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- Smithsonian_trinomial abstract "Smithsonian trinomials are unique identifiers assigned to archaeological sites in many states in the United States. They are composed of one or two digits coding for the state, typically two letters coding for the county or county-equivalent within the state, and one or more sequential digits representing the order in which the site was listed in that county. The Smithsonian Institution developed the site number system in the 1930s and 1940s. (Trinomials are now assigned by the individual states.) The 48 states then in the union were assigned numbers in alphabetical order. Alaska was assigned number 49 and Hawaii was assigned number 50 after those states were admitted to the union. There are no Smithsonian trinomial numbers assigned for the District of Columbia or any United States territories.Most states use trinomials of the form "nnAAnnnn", but some specify a space or dash between parts of the identifier, i.e., "nn AA nnnn" or "nn-AA-nnnn". Some states use variations of the trinomial system. Arizona, California, Connecticut, Maine, Rhode Island and Vermont use two-letter abbreviations of the state name instead of the Smithsonian number. Alaska uses three-letter abbreviations for USCG map quadrangles in place of the county code. Arizona uses a five-part identifier based on USCG maps, specifying quadrangles, then rectangles within a quadrangle, a sequential number within the rectangle, and a code identifying the agency issuing the sequential number. California uses a three-letter abbreviation for counties. Connecticut and Rhode Island do not use any sub-state codes, with site identifiers consisting of the state abbreviation and a sequential number series for the whole state. Delaware uses a single letter code for counties and adds a block code (A-K) within each county, with sequential numbers for each block. Hawaii uses a four-part identifier, "50" for the state, a two-digit code for the island, then a two-digit code plus a four digit sequential site number for sites on each island.".
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink trinomial.html.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink Alcoabbreviation.htm.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink coname.html.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink quadmap.html.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink DESHPO_SurveyFormsDataCoordGuidance.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink NDCRS%20Archeological%20Manual.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink codes.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink inv-oai.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink countmap.html.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink 15769.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink quad_names_numbers.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink abbrev.htm.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageExternalLink TxCountyAbbreviations2005-01.pdf.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageID "38151590".
- Smithsonian_trinomial wikiPageRevisionID "605567441".
- Smithsonian_trinomial hasPhotoCollection Smithsonian_trinomial.
- Smithsonian_trinomial subject Category:Archaeological_sites_in_the_United_States.
- Smithsonian_trinomial subject Category:Smithsonian_Institution.
- Smithsonian_trinomial subject Category:Universal_identifiers.
- Smithsonian_trinomial comment "Smithsonian trinomials are unique identifiers assigned to archaeological sites in many states in the United States. They are composed of one or two digits coding for the state, typically two letters coding for the county or county-equivalent within the state, and one or more sequential digits representing the order in which the site was listed in that county. The Smithsonian Institution developed the site number system in the 1930s and 1940s.".
- Smithsonian_trinomial label "Smithsonian trinomial".
- Smithsonian_trinomial sameAs m.0pl16qt.
- Smithsonian_trinomial sameAs Q7545628.
- Smithsonian_trinomial sameAs Q7545628.
- Smithsonian_trinomial wasDerivedFrom Smithsonian_trinomial?oldid=605567441.
- Smithsonian_trinomial isPrimaryTopicOf Smithsonian_trinomial.