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Featured researches published by Cynthia M. Munoz.


Theoretical Informatics and Applications | 2011

Archeological Significance Testing at 41BX17/271, the Granberg Site: A Multi-Component Site along the Salado Creek in Bexar County, Texas

Cynthia M. Munoz; Raymond P. Mauldin; Jennifer L. Thompson; S. Christopher Caran; Linda Scott Cummings; J. Philip Dering; Mary Malainey; Al McGraw; Tom McKern; Manuel Palacios-Fest; Barbara A. Meissner; Barbara Winsborough; Chad Yost

The Center for Archaeological Research (CAR) of The University of Texas at San Antonio conducted archeological significance testing at 41BX17, the Granberg Site, from January to March 2006. The testing was conducted for the Texas Department of Transportation, Environmental Affairs Division (TxDOT-ENV). The Granberg Site sits on the eastern flood terrace of the Salado Creek south of Loop 410 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. Planned road improvements including installation of a storm sewer line and a water main prompted the need to assess whether (1) cultural deposits including human remains still exist after previous testing and (2) if the deposits contribute to the site’s National Register of Historic Places eligibility. The archeological work was conducted under Texas Antiquities Permit No. 4010. Steve A. Tomka served as Principal Investigator and Jennifer Thompson served as Project Archeologist. Fieldwork included mechanical auger boring and backhoe trenching to determine the horizontal extent of the site boundaries within the median of Loop 410 eastbound. Sixteen 1-x-1-m units were excavated to determine the distribution and integrity of the cultural deposits and to locate any possible burials that may still exist at the site. Materials recovered included burned rock features, chipped stone artifacts, animal bone, snail and mussel shell and charred plant remains. The distribution of the artifacts, the geomorphic investigations, the radiocarbon assays, and temporally diagnostic artifacts indicate the presence of Middle and Late Archaic archeological materials with good stratigraphic integrity. The Granberg Site was determined to be ineligible for the National Register of Historic Places. Following the completion of eligibility testing efforts, the TxDOT directed the CAR to develop a research design linking the data recovered from the various excavations at the Granberg Site with research goals. The CAR developed the research design (Munoz et al. 2007) under Work Authorization No. 57513SA005 with Cynthia M. Munoz serving as Project Archeologist. At roughly the time of the research design implementation, the CAR was the recipient of a donation of a collection of commingled human skeletal remains recovered from the Granberg Site. These remains were recovered from 41BX17/271 in 1962 by Harvey Kohnitz, an avocational archeologist, without knowledge or permission from the Texas Highway Department. The remains were stored at the Kohnitz home until his son, Mark Kohnitz, donated them to the CAR in 2007. An osteological analysis was conducted at the CAR laboratory during February 2008 for TxDOT, under Work Authorization No. 57513SA005 Supplemental Work Authorization No. 4. The results of this analysis are reported in Appendix H of this report. The commingled remains will be curated the CAR and all required documents, including an inventory, will be submitted to the National Park Service National NAGPRA Program to fulfill all obligations pertaining to the NAGPRA laws. All artifacts collected during this project and all project-associated documentation are permanently curated at the CAR according to Texas Historical Commission guidelines.


Theoretical Informatics and Applications | 2005

Archeological Investigations at Mission Espíritu Santo (41GD1), Goliad County, Texas

Kristi M. Ulrich; Antonia L. Figueroa; Jennifer L. Thompson; Anne A. Fox; Johanna M. Hunziker; Steve A. Tomka; Cynthia M. Munoz

Excavations were carried out at Mission Nuestra Señora del Espíritu Santo de Zuñiga (41GD1) in November of 2004 and February of 2005 by the Center for Archaeological Research of The University of Texas at San Antonio under contract with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The work was conducted in advance of the planned construction of a French drain system. Shovel tests, 1-x-1-meter test units, and controlled backhoe trenches were used to explore areas that would be impacted by the proposed drainage system along the northern walls of the chapel and museum (granary) and across the center of the courtyard. Based on the findings of the shovel tests, test units, and trenching, three areas with significant deposits were identified. The first area is associated with a probable midden deposit located in the northwest section of the mission, the second is located along the northern wall of the granary (museum), adjacent to the priest’s quarters, while the third consists of two colonial-period features located west of the presentday workshop. Although at the start of the fieldwork it was assumed that no intact cultural deposits survived within the courtyard of the mission, the excavations revealed that selected areas do retain intact colonial-age deposits with significant research potential. These areas should be more fully delimited and explored as future opportunities for their investigations arise. The fieldwork was conducted under Texas Antiquities Permit No. 3593 with Antonia Figueroa and Jennifer Thompson serving as co-Principal Investigators. All artifacts collected were processed in the Center for Archaeological Research laboratory and transferred to Texas Parks and Wildlife for permanent curation.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis of hunter–gatherers from the Coleman site, a Late Prehistoric cemetery in Central Texas

Raymond P. Mauldin; Robert J. Hard; Cynthia M. Munoz; Jennifer L.Z. Rice; Kirsten Verostick; Daniel R. Potter; Nathanael Dollar


Open Journal of Archaeometry | 2014

Exploring the use of stable carbon isotope ratios in short-lived leporids for local paleoecological reconstruction

Stephen Smith; Raymond P. Mauldin; Cynthia M. Munoz; Robert J. Hard; Debajyoti Paul; Grzegorz Skrzypek; Patricio Villanueva; Leonard Kemp


Theoretical Informatics and Applications | 2010

Archeological Testing and Data Recovery at 41ZV202, Zavala County, Texas

Raymond P. Mauldin; Russell D. Greaves; Jennifer L. Thompson; Cynthia M. Munoz; Leonard Kemp; Barbara A. Meissner; Bruce K. Moses; Steve A. Tomka


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

Old Collections and New Approaches: Estimating Mast Resource Use in the Lower Pecos Canyonlands of Southwest Texas

Raymond P. Mauldin; J. Kevin Hanselka; Cynthia M. Munoz; Leonard Kemp


Society for Historical Archaeology | 2018

Death in Texas: Burials Patterns Within the Campo Santo of San Fernando Cathedral in San Antonio

Raymond P. Mauldin; Cynthia M. Munoz; John Reynolds; M. McKenzie Clinton; Megan Brown; Karlee Jeffery


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017

Exploring Occupation Patterns in the Lower Pecos and Central Texas Regions over the Last 9,000 Years using Radiocarbon Dates

Raymond P. Mauldin; Emily McCuistion; Leonard Kemp; Cynthia M. Munoz


The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2015

10,000 Years of Stone Tool Use by Hunter-Gatherers in Central Texas

Melissa Eiring; Sarah Wigley; Cynthia M. Munoz; Raymond P. Mauldin


The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2015

Archaeological Implications of Vegetation Shifts in the Northern Chihuahuan Desert

Leonard Kemp; Cynthia M. Munoz; Raymond P. Mauldin; Robert J. Hard

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Raymond P. Mauldin

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Jennifer L. Thompson

Stephen F. Austin State University

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Robert J. Hard

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Steve A. Tomka

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Anne A. Fox

Stephen F. Austin State University

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Antonia L. Figueroa

Stephen F. Austin State University

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Chad Yost

University of Arizona

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Daniel R. Potter

University of Texas at Austin

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Jennifer L.Z. Rice

Our Lady of the Lake University

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Johanna M. Hunziker

University of Texas at San Antonio

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