Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kathryn E. Krasinski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kathryn E. Krasinski.


American Antiquity | 2015

Dry Creek Revisited: New Excavations, Radiocarbon Dates, and Site Formation Inform on the Peopling of Eastern Beringia

Kelly E. Graf; Lyndsay M. DiPietro; Kathryn E. Krasinski; Angela K. Gore; Heather L. Smith; Brendan J. Culleton; Douglas J. Kennett; David Rhode; Graf; E Kelly; DiPietro; M Lyndsay; Gore; K Angela; Smith; L Heather; Culleton; J Brendan; Rhode; David

The multicomponent Dry Creek site, located in the Nenana Valley, central Alaska, is arguably one of the most important archaeological sites in Beringia. Original work in the 1970s identified two separate cultural layers, called Components 1 and 2, thought to date to the terminal Pleistocene and suggesting that the site was visited by Upper Paleolithic huntergatherers between about 13,000 and 12,000 calendar years before present (cal B.P.). The oldest of these became the typeassemblage for the Nenana complex. Recently, some have questioned the geoarchaeological integrity of the sites early deposits, suggesting that the separated cultural layers resulted from natural postdepositional disturbances. In 2011, we revisited Dry Creek to independently assess the sites age and formation. Here we present our findings and reaffirm original interpretations of clear separation of two terminal Pleistocene cultural occupations. For the first time, we report direct radiocarbon dates on cultural features associated with both occupation zones, one dating to 13,485-13,305 and the other to 11,060-10,590 cal B.P.


PaleoAmerica | 2018

Holzman South: A Late Pleistocene Archaeological Site along Shaw Creek, Tanana Valley, Interior Alaska

Brian T. Wygal; Kathryn E. Krasinski; Charles Holmes; Barbara Crass

ABSTRACT This report introduces the newly discovered Holzman South site with Pleistocene-aged components dated prior to the appearance of Clovis in North America. The site contains evidence for mammoth–human interaction, hearth activity areas, marrow extraction, and localized stone utilization in the middle Tanana Valley of Alaska, the northern gateway of the interior Canadian Ice Free Corridor.


Journal of Field Archaeology | 2016

Detecting Late Holocene cultural landscape modifications using LiDAR imagery in the Boreal Forest, Susitna Valley, Southcentral Alaska

Kathryn E. Krasinski; Brian T. Wygal; Joanna Wells; Richard Martin; Fran Seager-Boss

The subarctic boreal forest, or taiga, is the largest biome in the world but has received minimal archaeological research because of its remoteness and difficult working conditions. In Southcentral Alaska the most common archaeological sites are surface manifestations of proto-historic semi-subterranean caches once used for food storage and living structures. However, in dense summer vegetation, these small-scale features are difficult to locate without high intensity pedestrian survey. To test the usefulness of LiDAR data for archaeological prospection in the taiga, we compare LiDAR imagery to the known distribution of small-scale semi-subterranean cultural features. The use of LiDAR, when complemented with Sky-View Factor, has proven valuable in identifying relatively small semi-subterranean features though it does not replace on-the-ground investigation. Nevertheless, the application of LiDAR to locate low density and small-scale cultural features is widely applicable across the subarctic in densely vegetated contexts and may assist in significantly expanding our current knowledge of land-use patterns and site distributions in logistically challenging places.


Journal of taphonomy | 2010

Taphonomic fieldwork in Southern Africa and its application in studies of the Earliest Peopling of North America

Gary Haynes; Kathryn E. Krasinski


Archive | 2010

the eastern beringian chronology of quaternary extinctions: a methodological approach to radiocarbon evaluation

Kathryn E. Krasinski; Gary Haynes


Human Ecology | 2018

Archaeological Concepts of Remoteness and Land-Use in Prehistoric Alaska

Kathryn E. Krasinski


Quaternary International | 2016

Multivariate evaluation of criteria for differentiating cut marks created from steel and lithic implements

Kathryn E. Krasinski


Les nouvelles de l'archéologie | 2015

À la recherche des premières occupations préhistoriques de l’Alaska dans la vallée de la Tanana (États-Unis)

Yan Axel Gómez coutouly; Brian T. Wygal; Kathryn E. Krasinski; Randolph M. Tedor


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

Investigations of the Late Pleistocene occupations at Holzman, Shaw Creek, Interior Alaska

Kathryn E. Krasinski; Brian T. Wygal; Charles Holmes; Barbara Crass


Quaternary International | 2018

From taphonomy to human ecology: Interdisciplinary contributions by Gary Haynes and his colleagues, former students, and friends

Kathryn E. Krasinski; Kelly E. Graf; Chrissina C. Burke

Collaboration


Dive into the Kathryn E. Krasinski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Barbara Crass

University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles Holmes

University of Alaska Fairbanks

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brendan J. Culleton

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Rhode

Desert Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douglas J. Kennett

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge