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2002-06-05_PERMIT FILE - M2002004 (3)
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2002-06-05_PERMIT FILE - M2002004 (3)
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Last modified
8/24/2016 2:18:41 PM
Creation date
10/15/2010 10:35:22 AM
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M2002004
IBM Index Class Name
PERMIT FILE
Doc Date
6/5/2002
Doc Name
Proposed Access Road, Overview Survey, and Predictive Model
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URS
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DRMS
Media Type
D
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Proposed Limestone Quarry Access Road and Overview Cultural Resources Inventory <br />German. The following is a list of people that lived in Lime at some points during its history. <br />The dates included are not the exclusive time of residence for the people mentioned, nor is the <br />list exhaustive of all those that have lived in Lime, it is provided as an example (CF&I 1902; <br />Chmel 1989; Scamehron 1976, 1999). <br />' M. T. Brennan- 1899-1901-superintendent of Lime quarry. <br />T. B. Butler- 1901- took control as superintendent of Lime quarry after Mr. Brennan <br />' transferred to Rouse quarry. Mr. Butler retired later the same year due to illness. <br />T.J. Quinn- moved from Orient to Lime in 1902 with wife and son, Frank. Became <br />superintendent of the quarry. <br />H. J. Smith- 1902- clerk for T. J. Quinn. <br />' James Sease- 1902- Forman. <br />E.A. Allen- 1902- Engineer in charge of the crusher. <br />W. H. Drove- 1902- Engineer/Blacksmith <br />John Bloomberg-1902- In charge of the stables <br />A.W. Harrell- 1902- railroad agent <br />F. L. Reynolds- 1902- night railroad agent <br />' Evelyn Cebulski Stark- ? to 1965 <br />Audrey Weber Golden- ? to 1965- Known as the "miracle baby" because she was <br />rescued from a cave-in at the quarry at age 3. <br />' Evidence of the Lime townsite and quarry is still visible on aerial photographs and from the <br />current access route to the project area along the railroad right of way. This area is in the <br />northwest of Section 12, T22S, R65W along the St. Charles River and to the northwest of the <br />railroad right of way. <br />Predictive Model for Significant Prehistoric Site Locations <br />' The only lands within the proposed project area that were homesteaded was the Montoya <br />parcel, for which the remains of a structure have been located and documented. Other historic <br />' features are clearly indicated on the maps of the area and have also been located and recorded <br />in relation to the proposed project area. It is unlikely that any additional significant historic <br />resources are located within the proposed project area. Therefore., any additional survey work <br />' in the proposed project area should focus on identifying significant prehistoric sites. <br />The intensive survey for the proposed access road did not result in the discovery of any <br />prehistoric sites. Only two prehistoric archaeological sites are recorded in the project vicinity <br />and none of the significant sites discussed by the various authors in Zier and Kalasz (1999) are <br />located in the vicinity.. The two known sites are located to the west of the project area, within <br />the larger lease area. They are situated along the terrace of the St. Charles River. <br />Discussions in7_ier and Kalasz (1999) revolve around concepts pertaining to the relationship <br />between environmental variables and human subsistence adaptations. Certain characteristics <br />of the environment limit the range of human activities. These factors, along with the <br />geomorphologic history of the area, contribute to the likelihood of sites being located, preserved, <br />and discovered at any given location. Throughout prehistory, two factors, available water and <br />access to animal and vegetal resources, limited human settlement. Water availability was <br />probably not as much of an issue in the Paleoindian and Early Archaic times generally given <br />cooler and wetter conditions as it was in later times including the present. The semiarid nature <br />' of the region dictates that settlement locations are constrained by access to water. <br />UM 12
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