Data entry menu Add ref Edit ref Switch ref Add sample Edit sample Add/edit register
Hobson Site
edit this sample – create a copied sample – enter a new sample – edit the register
Basic information
Sample name: Hobson Site

Sample aka: 33Ms-2

Reference: J. L. Murphy. 1968. The Hobson Site: a Fort Ancient component near Middleport, Meigs County, Ohio. Kirtlandia 4:1-14 [ER 3178]
Geography
Country: United States

State: Ohio


Coordinate: 38° 59' N, 82° 5' W
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Time interval: Holocene

Max Ma: 0.00085

Min Ma: 0.00075

Age basis: zone

Geography comments: "on the northern bank of Storys Run at the confluence of that stream with the Ohio River, 1 1/2 miles downstream from Middleport... at an elevation of approximately 570 feet above sea level" (coordinate based on Hobson Site)
"the site represents the early Feurt Phase, and the age of the site is estimated as approximately 1100-1200 A.D."

Environment
Lithology: not described

Taphonomic context: midden,settlement

Archaeology: bone tools,burials,ceramics,stone tools

Habitat comments: "Midden material averaged less than a foot in thickness"
a "complete burial", stone artifacts, worked bone, and pottery were found
structures are not discussed

Methods
Life forms: carnivores,rodents,ungulates,other small mammals,birds,turtles,fishes,clams,snails

Sampling methods: quarry

Sample size: 885 specimens

Years: 1966

Sampling comments: "excavation technique, if it can be called that, consisted largely of surface collecting behind the earth-moving equipment as the machinery passed back and forth over the site"

Metadata
Sample number: 3486

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2019-09-06 16:04:48

Modified: 2023-02-25 11:23:25

Abundance distribution
33 species
5 singletons
total count 885
extrapolated richness: 49.0
Fisher's α: 6.759
geometric series k: 0.8274
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.7357
Shannon's H: 2.0483
Good's u: 0.9944
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
Register
Current reference: Huckleberry et al. 2001 (ER 3215)