lwetterauer

About lwetterauer

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far lwetterauer has created 92 blog entries.

Test Excavations at the Fulcher Site, Brewster County Texas

2005–2006

Test excavations were conducted at the Fulcher site (41BS1495) during two sessions in March 2005 and April 2006. Results of these investigations indicated the presence of five occupational episodes beginning with the Late Archaic period and continuing into the Historic period. Important data contributable to the efforts of the Trans-Pecos […]

Glass Mountains

1998–2006

Despite decades of research into the common archaeological manifestation known as “burned rock middens,” these features remain poorly understood. Burned rock middens are enigmatic in that their form and function are rarely well defined—they could have been used as large earth-ovens or served as discard piles from smaller thermal features […]

Oak Park Site

2005

Located within Pinto Canyon Ranch below the Chianti Mountains, excavations focused on a midden deposit and outlying areas. Radiocarbon data indicate Late Archaic (1000 B.C. to A.D. 700) to Late Prehistoric (A.D. 700—1535) occupations. A draft manuscript is completed, and there are plans to publish this research in future collected […]

Wolf Den Cave

2001

The long trail began at base camp and took a circuitous route across the slopes and top of a high ridgeline, dropping finally down the sheer canyon face into the rockshelter. The Wolf Den crewmembers were scattered out along the trail, reveling in the brisk, high mountain air on an […]

Mallouf Retires After Thirteen Years of Service

The Sul Ross Skyline, September 4, 2008

Retirement for Robert J. Mallouf merely means shifting priorities.

Mallouf, director of the Center for Big Bend Studies at Sul Ross State University since 1995, stepped down from his position Aug. 31. He plans to spend more time with his son, Parker, and publish his […]

CBBS Conference Blends History, Archaeology of Big Bend Region

The Sul Ross Skyline, November 13, 2008

For 15 years, the annual Center for Big Bend Studies (CBBS) Conference has expanded the knowledge base of history, culture and archaeology of the Trans Pecos Region of Texas and Mexico.

Over 150 persons attended this year’s conference, held Friday-Saturday (Nov. 7-8) at Sul Ross […]

Go to Top