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SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
MEMORANDUM
00.
?
SENATE
Subject.
CURRICULUM CHANGES ?
ARCHAEOLOGY...
From..
SENATE COMMITTEE ON. UNDERGRADUATE
STUDIES
Date.
NOVEMBER 12, 1980
?
. .
Action undertaken by the
Studies at its meeting of November
ing motion:
MOTION
"That
Senate approve and
Board of Governors, as s
proposed new course ARC.
Senate Committee on Undergraduate
4, 1980 gives rise to the follow--
recommend approval
,
to the
t forth in S.80-139, the
485-57 Lithic Technology."
Subject to approval of the course by Senate and the Board
of Governors, SCUS approved waiver of the two semester time lag require-
ment in order that the course may be first offered in Summer 81-2.
so
FOR INFORMATION
At its meeting of November 4, 1980, acting under its
delegated authority, SCUS approved a number of changes as follows:
ARC. 272-3 - Archaeology of the Old World - delete prerequisite
ARC. 273-3 - Archaeology of the New World - delete prerequisite
ARC. 301-2 - Prehistoric and Primitive Art
.-
delete prerequisite;
ARC. 360-3 - Indian Cultures of North America - change vector from
0-3-0 to 1-2-0, and nature of course to Lecture/Seminar;
ARC. 438-3 - change of title.
0

 
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY D L
MEMORANDUM
o........
Mr.
.
s.c.u.s.
Faculty of Arts Curriculum Committee
Subject
41im
Changes ?
Date
1980-1027
The Faculty of Arts Curriculum Committee at its meeting of October
23, 1980 approved the attached curriculum changes submitted by the Department
of Archaeology. Would you please place the same on the agenda of the next
SCUS meeting.
Thank you.
S. Roberts
Attachment
:nl

 
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
?
/
NEW COURSE PROPOSAL FORM
Calendar Information
?
Department Archaeology -
Abbreviation Code
?
ARCS ?
Course Number:
1
485
?
Credit Hours: 5
?
Vector: 4-0-1
Title of Course: Lithic Technology
Calendar Description of Course: An in-depth study of how to manufacture and analyze
stone tools. Includes rock and mineral identification, stone working by students,
fracture mechanics, and relevance to theoretical problems.
OFFICE OF THE PF''
Nature of Course Lecture/Laboratory
Prerequisites (or special instructions): Arc. 101 and Arc. 372;
?
OCT20 1980
FACULTY OF A.
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved: ?
none
2.
How frequently will the course be offered? once every two years
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
Which of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
ossible? ?
Hayden, F1adnark
pjectivesof the Course
To train students in the analysis of stone tools. Archaeology relies extensively on
the analysis of stone tools to date sites, to determine the cultural affilhitiort of
sites and, to determine the function of sites. The subject is therefore essential
in archaeological training and is not covered by existing courses.
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty none
Staff ?
one teaching assistant
Library none
Audio Visual none
Space ?
none
Equipment
?
none
5.
Date:.Q
1 j7
1
j gpo1__
?
*NOV 4 IS
Chairman, SCUS
Department hairman
?
Dean
' S 73-34b:- (When completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCIJS 73-4a.
A
L
ach course outline).
Arts 78-3

 
ARCHAEOLOGY 485-5
LITHIC ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION
REQUIRED TEXTS:
Crabtree 1972. An introduction to flintworking. Pocatello:
Idaho State University Museum.
Hester and Heizer 1973. Bibliography of archaeology 1: experiments,
?
lithic technology and petrography. Addison-Wesley Module 29.
RECOMMENDED TEXTS:
Turner 1975. Food plants of British Columbia, Part 1. Provincial
Museum.
Hamilton, Woolley, and Bishop 1977. Larousse Guide to minerals,
rocks,and fossils.
Hayden, B. 1979. Lithic Use-Wear Analysis. Academic Press.
Pelc'vant ,1nurna1c
Lithic Technology
Flintknapper's Exchange
Description:
This course is intended to be an indepth exploration of techniques
of lithic manufacture, maintenance (resharpening), use and interpretation.
It will include experience in knapping and using stone tools; hafting
and use. A weekend field trip is planned, to put lithic use concepts to
use. Background research on resource utilization and technology is mandatory.
The course will also deal with aspects of use-wear analysis and experimenta-
tion. Research papers are due at the end. Each student will be responsible
for providing a pair of gloves, safety glasses, a piece of leather or rubber
to protect legs, and a hard wood billet. Enrolment is limited to 15.
1.
Goals; definitions; Ethnography; pseudofacts (Europe, Africa, the
Kafaun, Japan, Sozudai, and North America: Calico Hills, the Fraser
Canyon); heatspalling and the real thing; what can be done with
lithics? Fracture types. Film: The Flintknapper.
2.
Raw materials, heat treatment, patination. Paper topics and
research designs.
?
Film: The Alchemy of time.
3.
The beginnings: choppers and chopping tools and the Fraser Canyon:
morphology and functions.
Field Trip: making a chopper
continued--

 
-2-
4. Bipolar techniques and split cobbles: morphology and functions.
(and splintered pieces)
?
Video Tape: Boonichson
5.Flakes and retouch: morphology, functions, accidental retouch,
use-retouch, and multiple tools.
6. Bifaces and billets: edging, thinning, morphology and functions.
Video Tape Bonnichson
1.
Core techniques: Levallois, blade, and punches: microtools.
Films,: The Hunter's Edge
Stone Knapping in modern Turkey
8.
Pressure flaking: the analysis of points--the degenerate
Archaic and the sophisticated P1.
Films: Ancient Projectile Points
Blades and Pressure Flaking
Obsidian Point Making
9.
Interpretations and analysis:
edge angles
material importance
flake to tool ratios
styles
debitage (what to do with assemblages without tools)
debitage in British Columbia with Poketylo and Magne
morphological types vs. functional types vs. other types
curati on
multi-functionality and the reasons for it
unidirectional trends
reasons for exotic materials and change over time
(Tasmania and the P1)
the evolution of ground stone tools
information and decision making theory
design theory
site function, and the problem of high density sites
e.g. Olorgesailie
inter-assemblage variability - how to interpret it and
criteria to be used.
10.
Use-wear: causes and techniques: fractures and abrasion
the Ho Ho Report.
11. Residues.
Film: Beautiful Tree, Wooden Box
12.
Context and experimentation:
Field Trip.
13.. Ground stone, the Hoabinhian, and cracked rocks.

 
-3-.
ARC 485-5
Brian Hayden
READING ASSIGNMENTS
1
?
INTRODUCTION:
?
Collins 1975
ETHNOGRAPHY: Aiston 1928; Gould, Koster and Sontz 1971;
Mountford 1941; Vaufrey 1950; Hayden 1979; Ch. 34.
PSEUDOFACTS: Bleed 1977; Clark 1958; Mason 1965; Warren 1914;
Barnes 1939
2 ?
Crabtree 1967-, 1967b, 1972 (text); Honea 1964; Hamilton et al. 1977.
3
?
Borden 1975:55-68, Mountford 1941
4 ?
Binford and Quimby 1963; White 1968, Sollberger and Patterson 1976;
H. Bynes 1977; White 1977; Hayden nd.
5 ?
Clark and Thompson 1954; Clark and Haynes 1970; Hayden 1979, pgs. 63-142
4.
6 ?
Mewhinney 1964; Newcomer 1970; Callahan 1979:10-11, 33-53, 67. 90. 116-7
7
?
Aigner 1970; Bordes and Crabtree 1969; Sanger 1968, 1970
8 ?
Akerman 1978; Elkin 1948; Kroeber 1961 (Chapter 9); Nagle 1914;
Crabtree 1966, 1970; Muto 1970
9 ?
DEBITAGE: Hassan 1971
TYPES: Sackett 1966; White 1969; Hill and Evans 1972; Bonnichson
1977 Ch. 8.
VARIABILITY and CURATION: Binford 1973; Binford and Binford
1969, Wilmsen 1970
10 ?
Keeley 1974; Tringham et al 1974; Wilmsen 1968; Witthoft 1967;
Wylie 1975; Hayden 1979; Chaps. 1, 2, 17, 18, 24, 26

 
-4-
0
?
READING LIST
Aigner, J. S.
1970
?
?
The unifacial, core and blade site on Anagula Island,
Aleutians. Arctic Anthropology 7:59-88.
Aiston, George
1928
?
?
Chipped stone tools of the Aboriginal tribes east and north-
east of Lake Eyre, South Australia. Papers and Proceedings,
Royal Society of Tasmania 123-131.
Akerman, Kim
1978 ?
Notes on the Kimberley stone-tippped spear focusing on the
point hafting mechanism." Mankind 11:486:489.
Barnes, A. S.
1939 ?
"The differences between natural and human flaking on
prehistoric flint implements." American Anthropologist
41:99-112.
Binford, L. R.
1973 ?
Interassemblage variability--the Mousterian and the 'functional'
?
argument. In Renfrew 227-54. The Explanation of Culture
Change: Pittsburgh.
D ?
Binford, Sally and L. Binford
1969 ?
"Stone tools and human behavior." Scientific American
220:70-84.
BQnnichsen, Robson
1977 ?
Models for deriving cultural information from stone tools.
Mercury Series, National Museum of Man, Archaeological Survey
of Canada, Paper 60: Ottawa.
Bleed, Peter
1977 ?
Early flakes from Sozudai, Japan: are they man-made?
Science 197:1357-59.
Borden, Charles
1975 ?
Origins and development of early Northwest Coast culture to
about 3,000 B.C. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, 45:
Ottawa..
Bordes, Francois and Don Crabtree
1969 ?
The Corbiac blade technique and other experiments. Tebiwa 12:
1-21.
Callahan, Errett
1979
?
?
"The basics of biface knapping in the eastern fluted point
tradition: a manual for flintknappers and lithic analyst."
Archaeology of Eastern North America 7(l):1-180.

 
-5-
thirk, J. Desmond
1958 ?
The natural fracture of pebbles from the Batoka Gorge,
North Rhodesia, and its bearing on the Kafuan Industries
of Africa. Proceedings, Prehistoric Society 34:64-77.
Clark, J. D., and C. V. Haynes Jr.
1970 ?
An elephant butchery site at Mwanganda's village and its
relevance for Paleolithic archaeology. World Archaeology
1:290-311.
Clark, J. G. D., and M. W. Thompson
1954 ?
The groove and splinter technique of working antler in
Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic Europe, and with special
referene to the material from Star Carr. Proceedings,
Prehistoric Society 19:148-160.
Collins,
1975 ?
Chapter in Swanson 1975.
Crabtree, Don
1966 ?
"A stoneworker's approach to analyzing and replicating
the Lindenmeier Folsom." Tebiwa 9(l):3-39.
1967a ?
Notes on experiments in flintknapping:3. The flintknapper's
raw materials. Tebiwa 10:8-25.
1967b ?
Note on experiments in flintknapping:4. Tools used for
?
making flaked stone artifacts. Tebiwa 10:60-73.
1970
?
Flaking stone with wooden implements. Science 169:146-153.
Elkin, A. P.
1948 ?
Pressure flaking in the northern Kimberley, Australia.
Man (#130):110-113.
Fitzhugh, William
1972
?
Environmental archaeology and cultural systems in Hamilton
Inlet, Labrador. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology,
Number 16. Smithsonian Institution: Washington, D.C.
Gould, Richard A., D. A. Koster, and A. H. L. Sontz
1971 ?
The lithic assemblage of the Western Desert Aborigines
of Australia. American Antiquity 36:149-169.
Hassan, Fekri
?
.
1971 ?
Study of debitage in lithic assemblages and its uses.
Pam-African Congress on Prehistory and the Study of the
Quaternary, Bulletin 4:20-29.
Haynes, Gary
1977 ?
Reply to Soilberger and Patterson. Lithic Technology 6:5.
Hayden, Brian (Ed.)
: ?
1979b ?
Lithic use-wear analysis. Academic Press: New York.

 
U
?
-6-
Hill,
?
J.,
and R.
?
Evans
1972
A model ?
for classification and typology.
?
In Clarke, D.
Models in Archaeology. ?
Methuen, London.
?
231-273.
Honea, ?
K.
1964
The patination of stone artifacts. ?
Plains Anthropologist
9:14-17.
Keeley, Lawrence
1974
The methodology of microwear analysis.
?
American Antiquity
39:126.
Kroeber, Theodora
1961
Ishi ?
in two worlds. ?
University of California Press:
Berkeley.
Mason, ?
R. J.
1965
Makapangsat Limeworks fractured stone objects and natural
fracture in Africa. ?
South African Archaeological ?
Bulletin
20(77):3-16.
MacDonald,
George
1968
Debert: ?
a Pa1eo-Indin site in central
?
Nova Scotia
Anthropology Papers, National Museum of Canada, 16.
D
Mewhinney,
1964
H.
A skeptic views the billet flake.
?
American Antiquity 30:203-204.
Mountford,
Charles P.
1941
An unrecorded method of manufacturing wooden implements by
simple stone tools.
?
Transactions, Royal Society of South
Australia 65:312-316.
Muto, Guy
1970
A stage analysis of the manufacture of stone tools.
?
In D. M.
Aikens, ?
(Ed.), Selected Papers, Great Basin Anthropological
Conference 1970, University of Oregon Anthropological
?
Papers
1:109-118.
Nagel,
?
E.
1914
Arrow chipping by means of fire and water.
?
American Anthro-
pologist 16-140.
Newcomer, Mark
1970
Some quantitative experiments inhand-axe manufacture.
World Archaeology-3:85-93.
Olsen, Larry
1973
Outdoor survival ?
skills. ?
Brigham Young University Press:
Provo.
Peterson, Nicolas
1968
The pestle and mortar:
?
an ethnographic analogy for archaeology
in Arnhem Land. ?
Mankind 6:567-570.

 
-7-
Sackett, James
?
1966
?
Quantitative analysis of Upper Paleolithic stone tools.
American Anthropologist 68:256-294.
Sanger, David
?
1968 ?
Prepared core and blade traditions in the Pacific Northwest.
Arctic Anthropology 5:92-120.
?
1970 ?
Mid-latitude core and blade traditions. Arctic Anthropology
7:106-114.
Soilberger, J., and L. Patterson
?
1976 ?
The myth of bipolar flaking industries. Newsletter of Lithic
Technolooy 5(3) :40-41.
Swanson, Earl (Ed.)
?
1975 ?
Lithic technology: making and using stone tools. Mouton:
The Hague.
Tringham, Ruth, Glenn Cooper, George Odell, Barbara Voytek, and Anne Whitman?
?
1974 ?
Experimentation in the formation of edge damage: a new
approach to lithic analysis. Field Archaeology 1:171-195.
Vaufrey, R.
?
1950
?
Flake-using and biface-using peoples. South African
Archaeological Bulletin 5:137-139.
Warren, S. H.
?
1914 ?
"The experimental investigation of flint fracture and its
application to problems of human implements." Journal,
Royal Anthropological Institute 44:512-53.
White, J. Peter
?
1968
?
Fabricators, outils ecailles, or scalar cores? Mankind 6:
658-666.
?
1969 ?
Typologies for some prehistoric flaked stone artifacts in
the Australian New Guinea Highlands. Archaeology and
Physical Anthropology in Ocean 4:18-46.
?
1977 ?
Reply to Patterson and Sollberger. Lithic Technology 6:6.
Wilmsen, Edwin N.
?
1968
?
Functional analysis of flaked stone artifacts. American
Antiquity 33:151-161.
?
1970 ?
Lithic analysis and cultural inferences. Anthropological
Papers of the University of Arizona, #16.
Wilson, 1.
1899 ?
Arrowpoints, spearheads and knives of prehistoric times.
Annual Report, Smithsonian Institution (for 18979:823-988
Witthoft, J.
1967 ?
Glazed polish on flint tools. American Antiquity 32:383-388.
Wylie, H.
0
11
Tool microwear and functional types from Hogup Cave, Utah.
Tebiwa 17:1-31.

 
c4
?
(f r
J\
Date:
?
6 Nov.. 80
SFU LIBRARY COLLECTION EVALUATION?
(To be completed only for
new course or
program proposals.)
1. Course No.
and Name or Program:
ARC 485 Lithic Technology
Date to be
offered:
?
Spring 81
2.
Resources currently in collection:
Reading lists. No. and 2 of titles available:
54
?
88.5
Related materials in general collection:
Monographs:
Serials Subscriptions:
Backfiles;
Other:
a
3. Recommended additions to collection:
(Indicate approx. no. of titles, vols.,
date, as appropriate)
Monographs:
?
5 -
7 titles
New serials subscriptions: ?
1 title
Serials backfiles: ?
1 title 20 vols., 1911-30
Other (specify): ?
Films 2 titles
kSTIMATED COST1
150.00
15.00
200.00
800.00
Total
?
1165.00
4. ?
Comments:
See
attached sheet
fe
cPJ
For ?
brary
a&
?
___
For Faculty "parLment
Eve Szabo

 
U
.
Comments:
The Library can provide good support for this subject. A check.
of the standard bibliography
111
the field (Hester, T.R. and
R.F. Heizer. Bibliography of archaeolog
y
1: Experiments, lithic
technology and petrograpy. 1973) showed that the Library's
collection is adequate. Most of the titles lacking are articles
in older, specialized and/or non-English language journals.
The basic text for mineral identification which is listed on the
course outline is not in the Library's collection and should
be purchased along with another 5-7 titles to build a basic
collection in this area.
The Archaeology Dept.
already has or has access to the video tapes
a
nd most of the films
listed on the course
outline.
?
However,
there are other films
the Department would
like to have and funds
should be alloted to
purchase at least two
films immediately.
^^J

 
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
S
c
tç c -
MEMORANDUM
vans,Secretary
Subject.....
?
.
?
1
gs .Achaecy
From.
Sheila Roberts, Secretary
Faculty of Arts Curriculum Committee
Date..
The Faculty of Arts Curriculum Committee at its meeting of October
23, 1980 approved the attached curriculum changes submitted by the Department
of Archaeology. Would you please place the same on the agenda of the next
SCUS meeting.
Thank you.
S. Roberts
Attachment
:nl
.

 
CURRICULUM CHANGES
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY
?
P. 100 ?
ARC. 272-3 Archaeology of the Old World
DELETION OF PREREQUISITE
Delete ARC.131 is recommended.
ARC. 273-3 Archaeology
.
of the New World
CHANGE IN PREREQUISITES
DELETE ARC.101 is recommended.
PATTflrSM g.
The department has proposed the deletion of the present prerequisites
for ARC
S
272 and ARC
S
273, as it now requires majors to take ARC. 101,131,
272 and 273, and they are strongly advised to take ARC 101 or ARC 131
before taking either ARC. 272 or ARC-273. At the same time the course
material is structured so that non-majors can handle the subject matter
without any prerequisites. ?
-
SEE APPENDICES A & B?
?
P. 100 ?
ARC.301-2 Prehistoric and Primitive Art
. ?
DELETION OF PREREQUISITES
it
I,
Delete Any Lower Division Archaeology course.
RATIONALE:
The 'department has proposed the deletion of a prerequisite for
ARC. 301 as the subject matter of the course is self-explanatory and
does not require prior work
in
archaeology.
SEE APPENDIX C
P. 100 ?
ARC, 360-3 Indian Cultures of North America
CHANGE OF VECTOR AND NATURE OF COURSE
From: 0-3-0
To; ?
1-2-0
From: Seminar
To: ?
Lecture/Seminar
RATIONALE:
This course may be taught as a Lecture/Seminar or as a Seminar
depending on the Faculty member who teaches the course
SEE APPENDIX D

 
•p. 102
?
ARC. 438-3 Application of Sedimentology to Archaeological Sites
CHANGE OF TITLE
Frbm: Application of Sedimentology to Archaeological Sites
To: ?
GEOARCHAEOLOGY
RATIONALE:
The department feels that Geoarchaeology more closely fits the
course description for ARC-438-3.
SEE APPENDIX E
NEW COURSE PROPOSAL
ARC. 485-5 LITHIC TECHNOLOGY
SEE APPENDIX F
0

 
PP
p
/Dn/
. .
Fl
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
_COURSE PROPOSAL FORM = Change in Prerequisite only
Calendar Information ?
Department ?
Archaeology
Abbreviation Code:
ARC. ?
Course Number: ?
272 ?
Credit Hours:
3
?
Vector: 2-1-0
Title of Course:
?
Archaeology of the Old World
Calendar Description of Course:
A survey of Old World Prehistory from the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age. Basic concepts
used in reconstructing prehistoric cultures, and the artifactual, fossil and contextual
evidence for the evolution of man and culture.
Nature of Course
Lecture/Tutorial
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
2. Scheduling
How frequently will the course be offered?
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
Which of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
3 Objectives of the Course
4. Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
-Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
Date: ?
Oct. 6/80
Al
'
at
.b.,
LQ
?
IZ
L
R
_
IIJ
Department Chairman
/7'
?
Dean
Chairman, SCUS
so 73-34b:- (When completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCUS 73-34a.
Attach course outline).
Arts 78-3

 
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
?
P
pPE
11/
1) 1
'A
Oft
COURSE PROPOSAL FORM - Change in Prerequisite only
Calendar Information ?
Department ?
Archaeology
w
Abbreviation Code:
Ak
C
,
Course Number: ?
273
Title of Course:
?
Archaeology of the New World
Credit Hours: ?
Vector: 210
Calendar Description of Course: ?
A survey
of
prehistoric cultures
of
North and South
America. The entry of man into the New World, the rise
of
the pre-Columbian civilizations
of Mexico and Peru, and the cultural adaptations by prehistoric populations to other parts
of
the New World.
Nature 'of Course ?
Lecture/Tutorial
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
2. Scheduling
How frequently will the course be offered?
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
?
-
Which of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
3—Objectives of the Course
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
Date:
?
Oct. 6/80
Department Chairman
?
Dean ? Chairman, SCUS
S73-3
4b:
- (When completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCUS 73-34a.
Attach course outline).
Arts 78-3

 
P
2
vDi
C
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
COURSE PROPOSAL FORM -- Change in Prerequisite only
Department -
Abbreviation Code: ARC.
?
course Number:
301
Credit Hours: ?
Vector: 2-1-0
Title of Course: ?
Prehistoric and Primitive Art
Calendar Decription of Course:
?
Art styles and traditions of prehistoric and
preliterate peoples.
Nature of Course
?
Lecture
Prerequisites (or special Instructions):
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved: ?
None
2. Scheduling
How frequently will the course be offered? At least once a year.
Semester in which the course will first be offered? --
Which of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
?
Visiting faculty
3 Objectives of the Course
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for Information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
Date: ?
Oct. 6/80
Department Chairm'k
?
Dean ?
Chairman, SCUS
Sts 73-34b:- (When completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCUS 73-34a.
Attach course outline).
Calendar Information
Archaeology
Arts 78-3

 
A
P
O
L =
V0
°SENATE CO
MM
ITTEE ON UNDERG
RA
DUATE STUDIES ?
description
?
- ?
COURSE PROPOSAL FORM Change in vector/only
Calendar Information ?
Department
?
Archaeology
Abbreviation Code: ?
___
Course Number:
360 ?
Credit Hours:
3
?
Vector:-
1-2-0
Title of Course:
?
Indian Cultures of North America
Calendar Description of Course: Comparative Study. of the traditional cultures of North
American Indians: prehistory, language, beliefs and customs
Lecte
Nature of Course
?
*/Seminar
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
ARC. 101 or 273
What
course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
2. Scheduling
How fiequently.will the course be offered?
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
Which of your present faculty would-be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
3_Objectives of the Course
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
Date: ?
Oct. 6/80
&Ll
^
J
t
C
?
Department Chairman
j7' ?
Dean
?
Chairman, SCUS
S73-34b:-
(When
completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCUS 73'-34a.
Attach course outline).
Arts 78-3

 
4. ?
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
APP,j
COURSE PROPOSAL FORM
?
Change in Course Title only
Calendar Information
?
Department
?
Archaeology
Abbreviation Code:
?
ARC.
?
Course Number: ?
438 ?
Credit Hours:
?
Vector: 0-0-3
Title of Course:
Geoarthaeology ?
-
Calendar Description of Cc..tirse:
The applications of techniques of sedimentolooy and pedology to the descriptive analysis
of archaeological sites.
Nature of Course
Laboratory.....
Prerequisites (or special Instructions):
-
?
One lower division Archaeology course and GEOG 318 'or permission of the Department.
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
2. Scheduling
How frequently will the course be offered?
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
?
-
Which of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
3.
Objectives of the Course
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
Date:
?
Oct. 6/80
Departme
- Ri
Chairman / (.,
?
Dean ?
Chairman, SCUS
S73-34b:- (When completing this form, for instructions see Memorandum SCUS 73-34a.
Attach course outline).
?
.
Arts 78-3

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