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No correspondence associated with the Hammatt et al. (1992) project was located by <br />SHPD and as such, it is unknown whether the AIS assessed the archaeological sites for <br />significance, and whether recommendations were made regarding which sites were <br />adequately documented, requiring no further work, and which retained potential for <br />further documentation through mitigation including archaeological monitoring or <br />preservation. Hammatt and Shideler (2007) submitted additional site documentation in <br />the form of a letter to SHPD for five sites, however, site maps and photographs were not <br />provided for all sites. <br />In 2016, SCS conducted an archaeological field inspection of the current project area to <br />relocate the sites identified during the 1992 Hammatt et al. AIS and to assess their current <br />condition and the adequacy of the study documentation. However, the field inspection did <br />not include the completion of new documentation needed to meet minimum AIS <br />standards. <br />By letter dated July 30, 2018, to the Planning Department, SHPD requested a second AIS <br />study of the Hammatt et al. (1992) project area to identify all archaeological historic <br />properties present, and to update previous archaeological documentation to include site <br />plans with site boundaries and areas impacted by bulldozing, photographs of all sites and <br />features, an assessment of their integrity, and site significance. The applicant hired SCS <br />to complete the study, consisting of a pedestrian survey of 76.121 acres of the project <br />area (with the exception of the five acres slated for HPA). Seventeen of the 21 previously <br />identified archaeological sites were located. Two of the previously documented sites <br />relocated by SCS were determined to be natural bedrock outcrops and the two burials that <br />were reinterred off-site in 1993. The four remaining previously documented sites were <br />bulldozed prior to the SCS fieldwork, and the remains of the sites are no longer present <br />on the ground surface. Three previously undocumented sites were also documented, <br />including a portion of the railroad berm, a small coffee shed enclosure, and several ranch <br />walls. <br />A third AIS (Escott and Escott 2018) was conducted in the five -acre southeast corner of <br />Parcel 17. The entire study area was subjected to a pedestrian survey and 22 <br />archaeological sites were recorded, primarily agricultural complexes and terraces <br />-11- <br />