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Historic Properties Treatment Plan, Collorn Mine, Colorado to <br />strategies involving a high degree of residential mobility. However, remains from components <br />investigated at sites often indicate more intensive activities and /or more repeated occupations <br />than components dating to other cultural historic periods, a pattern which corresponds to more <br />fundamental differences in subsistence and settlement organization (McNees et al. 1992; Talbot <br />and Wilde 1989). Investigation of the components identified on- site will allow comparison and <br />contrast of basic site functions among the different cultural historic periods represented at the <br />site. <br />The detailed spatial analyses of individual activity areas have the possibility to yield <br />considerable information beyond that provided by the analysis of the constituent cultural <br />remains alone. The spatial juxtaposition of certain classes of remains or particular <br />configurations of eateries may indicate the occurrence of specific activities that would not be <br />inferable merely from the presence of the features and other remains alone. The spatial structure <br />of a number of distinctly different types of activity areas have been used to provide insight into <br />variances in site use and settlement strategy between cultural historic phases (Benedict 1985; <br />Kent 1987; Kroll and Price 1991; Reed 1994; Talbot and Wilde 1989). <br />Data Requirements: Components containing well - preserved occupation surfaces and activity <br />areas dating to different cultural historic periods. Intact occupation surfaces retaining a high <br />degree of spatial integrity in the distribution of cultural remains; accurate provenance of various <br />classes of remains encountered during the data recovery excavations. <br />47599 TRC Mariah Associates Inc. <br />