Utah 18
Utah 18
Utah 18
UTAH \
AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY
AND PREDICTIVE MODEL
OF SELECTED AREAS
OF UTAH'S CISCO DESERT
John E. Bradley, William R. Killam, Geor�e R. Bums, and Marilyn A, Martorano
,."'" E ,
CISCO \\I
STUDY
R AREA
CE
AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY
AND PREDICTIVE MODEL
OF SELECTED AREAS
OF UTAH'S CISCO DESERT
Lakewood, Colorado
No. 18
Cultural Resource Series
1986
The Cisco III investigations reported herein are the logical continuation of those included
in Volume 5 of this series. Both volumes report on sample-oriented surveys of public land in
portions of the Cisco Desert in Grand County Utah, Moab District. Originally thought to be an
extremely low site density area, this current volume reports areas of high (over 25 sites per square
mile) site density. Because of this unexpected plethora of sites, the survey sample of 80,000 acres
was reduced ftom 10% to 5% after the first fieldwork session.
This report used the statistical procedures and environmental factors presented in Volume
11 of this series to build a preliminary predictive model based on existing data from Volume 5.
The results of this study, however, indicate the use of soil maps is simpler and more accurate for
predicting areas of relative site densities in the Cisco Desert.
In addition to providing a simplified management tool for over 220,000 acres of public
land, this volume presents an expanded view of prehistoric utilization of a marginal environment.
This volume, therefore, should prove useful to Federal land managers and cultural resource inves
tigators alike.
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ABSTRACT i
LIST OF FIGURES iv
LI ST OF TABLES vi
CHAPTER I . INTRODUCTI ON 1
Location . . . 9
Geomorphology 9
Hydrology 9
Soils 14
Vege tat ion 15
C l imate 15
Fauna 19
D i scus s ion 19
Paleo-Indian S tage 21
Archa ic S tage 21
Formative S tage 22
Late Preh i s toric/Protohis toric S tage 23
Euro - American Contact . . . . 24
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS - (CONTINUED)
Page
Recommendat ions 83
REFERENCES CITED 87
APPENDIX 1 94
iii
LIST OF FIGURES
Page
6. Cottonwood Wash . 12
7. Cottonwood Wash . 12
17 . Large S ide - Notched Po int and Medium Elko Corne r - No tched Points 36
19 . P into S e r i e s Po ints . 38
iv
LIST OF FIGURES - (CONTINUED)
Page
24. C i sco III Preh i s toric Camps ites and Lithic S catters w i th
Known Cul tural Aff i l iations 46
32. General Soil Uni ts w i thin the C i sco Area with .8 Mile
Buffer Zone 85
v
LIST OF TABLES
Page
vi
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
This proj ect was conce ived as the logical continuat ion o f cultural
resource s inves tigations in the Cisco Desert o f Grand County , eas t - central
Utah ( Fi gure 1 ) . As ide from numerous small , energy - related surveys , two
maj or surveys were undertaken in 1 9 7 8 and 1979 by Nickens and Assoc iates,
Inc . of Montro s e , Colorado . Thes e cons is ted of Cla s s II random s trati fied
surveys at a 10% sampling fraction totaling approximately 145 , 00 0 acres
( Figure 2 ) ( Reed and Nickens 1 9 8 0 ) . The lates t effort , C i s c o I I I , was
o r i ginally des igned to continue the 10% random s trati fied s ampling of an
additional 8 0 , 0 0 0 acres in the intermediate and adj acent areas , resulting in
a total s ampling universe o f 2 25 , 000 acres of federally - adminis tered land .
The contract requi red that a predict ive model o f prehis toric s i te and
nons i te locations be cons tructed prior to fi eldwork us ing previously
collected data . The Cisco I I I field survey results would then be an
independent tes t o f b o th the model and the hypotheses generated by the
p revious work o f Nickens and Assoc iates , Inc . The model would have a
predictive accuracy o f at least 80% for both s ite and nons i te locations , or
i f not , i t would be refined us ing the Cisco III survey data and b e further
tes ted with independent data . S i te dens ity and s ens itivity maps generated
from the model would be cons tructed reflect ing probab il i t i e s of s i te and
nons ite o ccurrence for use by BLM resource managers .
The o r i g inal model was cons tructed from 38 preh i storic s ite locat ions
and 57 randomly s ampled nons ite transects encountered during Nickens and
A s s o c iate s , Inc. 1 9 7 8 and 1 9 7 9 fieldwork . Following previously succes s ful
modeling attempts by Holmer ( 1 9 79 ) , Burges s et al. ( 19 80 ) , Larralde and
Chandler ( 1 9 8 1 ) and Kvamme ( 19 8 2 ) o f s omewhat s imilar environmental
cond i t i ons , 16 environmental variables were encoded for each prehis toric
s i te and nons i te location. Clas s i fication accuracy o f 8 7 % for prehistoric
s ites and 83% for nons i tes at the . 05 confidence level was obtained .
WYOMING
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Grand Junction
UTAH COLORADO
NEW MEXICO
ARIZONA
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... H��:::::::: ::
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- Transectl in 596 S a m p le
"" Additional Transects
01983 Study Area
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O State and Private Lands
o Lands Outside of Project Area
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in microenvironmental z ones that were not present in the previous areas ,
e . g . , sand and s i l t dunes and rockshe l ters . Whereas the p revious work
indic ated s ite dens i ty would range from a low of 0 . 3 8 to a h i gh o f 9 . 6 s ites
per s quare mile depending on environmental s tratum , the initial C i s c o I I I
data average was over 1 9 s i tes per square mile , o r 8 times the overall s ite
dens i ty f i gure for the comb ined 1978 and 1979 fieldwork . Predictive
accuracy of the model verified what was obvious ; only 15% of the prehis toric
s i tes were accurately p redicted . Nons ite predict ion accuracy , however , was
h i gh at 9 2 % , and indicated the low s ite dens ity desert shrub areas were
s imilar to thos e surveyed in 1 9 7 8 and 1 9 7 9 .
Due to the sub stantial increase in s ite dens i ty , it was nec e s s ary to
re fine the model to account for the h i gher dens i ty areas . Because o f the
p otential numbe r o f s ites to be recorded and budgetary restrict ions , the
s ampl ing frac tion was reduced to 5% ; 4 , 000 acres rather than 8 , 000 acres
would b e intens ively surveyed . However , the 5% samp l e o f the more
environmentally diverse area obvious ly could no t be used to tes t a mode l
bui l t on the more environmentally homogeneous 1 9 7 8 and 1 9 7 9 field data .
Information on the environmental variables from the s i tes and nons ites
with in the C i sco I I I s tudy area would have to be entered into a new model
that would ideally predict s ite and nons ite locations for the entire 2 25 , 000
acre C isco Desert region. The change in sample fract ion and s ample s iz e
also precluded the u s e o f the previous data i n building the new model . The
"5% s o lution" , as i t came to be known , would be to build the model on the 5 %
survey data from the 1 9 83 f i e l d s eason and then tes t the model o n the
independent data collected during the previous surveys rather than vice
ver s a as o r iginally p l anned .
The s tated purposes o f the contract were to provide data for proj ect
area planning and environmental analysis , to collect cultural r e s ource s data
to further define cultural proces s es and the nature of the resource s , and to
provide recommendations for future res earch needs and directions . The BLM
i s mandated by Federal legislation to identify , evaluate and protect
cul tural res ources on pub l ic lands under its adminis tration . The s e laws
include the Reservo ir S alvage Act of 1 9 60 , as amended by P . L . 93-2 9 1 ; the
National H i s toric Preservation Act of 1 9 6 6 , as amended ; the National
Environmental Pol icy Act of 1 9 6 9 ; the Federal Land Po l icy and Management Act
o f 1 9 7 6 and Executive Order 11593 . Interest in the C i s c o area was
pre c ip i tated by the then increas ing amount of energy - re lated exp loration and
devel opment , and concurrent requirements for surveys prior to land
dis turb ing ac tivitie s . This proj ect was s een as a pos s ib le way to decrease
the nee d for survey in areas where probabil ity o f encountering s igni fi cant
resources are low , and can be predicted with a high level o f confidence .
In working toward the general obj ective o f gene rat ing cultural
resource s data for area-wide pl anning , several specific obj ectives were met .
Recorded data from 1 2 6 s i tes allowed refinement of the cultural h i story o f
4
the C isco area and redefinit ion o f the extent and locati on o f human use o f
the region. As p a r t o f the analy s i s , National Reg i s ter c r i teria (36 CFR
6 0 . 4) were appl i e d and e l i gib i l i ty recommendat ions and m i t igative measure s
were o ffered for each s ite . Us ing mult ivariate discriminant analys i s, a
predi c t ive model for s i te and nons i te locations was bui l t us ing the 10% data
c o llected by the previous Class I I surveys in the C i sco Deser t . Depending
on a number of factors , this mode l yielde d a range of clas s ification
accuracy percentages, all above the required 8 0 % . Two addit ional mode l s ,
constructed us ing the 1 9 83 field se ason 5 % data , produced c l as s i fication
accuracy rates of over 80% for both s ite and nons i te locat ions . Predictive
accuracy over 8 0 % was obtained only for the model based on s o i l s variab les .
This has led to a different unders tanding o f preh i s toric land use patterns
for the area than previous ly hypo thes ized .
As des cribed above, the original terms o f thi s contract required the
survey o f a 10% random sample o f 8 0,000 acres us ing 40 - acre ( 1/2 mile by 1/8
mil e ) trans ect s , i . e . , 2 00 transects . However , the proj ect maps suppl ied by
the BLM included more than 8 0 , 000 acres . To make the actual proj e c t area
conform with the contract requirements ( s ince the contract could not be
modified at that t ime ) , s everal thous and acres o f land were dropped from
cons ideration . In an attempt to reduce b ias , areas o f very s teep rel i e f
along the Book C li ffs were e liminated and only BLM l ands in quarter section
increments were include d . Three sections in the extreme nor theas t corner of
the p roj e c t area along the s tate l ine were also dropped , as thi s area was
not included on the original map in the Reques t for Propo s a l s ( RFP ) . Thi s
method a llowed e limination of areas with di ffering environmental
characte r i s t ic s , rather than in one locali ty only .
Once the s ample universe o f 8 0 , 000 acres was defined, a s imple random
s ampl e method o f transect s e le c tion was chos en rather than random
s tratification based on environmental z ones, due to probl ems previous ly
encountered us ing environmental s trata . Additionally, the s e lection was a
s impl e random s ample rather than a systematic random sample used previously ,
i . e . , areas were not exc luded because o f l ack o f c adastral markers . Each
s e ct i on or quarter secti on was divided into 40 - acre transects as shown in
F i gure 3 , and each transect was as s igned a consecutive number from 1 to
4 , 00 0 . The s e numbers were then printed in a random order by an Osborne - l
microcomputer . The first 2 0 0 transects that did not overlap were se lected
for survey . For examp l e , the firs t transect selected was 4 1 - 13 , a north
s outh transe c t in the Wl/4 of the SEI/4 o f Section 2 9 , T . 2 1 S . , R . 23E .
( Fi gure 3 ) . The number 41 des ignates the secti on and 13 the transect
location w i th in the section .
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6
p roj ect area the s ame s iz e and reduce the s ample to 5% . Only the firs t 100
transects o f the original 2 0 0 randomly s elected transects would be used to
bui l d the new mode l . Of the 40 trans ects surveyed dur ing the firs t f i e ld
s e ss ion , 23 were in the first randomly selected 100 transect s . S ite and
nons i te data from the other 17 trans ects could not be used dur ing model
bui l ding , however , they could be used as additional independent tes t cases .
Along w i th the s ite and nons ite information from the previously surveyed
areas , thes e trans ects would be used to t e s t the mode l ' s predi ctive
accuracy .
To maintain cons is tency with the previous work , preh i s toric s i tes were
defined as containing five or more arti facts within a reasonabl e are a , or a
feature and one o r more art i facts . I f an artifac t , or c luster o f art i fac ts ,
was located more than approximately 25 meters ( 8 2 fee t) from the original ly
discovered s i te , it was usually recorded s eparately and its assoc iation with
o ther s i tes no ted. Aga in, in the high site density areas along Cottonwood
7
Wash , thi s rule o f thumb was occas ionally overlooked and s i te b oundaries
s tretched s omewhat depending on the s imilarity o f arti fac tual material and
the micro - environment . H i s toric s ite defini tions were s imilar , with recent
trash scatters ( le s s than 50 years old) not be ing recorded as s i te s .
Diagno s t ic p reh i s toric art i facts were collected , as was obs idian and chert
s ource material . Diagno s t i c h i s toric artifacts were drawn and described in
the field or collected . In addition to all standard s ite forms and map s , a
trans e c t form ( from Larralde and Chandler 1981) was comp l e ted for each
surveyed transect indicating topography , hydrology and vegetation zones .
For this publication , the report was edited by Mari lyn Martorano ,
Will iam K i l l am and J ohn Bradley . Word proc e s s ing and reformat ing was done
by Beverly Breda and Kimberly Forsyth . Goodson & Associates , Inc .
contr ibuted the materials, operators' salary and use o f the word proces s ing
equipment .
The report was orginally submitted to the BLM in Augus t , 19 84, as the
final contract deliverable . At: that time it included e i ght additional
appendi ces , including site forms , computer printouts and art i fact catalogs .
This information is avai lable to the interes ted reader at the BLM Moab
D i s tr i c t O ffice . Finally , due to time and budget res trictions , there has
been no attempt to cons ider any reports wri t ten s ince the ori ginal
subm i s s i on in 19 84 .
8
CHAPTER II
ENVIRONMENTAL OVERVIEW
LOCATION
The 8 0 , 000 acre C isco III Cultural Resource S tudy Area is located in
eas t - central Grand County , Utah , in the east half of the BLM Book Mountain
Planning Uni t , Moab D istrict ( Fi gure 1) . The area is bounded on the north
by the f i rs t terrace o f the Book C l i ffs , on the east by the Colorado - Utah
border , the south by an arbitrary l ine about f ive miles north o f the
Colorado River and on the west by an arbitrary l ine approximate ly ten miles
east o f Thompson , Utah ( Fi gure 2 ) . The nearest town is C isco , Utah , located
approximate ly two m iles south o f the proj e c t area. The nearest maj or
popUlation is Grand Junc tion , Colorado , s ituated approximately 30 miles east
of the p roj e c t area. Interstate 7 0 is the main thoroughfare through the
area and U . S . H i ghway 6 / 5 0 provides secondary access . Access to various
sections o f the proj ect area is via several graveled and unimproved ranch or
railroad service roads.
GEOMORPHOLOGY
Figure 4 dep icts the geologic and soils cross sec tion i llustrated in Figure
5 . As detailed in the latter figure , several Mesa Verde group sandstone and
shale strata ( ca . 70 mill ion years old) dip in a general northwest direction
on the northwest s i de o f the are a , forming the Book C l iffs ( Cashion 1 9 73;
Barnes 1 9 7 8) . Forming the southern margin o f the Tavaputs Plateau , the Book
C l iffs attain a maximum elevat ion of about 10,000 feet , and descend in large
escarpments to about 5 , 200 feet in the proj e c t area ( Figure 5) . The c l i ffs
drop to the relatively flat Mancos Shale lowlands o f the C isco Desert , lying
at about 4 , 5 0 0 feet. Below the upper Cretaceous age ( c a. 100 m i l l ion years
old) shal e deposi ts of the desert l i e the colo r - banded strata of the
Jurassi c ( c a . 1 5 0 mill ion years old) shales and sandstones of the
Summerville and Morrison Format ions , lying at an elevation o f about 4 , 700
fee t .
HYDROLOGY
Drainages in the proj ect area include Cottonwood , C isco , Nash , Danish ,
Sagers and P into Washes , and Westwater , Sulphur and B itter Creeks , flowing
in a general southeasterly direction from the Book C liffs to the Colorado
River. Most are intermittent or ephemeral in nature , with more water in
the i r northern reaches , when any is present at all , and which is often
absorbed or flows underground at some po int in the desert . Cottonwood Wash
(Figures 6 and 7) is the largest drainage in the area, draining a wide area
of the Book C l i ffs and is fed by numerous springs . It maintained a steady
flow o f water at all p oints observed during the course of fieldwork.
Westwater Greek (Figure 8) was also flowing along most of its extent across
9
o Soil unit I
o Soil un it 2
f;;:i�:D S o il u n i t 3
O S o il unit 5
� SOil unit 8
EE9 S o i l unit 9
Cr oss Section
(Figure 5)
R.25E.
10
Elevation
In Feet
C)":rj
1-'- H BOOK CLIFFS
III G)
CISCO DESERT COLORADO RIVER
o c:::
o :;0
/:%1
H
H Ln
H · Project Area
Boundary
P'.Ject
Boundary
� 550
I
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Soil Units
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SE/SW/SW/SW Sec_
T,I BS•• R22E.
34 o Miles 5 SE/SE/SE/SE Sec.
T .20S •• R.25E.
15
('0
(l Figure 5
rt
1-'-
0 REPRESENT ATIVE Key to Vegetation Zones
::;
G EOLOGIC and SOILS
CROSS SECTION Soil 2 Desert Shrub
CISC O III
Soil 3 Greasewood
Soil B Juniper
FIGURE 6 . View of the head o f Cottonwood Wash at the base o f the
Book C l iffs , looking northwe st from the north r im of Cottonwood
Canyon near s i te 42GR165 9 .
12
FIGURE 8 . Wes twater Creek looking north from S ite 4 2 GR17 l 5 .
13
the desert , alternately going subsurface then resurfacing at several points
as it approached the Colorado River. Much of its water is p resently being
diverted to irrigate vineyards near the Book C liffs . No other drainages
were observed to contain water during the time of fie ldwork.
SOILS
The general soils actual ly occurring in the study area are units 1 , 2 ,
3 , 5 , 8 and 9 ( Figure 4 ) . General soil unit 1 contains taxonomic units
Mesa, Mack and Chipeta and consists of lo amy soils on al luvial fan pediments
and shale p l ains associated with minor and ephemeral drainages. Unit 2 ,
containing taxonomic units Chip eta , Killpack and Blue flat , consists of
cl ayey soils on shale plains , pediments , cuestas and ridges associated with
lowlands between drainages. Major soil unit 3 contains the units Toddler ,
Ravo l a and G lenton and consists o f loamy soils located on fans , flood pl ains
and along drainages ( Cisco Wash , Sagers Wash , Cottonwoo d Wash , and
Westwate r , Sulphur and Bitter Creeks ) . Unit 5 consists o f loamy soils
l ocated on cuestas , benches , val ley sideslopes and rock outcrops, contains
taxonomic units Mo enkopie , Nakai and Rock Outcrop , and is characterized by
Morrison and Burro Canyon fo rmations of the Colorado River cliffs. Unit 8
contains taxonomic units Shalako, dry - Thedalund and stony - Hanksville , and
consists o f lo amy and stony soils found on benches , cuestas , al luvial fans
and canyon escarpments immediately be low the Book Cliffs and just above the
Colorado River. Soil unit 9 contains taxonomic units Barx , Strych and
S andoval and consists o f loamy soils located primarily on al luvial fans and
fan p ediments be low the Book Cliffs.
14
So i l s o f the area reflect the underlying geology and , in large part ,
determine or l imit the present and past vegetation communi ties . The s o i l s
are generally dry , warm and deep , Aridisols or Ent i s o l s , o r more
speci fically , Haplargids , Calciorthids , Torriothents and Torri fluvents
( Upper Colorado Region Inter - Agency Group 1971: 23; Hutchings and Murphy
1981:29). The s o i l s are alkal ine in character and often contain an hori z on
h i gh in calc ium at s ome depth . Without irri gation , areas dominated by these
s o i l s are o f l ittle use except for l imited graz ing and wildl ife ( Hutchings
and Murphy 1981:29). Surfic ially richer , more recent alluvial depos i ts
occur along Cottonwood Wash and Wes twater Creek ( Cashion 1973) and a more
humi c ( carbonaceous ) loess may be found bounding the desert near the base o f
and atop the f i r s t terrace of the Book C l i ffs .
VEGETATION
Vegetation o f the s tudy area may be divided into maj or z ones , related ,
in l arge p ar t , to s o i l type , elevation and topographic s i tuation ( Fi gure 5).
The Aridis o l s o f the Manco s Shale Lowlands are conducive to the growth o f
shadscale , s al tbush , b i g s age and o ther low , hearty , desert shrub plants
( Fi gure 9). Gras ses ( Fi gure 10) occur in varying amounts , from l e s s than 5%
in the des e r t shrub , to almo s t total domination in "The Grass i e s" near
Danish Flat , where loess s o i l s prevail . The alluvial depos i ts along the
larger drainages support a more lush tamarisk and greas ewood communi ty
( Fi gure 11). Thes e "greas ewood belts" o f Cottonwood Wash and Wes twater
Creek are especially prominent features when viewed from the uplands
bounding the des e r t or from the air . The uplands are predominated by
junip e r woodlands ( Fi gure 12) with scattered pinyon pines on s ome mes a tops
in the Book C l i ffs . Hi storic impact , sheep overgraz ing in particular , has
altered much of the native rangeland and resulted in the secondary
appearance of cheatgrass brome , which now dominates much of the area .
Edible p l ant spec ies are abundant in s ome areas during the i r seasonal
appearance . Sego l i l ies , with the ir edible roots , appear dur ing May and
June , and Indian r ice gras s , widespread in July and Augus t , provide eas i ly
col lectible foods tuffs ( Larralde and Chandler 1981:97). Plains pricklypear
is avai labl e during a l l summer months , as are cattai l , both providing viable
food s ources . The s e are but a few o f the edible spec ies pre sent , but serve
to demons trate that transhumance could eas ily be e ffected in the area at
certain times of year . Table 1 provides a l i s t of vegetat ion obs e rved in
the project area .
CLIMATE
15
FIGURE 9 . Mat saltbush vege tation at site 43GR1677, looking east .
16
FIGURE 11. Greasewood vegetation at site 42GR1628, looking
southwest.
17
while August through Octobe r have the most (Reed and Nickens 1 9 80:18 ) . An
ave rage o f ten to twenty inches of snow falls annually ( Richardson et a1 .
1 9 81 d : 7 0 ) .
I I I
I Common Name I Latin Name I
I I I
I Bulrush I Scirpus .§lL.. I
I Rush I Juncus .§lL.. I
I S alina Wildrye I Elymus salinus I
I Indian Rice Grass I Oryzopsis hymenoides I
I Scar1et G l ob emal1 ow I Sphaeralcea coccinea I
I Utah S e rviceb erry I Ame1anchier utahensis I
\Cliffrose I Cowania stansburiana I
I Utah Junipe r I Juniperus utahensis I
I Pinyon Pine I Pinus edulis I
I Mountain Mahogany I Cercocarpus montanum I
I Sunflower I Helianthus annuus ,
I Winter - fat I Eurotia lanata I
I Big Sagebrush I Artemesia tridentata tridentata I
I Wyoming Big S agebrush I Artemesia tridentata wyomingensis I
, Mat Saltbush I Atriplex corrugata I
I Four - wing S altbush I Atriplex canescens I
I Shadscale I Atriplex confertifolia I
I Nuttall Saltbush I Atriplex nuttal lii I
I Rabbitbrush I Chrysothamnus .§lL.. I
I Greasewoo d I Sarcobatus vermiculatus I
I Fremont Barberry I Berberis fremontii ,
I Blackbrush I Coleogyne ramosissima I
I Tamarisk I Tamarix pentandra I
I Pl ains Pricklypear I Opunltia po 1yacantha I
I Cheatgrass Brome I Bromus tectorum I
I Tansy Mustard I Descurainla sophia I
I Broom Snakeweed I Gutierrezia sarothrae I
I Single Leaf Ash I Fraxinus anoma1 a I
I Gamb e l Oak I Quercus gambe 1li ,
I Narrow 1 eaf Yucca I Yucca angustissima I
I Bitterb rush I Purshia tridentata I
I Common C ottonwoo d I Populus fremontii ,
I Mo rmon Tea I Ephedra viridis I
I Spine l ess Hopsage I Grayia brandegel I
I Sego Lily I Ca1 ochortus gunnisonii I
I J imsonweed I Datura mete10ides I
I Miner's Lettuce I Montia perfoliata I
I Prickly Lettuce I Lactuca se rrio la I
I Russian Thistle I Sal so la kali ,
I B1ue Grama I Boute loua gracilis I
I Crested Wheatgrass I Agropyron smithii I
I Prarie Pepperwee d I Lepidium densiflorum I
I I I
18
TABLE l . ( Cont inued)
I I I
, C ommon Name , Lat in Name I
' ------�,�- I
I Quackgrass , Agropyron repens I
I NeedleandThread Grass , S t ipa comata ,
, Curly ( Galleta) G rass I Hilaria jamesii ,
, Crytograms ( Lichens) I ,
I Threadleaf Groundsel I Senecio longi lobus I
I Loc oweed I Astragalus � ,
I W i l d Oat I Avena fatua ,
I Hedgehog cac tus I Echinocereus engelmani i I
I Cattai l I Typha latifo l a I
I Alka l i Seepweed I Suaeda fruticosa I
I , 1
C limate in the study area is typ i fied by ho t dry summers and cold
winters . An average of 60 days may be expected to exceed 9 0°F, and 160
frost - free days between last kill ing frost and the f irs t of the following
season are typ ical (Richardson et al . 1 9 8 1 a : 5 9; 1 9 8 1b:6 3 ) . Tabl e 2
summar i z es key temperature data for the town o f C isco, also app l icable to
the study are a .
FAUNA
DISCUSSION
19
TABLE 2 . Key Temperature Data for C isco Are a .
I
, Mean Mean Mean High Low
I Annual Annual Annual
I Maximum Minimun
I
I
I 51.9 67 . 7 36 . 0 109 - 26
,
After Wormington 1 9 5 5 .
I I I
I Common Name I Lat in Name I
I ______________________
I --------------------------- I
�
I Mule Deer I Odoco ileus hem ionus I
I Pronghorn Antel op e I Antel ocapra americana I
I Coyo t e I Canis latrans I
' Badger I Taxidea taxus I
I Golden Eagle ' Aquila chrysaetos I
I Lesser Nighthawk I Chorde iles acutipennis I
I Loggerhead Shrike I Lanius ludovici anus I
I Marsh Hawk I Circus cyaneus I
I Gamb e l ' s Quai l I Cal l ipepla gambel i i I
, Western Meadowlark I S turnel l a neglecta I
, White - tailed Prairie Dog I Cynomys l eucurus ,
I Desert Cottontai l Rabb i t I Sy1vi lagus audoboni I
I Black- tailed J ack Rabb i t I Lepus ca1 ifornicus I
I Kangaroo Rat I D ipodomys ordii I
I Pocke t Mouse I Perognathus apache I
I C o l l ared L i z ard I Crotaphytus col 1aris I
I Leopard L i z ard I Gambelia wisl i zsen i i I
I Short Horned Lizard I Phrynosoma douglassi I
I Midget Rattlesnake I Crotalus viridis I
I Gopher Snake I Pi tuophis me 1ano1 eucus I
I I I
20
CHAPTER III
PALEO-INDIAN STAGE
ARCHAIC STAGE
The Early Archaic S tage in Utah partial ly overlaps the Plano Tradition
o f the Pal e o - Indian S tage. A number of rockshelters and cave sites on the
Plateau have provided evidence of this overlap , as well as de fining an
Archaic cul tural sequence . Wal ters and Cowboy Caves provided C - 14 dates of
c a . 6 8 7 5 BC (88 7 5 ±1 2 5 BP) and ca. 6690 BC ( 86 9 0±7 5 BP) , marking the earl iest
known o c cupation of the Colorado Plateau ( S chroedl 1 9 7 6 : 2 4 ) . Assoc iated
artifacts suggest an Archaic, rather than a Paleo-Indian lifestyle.
21
Using data from Cowboy Cave and Sudden Shelter , Schro edl ( 19 7 6 ) has
devised a regional Archaic chronology , broken into four phases , each
signaled by the appearance o f new projectile point typ es and/or population
fluctuati ons . The following description of the Colorado Plateau Archa ic has
been taken largely from Schroedl's 1 9 7 6 dissertation . Po int styles are
emphasiz e d , as many of these styles were found dur ing the present study , and
prov ide the most sensitive method of temporal control in this area.
The earl iest phase is the Bl ack Knol l Phase , 6 3 5 0 - 4 2 5 0 BC ( 8300 - 6200
BP ) . The be ginning o f this phase was marked by the e fflorescence o f the
Elko Corne r - Notched dart p o int , a style which remained popular through the
Proto - Histor ic era. Pinto S eries po ints became popular dur ing the l atter
half o f the Black Kno l l Phase , suggesting ties with the Great Basin and , to
a l imited extent , with Southwest populations. An early Pinto var iant has
been found on the same site as Folsom po ints , and together , the styles form
the Moab C omp l ex ( Hunt and Tanner 1 9 6 0:1 11 ) .
The f inal Archaic phase defined by Schroedl is the Dirty Devil Phase ,
1 3 5 0 Be - AD 4 5 0 ( 3 3 0 0 - 1500 BP ) . The phase is not we l l rep resented
archaeologica1ly and shows few innovations in p roject i l e p o ints , but rather
exhib its continuity from e ar l ie r phases by the continued use of Gypsum and
E 1ko S e r ies po ints. Items such as unfired clay objects , basketry and
sandals distinguish this phase more than p rojectile p o ints . The end o f the
D irty Devil Phase is signaled by the advent of smal ler p rojectile p o ints.
Larger po ints , i . e . , Elko Corne r - Notched and Gypsum , remained in use , but
more as cutting tools than projectile po ints (Madsen and Berry 1 9 7 5: 394 ) .
FORMATIVE STAGE
22
Plains influence i s sugges ted on at leas t the northern periphery (Aikens
1 9 66 ) , however , the extent and form of the influence is the core of the
p roblem . Theories range from a diffus ion o f S outhwes te rn cultural elements
to an indigenous Archai c population , to the migration of a Basketmaker I I
level population from the Virgin Anasaz i area ( Gunnerson 1 9 6 9 : 1 7 0 ; Aikens
1972 : 63 ) .
Mater ial culture remains indicate that the Fremont were not completely
s e dentary , w i th hunt ing and gathering o f wild resourc e s remaining a c r i tical
e lement of the ir sub s i s tence act ivities (Reed 1 9 84 : 31) . Charac te ri s t i c
Fremont proj ectile p o ints include Ros e Spr ing , De se rt S i de - No tched , Gypsum
and the E1ko Series . Ceramics include graywares , several variations o f
b 1 ack- on-wh ite and polychrome wares (Amb ler 1 9 6 6 : 31 ) , Mos t o f thes e p oint
s tyl e s , and several vari e t ies of grayware ceramics were recorded during thi s
p roj e c t .
The Turne r - Look s ite , which may repre sent a southern extens ion o f the
U inta Fremont ( Schroedl and Hogan 1 9 7 5 ; Lindsay 1 9 7 6 ) , is located directly
adj acent to the proj ect area . Living in semi - subterranean hous e s o f dry
laid masonry , the inhab itants cul t ivated corn and p os s ibly squash .
D iagno s t i c art ifac t s , including Uinta Gray ceramics , p lace o ccupation o f the
s i te to AD 1 0 5 0 o r later (Wormington 1 9 5 5 : 7 5 ; Jennings 1 9 7 8 : 15 6 ) .
Bec aus e Ute s i tes o ften lack the typ ical small s i de - notched p oints o r
c rude grayware ceramics commonly attributed to their culture , the ir remains
c an be eas ily confused with cultural material fall ing anywhere in the
cul tural c ontinuum from Paleo - Indian to Ute , whose pedestrian hunting-
23
gathering sub s i stence s trategies left s imilar archaeological evidence. The
neare s t recorded s tructural evidence of Ute occupation is in the Uinta Bas in
some 70 miles to the north ( Chandler and Nickens 1979 ) . A diagnostic knife ,
a s i te containing pos t - contac t glas s b eads and a s i te radiocarbon dated to
ca. AD 1840 ( 1 10±50 BP ) present firm evidence of Late Prehis toric/
Protohis tor i c pre s ence in the C i sco III s tudy area .
24
CHAPTER IV
One hundred twenty - six sites were recorde d during the C isco III
cultural resources survey . This to tal inc ludes I I I aboriginal sites ( Figure
1 3 ) and 15 histo r i c sites (Figure 14 ) , one of which ( 42GRl7 14) is a
p rehisto r i c s i te w i th an over lying historic component . Summaries of
prehistoric and historic site attr ibutes are included as Appendices 2 and 3 .
A total of 1 2 9 isolated finds , 103 abo r iginal, 2 5 historic and 1 human tooth
o f indeterminable age, was recorded in the study area.
The high site dens ity areas along Cottonwood Wash and Westwater Creek
are recommended as e l i gible for nomination to the Nat i onal Register of
Historic Places ( NRHP) as p roposed archaeological districts . Diagnostic
art i facts indicate utilizat ion of these areas from the Early Archaic through
Late Prehistoric/Protohistoric periods, with possible Paleo - Indian
uti l iz ation indicated for the proj ect area at large . Carbon samp les
provided C - 14 dates of ca . AD 1 840 ( ll0±50 BP) and ca . AD 140 ( 18 l0±7 0 BP)
for s ites 42GR16 5 8 and 42GR16 8 0 respectively . Charcoal was recovered from
two o ther sites , but was no t analyzed .
PREHISTORIC RESOURCES
S ite Types
The maj o r i ty of the sites were p laced into one o f two categor ies based
on the presence/absence of groundstone or evidence of a hearth ( Table 4) .
If e i ther or bo th o f these were present , the site was deemed a campsite,
presumably the locus of mul tiple or long - term ( at least overnight) ac tivity .
Campsites totaled 5 1 , or 45 . 94% o f the abori ginal s i te invento ry . S i tes
lacking these tradi t i onal diagnostics numbered 49 , or 44 . 14% of the
abo r i g inal s i te inventory , and were called l i thic scatters, those local i t ies
which exhibit evidence of sho r t - term or l imited act ivity . See Figure 15 for
distribution of campsites and l i thic scatters .
25
SITES IN COTTONWOOD
OlSTRICT
1611 1612 1613 1614
1628 1629 1630 1&31
1632 1633 1634 1635
1636 163T 1&38 1642
1643 1644 1645 1655
165& 1657 1658 1673
1687 168S 1689 1690
1691 1692 1694 1695
1696 1697 1698 1701 lUi �
1702 1703 1717 1718 Wl1
1719 1724 1725 f732
rl'33 1734 1606 1607
160B
T. ISS. 1983 PROJECT AREA 80UNOAAY
26
T.l9S.
27
T. 1 7S •
• CAMPSITES
• LITHIC SCATTE�S
28
TABLE 4 . S ite Type Frequencies .
I I I I
I S ite T::i12e I Total I Percentage I
I I I I
I L i th i c S catter I 46 I 41 . 44 I
I I I I
I Lithic/Ceramic Scatter I 3 I 2 . 71 I
I I I I
I Campsi te w i th Hearth ( s ) I 42 I 3 7 . 84 I
I I I I
I Campsi te with Groundstone I 5 I 4 . 50 I
I I I I
I Campsi t e with Hearth and Groundstone I 4 I 3 . 60 I
I I I I
I Rockshel te r I 6 I 5 . 40 I
I I I I
I Quarry I 2 I 1 . 80 I
I I I I
I Quarry and Campsite with Hearth (s) I 3 I 2 . 71 I
I I I I
I I I I
I Total I 111 I 100 . 00 I
I I I I
Whi l e most sites may be p l aced c learly into one of these two
catego r ies , some s i tes may be misclass i fied due to burying o r mixing of
cultural deposits . This would be a significant factor espec ially when
conside r ing sand dune s i tes , where repeated deposition and de flation
obliterate cul tural features . S ix rockshe lte rs , or 5 . 40% of the site
inventory , were found below the sandstone caprock topp ing the mesas
northwest and southeast of the desert lowlands . All rockshelters c ontained
charcoal or burned rock and are assume d to have been habitations or
campsi tes .
29
Intuitively , it was felt that camps ites were occup ied for l onger
periods of time and therefore would contain a variety of too l typ e s des i gned
for a broad range of specific tasks . They may also exhib it a variety o f
too l reducti on stage s and/or types and amounts o f flake material. Lithic
scatters , on the other hand , should be more restricted in terms o f the se
variab l e s . There fore , the experiment was set up s o that:
HI The material remains o f " camps ite s " vs . " l ithic scatters "
di ffer in terms of l ithic content.
Material Types
Flaked stone arti facts, including formal too l s , core s , and debitage ,
were the most common cultural remains found in the proj ect are a . Tool
manufacturing waste flakes were by far the most common , with 3 , 1 68 flakes
recorde d . Thi s represents a s ampl e of the flake s located on recorded s ites ,
as transects were used to s ampl e the l ithic population on l arge s ites . Five
bas ic material types were repre s ented . In order o f the ir prevalence , the s e
were: chert . chalcedony , quartz ite . basalt and obs i dian . Chert and
chalcedony are both waxy - appearing cryptocrysta l l ine s which occur in a wide
range of colors . The ir principal difference , for the purp o s e o f this
proj ect , i s that chert is generally op aque whi le chalcedony i s more
translucent.
30
Chert material o f many co lors was observed outcropping in the Brushy
Basin Member o f the Morr ison Formation , p resent in depos i ts up to 4 5 0 feet
thick ( Barnes 1 9 7 8 : 5 7 ) in the color - banded r iver c l i ffs southeast of the
p roj e c t area, near the Colorado River . The second most common toolstone
observed was chalcedony , wh ich outcrops in the Summerville Formation
( Cash i on 1 97 3 ; Powers 1 9 8 3 ) found south o f the stUl;ly area and in Arches
National Park ( B e rry 1 9 7 5 ) . Quartz ite, me tamorphosed sandstone , is
generally gray or whi te in color , but ranges in some areas from red to green
to black . It is generally granular in character , ranging from fine to
coarse - grained, with recrystal l ized quartz cementing the grains . Quartzi te
cobbles wer e found in drainages and eroded areas of the Morr ison Formation
on the south side of the p roj ect area . Basalt and obsidian are igneous
mater ials di ffering mainly in that obsidian is a natural glass while basa l t
l acks the glassy character . Black is the most common color, but both can
o ccur in a wide range o f colors depending on the chemical content o f the
particular volcanic extrusion . Neither basalt nor obsidian o c curs naturally
within the proj ect area . Trace element analysis for the purpose of source
ident ification was performed on five obsidian flakes and one p o int, but
results were inconclusive . The relative frequency o f all recorded flake
materi als and the ir percentages is presented in Table 5 .
Art ifact C la s s e s
Twenty - five diagnos tic proj ectile po ints were collected from s i te
c ontexts , providing temporal control for 19 sites, while 7 were isolated
finds . Table 6 provides proposed temporal sp ans for e i ght dist inc t ive p o int
types found dur ing the C isco I I I survey. Some overlap in dates exists
depending on the author consul ted , and the longest suggested time spans o f
use have been indicated .
31
T ABLE 5 . Percentages of Material Types .
I I I I
I I Total Number I Percent o f I
I Material I o f Flakes I Total Flakes I
I I I I
I I I I
I Chert I I I
I I I I
I Maroon I 740 I 23 . 3 I
I Brown I 323 I 10 . 2 I
I White I 270 I 8.5 I
I Gray I 135 I 4.2 I
I Other I � I ..J.Q....1 I
I I 1 , 79 1 I 56 . 4 I
I I I I
I Chalcedony I I I
I I I I
I White I 501 I 15 . 8 I
I Gray I 65 I 2.0 I
I Other I -ill I -2.J. I
I I 748 I 23 . 5 I
I I I I
I Quartz i te I I I
I I I I
I White I 237 I 7 .5 I
I Gray I 158 I 5.0 I
I Other I --M. I � I
I I 475 I 15 . 0 I
I I I I
I Basalt I 140 I 4.4 I
I I I I
I Obs idian I 9 I .2 I
I I I I
I Petri fied Wood I 2 I . 06 I
I I I I
I O ther I 3 I . 09 I
I I ! I
I I I I
I Total I 3,1 6 8 I 9 9 . 65 I
I I I I
32
TABLE 6 . Proposed Proj e c t i l e Po int Temporal Spans .
I I z I I I 1 I
I I
I I'Ll I Ua u I a � I �
I'Ll H I � O I
I O � I E-! I zE-! c.:: I a
I ....:l u i
....:l
....:l ::r::: z
I U U II ;,...:;I'Ll Z I C/) II C/) II C/)O E-!Z II �C/) C/)E-! II �c/) bz 1I HIPROPOSED CULTURE I
>< P-. H Q:l
<
YEAR � c.::
STORY S EQUENCE I
0 0 ....:l O H I'Ll O P-. I'Ll 0
P-. ::r::: c.::
C/)
I
I I
I, ,
1900
,
I, ,
,
I, I, Protoh i s toric ,
I
1500
I I ,
I
6500 ,
I I Paleo - I
I 1 I Indian
1I
I
I
7 000
I
II
After S chroedl 1 9 76 , Holmer 1 9 7 8 , Gunnerson 1969 and Aikens 1 9 7 0 .
33
a b c
d e
f 9
34
apparently remained in use through the Late Preh i s tori c , ca . AD 1 3 5 0 (Madsen
and Berry 1 9 7 5 : 394) . Mean measurements for the s even po ints are : Length :
too fragmentary for accurate measurement ( The s ingle comp lete spec imen is
3 . 9 cm . ) , Width : 2 . 2 1 cm . , Thickne s s : . 47 cm .
35
a
B
: �
.: �
: .
� - ...
.'
I
c d
•�
. '
_ IIJ ! l ' (
, ,
I
e f
36
a b
R
f , , ,I '.:
' ;,
. . .
,," .. - ::0-
I
d e
37
a b
c d
e f
38
a b
I
c d
39
Smal l Corne r -Notched Points ( 2 specimens ; Figure 2 1 , a and b ) . The
po ints in thi s category are o f Late Prehis tor ic/Proto - H i s to r i c manufacture ,
dating from AD 5 0 0 - 1 7 0 0 , for use as arrowpo ints (Reed and Kainer 1 9 7 8 ) .
Cultural affil iat ion of thi s po int s tyle i s difficult to de term ine as i t was
in wide spread use acr o s s the Colorado Plateau , Great Bas in and Plains
cul ture areas , e specially after introduct ion o f the hors e . Mean
measurements of the po ints are : Length : too fragmentary for accurate
measurement , Width : 1 . 45 cm . , Thickne s s : . 3 5 cm .
B i faces are patterned tools exhib i t ing b ifac ial retouch o f all
surfac e s , thinning , and a generally acute cutt ing edge angle . They occur in
a var iety of forms and therefore imply a variety of potential func t ions .
Subtypes include : 1 ) preforms , 2 ) dr ill s , and 3 ) knives . The maj o r i ty o f
the b ifac e s are made o f c ryptocrystall ine material s . A diagnos ti c b i face
( Fi gure 2 2 ) recorded on 42GR1 6 3 l has been identified as a Shoshonean kni fe
( Fr i s o n 1 9 7 8 : 80 ) .
Edge - retouched flakes are tools with uni fac ial o r b ifac ial re touch
al ong one o r more selected working edge s . They may be f o rmal or expedient
tools , and gene rally rece ive less edge modificat ion than b i faces , resul ting
in a more irregular outl ine . The edge angle along the working e dge vari e s
from acute to obl i que depending on the de s ired task , which may have involved
cutting , scrap ing or sawing . Tools such as s c rapers and retouched flake s
are inc luded in this category . Mos t obl i que - angle edge - re touched flakes
( fo rmal too l s ) are made o f coarse mate rials , 1 . e . , quartz i te and basal t ,
who se inherent qualities make them sui table for heavy - duty s craping and
cutting tasks . Retouched flakes ( expe dient too l s ) are generally of
c ryptocrystall ine materials .
40
I�
�! I '·
a b
FIGURE 2 1 . Small Corner - Notched Late Prehi s tori c/Proto - Hi s toric Points .
a) 42GR1 607. l , b ) 42GR1 6 59 . 1. c ) 4 2GR1 64 5 . l - Rose Spr ing.
d) 4 2GR1 6 8 l - Small S temmed Fremont . Drawings actual s iz e .
41
I.
42
Grounds tone ( 2 1 spec imen s )
Ten s i tes contr ibuted a total of 2 1 part ial o r comp le te grounds tone
artifacts . S even manos were found , four complete . One mano was two -handed
and the remainder were one - handed var ie t ie s . Two manos were b i facially
ut i l ized and the remainder were uni fac ial . Ten metate s , both pecked and
nonpecked vari e t i e s , of flat s l ab typ e s were represented . Two were c omp lete
and e i ght were fragmentary . Four grounds tone fragments rema in unidenti f i e d .
Al l grounds tone was made of sands tone , and probably transported to the s ites
from the outcrops bounding the de s e r t on the north and s outh .
Ceramics ( 5 0 specimen s )
4 2 GRl 609 - E i ght body sherds were noted and collecte d . The sherds are
thick ( up to one cm . ) , and we l l - fired with a dark brown to browni sh - gray
core . The temp e r i s made up mos tly of l arge par t i c l e s of semi - angular
quartz pro truding through the surface , with s ome rounded sand grains also
noted . Fracture i s p laty , with smo o thing/scrap ing s triat ions noted on the
interi o r s ide o f the maj o r i ty of the sherds . Color ranges from a yellow
brown buff to reddish - orange , with some evidence of fire - clouds noted . Two
sherds exhib i t a s l i ght outward curve , res embl ing the neck of an o l l a - shaped
ves s e l . These sherds were class i fi e d as Great Salt Lake Gray by Prisc illa
Ellwoo d ( 1 9 8 4 : p e r s onal communication) .
42GR1 6 1 3 - Five small body she rds ( the large s t b e ing 2 cm . long ) ,
probab ly from the s ame ves s e l , were collected . The core is gray , as i s the
surface , whi ch has weathered or chipped away on a portion o f all the sherds .
Temper cons i s t s o f large particles o f angular , mi lky quartz , and smaller
p i e c e s of sub - angular rock , p o s s ibly b ioti te gni e s s . Als o no ted were two or
three smal l particles of white she l l , ident ified by a pos i t ive hydrochloric
aci d tes t . Temper pro trudes through the surface on the p ieces where the
surface remains . The se sherds were also clas s ified as Great Salt Lake Gray .
43
4 2 GR16 7 6 - One very small ( 1 . 4 cm . in length) sherd was recovere d .
Temper i s small p ieces of sub - angular crushed rock , poss ibly feldspar , with
a very small percentage of mic a , and an almos t black core . The exterior is
a brown i sh - gray . Pos i t ive clas s ificat ion was not made , however , the sherd
mos t c losely resembles those clas s i fied as Emery Gray .
4 2GRl6 8 6 - Thirteen body sherds , probably from the s ame ve s sel , and
one corrugated rim sherd were collected . The core of the body sherds i s
medium gray , as i s the exterior . Temper cons i s t s of small p articles o f
angular , crushed dark rock , pos s ibly bas alt or b iot i te gnie s s ; with some
f ine angular quartz and mica ( rare ) . The outs ide surface has been pol i she d ,
and scrap ing s triat ions are evident on the ins ide . Some exfoliat ion has
occurred on two of the sherds , and there is a pos s ib ility that a slip or
float was used . The se sherds have been class ified as Emery Gray .
The s ingle rim sherd (Figure 23) has a dark gray core w i th temper
cons i s t ing of crushed quartz and gnie s s . The surface i s l i ght t o medium
gray , w i th s ome temper protruding . Corrugat ion is well - smoothed , w i th no
finger or p inch marks . The sherd was tentatively clas s i fied as Mancos Gray
by Calvin Jennings ( 1984 : personal communication) .
44
a l l three Fremont cultural groups were not actually uti l i z ing the are a , they
d i d , at leas t , maintain s teady contact with one another .
D is cus s ion
Format ive S tage s i tes , or tho se o f Fremont affil iation , are indicated
by grayware ceramics and d i s t inctive Rose Spring and sma l l s temmed p o ints .
I n add i ti on , Desert S ide - Notched po ints may date to thi s , or the l ater Late
Preh i s toric/Prot oh i s toric t ime period . Trade with the S outhwest culture
area dur ing the Format ive S tage is indicated by the presence of a Mancos
Gray sherd found a s s o ciated with Emery Gray sherds .
HISTORIC RESOURCES
S ite Type s
45
0' S o i l u n i t boun d a r i e s
.0 Archaic
.0 F r e m o n t
.. A La te P r e h i s t oric
S o l i d symbols d e n o h c a m p s i t e s
Op e n symbols d e n o t e l i t h i c scatters
T. 1 9 S .
46
Mat erial Culture
9) o ther me tal - l i cense plate , sheet tin , Texaco s ign , t in cup , bed
frame s , buckets , stove parts , railroad cons truc tion metal ,
rai lroad s p ikes , shovel , buckles , barrel stay s , s crews , c o ffee
pot , various tools and hardware , footlocke r , wagon parts ,
horse shoe , pressure gauge ( Fi gure 2 5 ) .
11) o ther - shel l buttons , glass trade beads , tobacco p ipe , b ricks .
47
Air �
A.
. . . . . ��AT60A!/82\: ·t. �· -.' . . .
: � .
, '
. . . ' � . . \ . '
'
48
Dat ing the H i storic S ites
42GR16 0 1 is a sheepherder ' s camps ite containing tin cans , a hearth and
wood . Modern seamed t in cans outnumber ho1e - in - top cans , implying a p o st -
1 9 2 2 date ( Fawcett 1 9 7 9 : 1 ) , and the condensed milk cans are dated pre - l9 3 l
( Ib i d . ) . Thes e dates indicate occupation o f the s i te between 1 9 2 2 and 1 9 3 1 .
42GR1640 is a tin can scatter containing one modern seamed can and
e i ght s older - top c ans with p lugs . The predominance o f s older - top over
modern s e amed c ans imp l ies a 1 9 0 0 - 1 9 1 0 date ( Fawcett 1 9 7 9 : 1 ) .
42GR1641 is a tin can scatter containing four s olde r - top cans . Two
are datable condensed milk cans ( Fawcett 1 9 7 9 : 1 ) and two are modern seamed
cans ( Busch 1 9 8 1 : 9 8 ) . These artifacts indicate a date range from the 1 9 2 0 s
to the 1 9 3 0 s .
49
42GR1672 i s a s ite containing 7 1 5 whole glas s trade b eads , commonly
refe rred to as " p ony beads " , located in 4 ant h i ll s . They were manufactured
in Venice , I taly , with documented production beginning as e arly as AD 1490
( Franci s n . d. ) , and continuing through the pre s ent (Richard Conn
1 9 84 : personal communication) . Bead color and s i ze varieties are presented
in Tab l e s 7 and 8 . No s tructures or o ther art i facts were noted .
I I Ant I
I Color I H i 1 1# 1 2 3 4 I Total
I I I
I I I
I Light b lue/green I 223 2 2 2 I 229
I opaque and translucent I I
I I I
I Br i ght b lue opaque I 163 1 7 I 171
I I I
I Light green opaque I 110 2 I 112
I and translucent I I
I I I
I Whi te opaque I 63 1 I 64
I I I
I Yellow opaque and I 48 I 48
I translucent I I
I I I
I Purple translucent I 36 1 I 37
I ( faceted) I I
I I I
I Black I 27 I 27
I I I
I Green trans lucent I 20 I 20
I I I
I Light b lue trans lucent I 6 I 6
I I I
I Red translucent ! 1 I 1
I I I
I I I
I I I
I Total I 697 5 11 2 I 715
I I I
50
TABLE 8 . 42GR16 7 2 . Bead Varieties For Ent ire S ite .
I I I I
I Color I Numbe r Percent I S iz e Range I
I I I I I
I B lues I 406 I 56 . 7 8 I . 2 - . 4 cm . I
I I I I I
I Greens I 132 I 1 8 . 46 I . 2 5 - . 45 cm . I
I I I I I
I Whi te I 64 I 8 . 95 I . 25 - . 4 cm . I
I I I I I
I Yel l ow I 48 I 6 . 71 I . 25 - . 4 cm . I
I I I I I
I Purpl e I 37 I 5 . 17 I .3 -
. 4 cm . I
I I I I I
I Black I 27 I 3 . 77 I . 2 5 - . 5 cm . I
1
I I I I I
I Red I I . 13 I . 3 5 cm . I
I
I
I I I I
I I I I
I I I I
I Total I 715 99 . 97 I I
I I I I
The beads were manufactured by dipp ing a wire in mol ten glas s and
drawing the glas s unti l i t cooled . Thi s hollow glass tube was then cut into
bead l engths . The edge - rounding was achieved by mixing the beads in a
mixture o f hot charcoal and fine sand , with the final polishing accomp l i shed
by agitating the beads in bags o f bran (Kidd and Kidd 1 9 7 0 : 49 ) . The
irregular facets o f the purple beads were probably filed onto the glass
tub e s prior to cutting and p o l i sh ing , as the edges o f thes e beads are not
nearly as rounded as the other colors . Additionally , whi le the maj o r i ty of
the beads were probably used for embroidery , the purple faceted beads were
more o ften used on fringes and in necklaces (Richard Conn 1 9 84 : personal
c ommunication) . Mr . Conn also s tated that the larger s iz e beads were
popular among the Plains Indians through the 1840s , while this larger s iz e
w a s predominant in the Intermontane region through the l 8 7 0 s . The b lue
beads were generally preferred , because it was a color the Native Ameri can
technol o gy was incapab l e of reproducing with the materials at hand .
The length o f time these beads were manufactured , their durab i l i ty and
pos s ib i l i ty o f reus e , makes i t difficult to a s s i gn a prec i s e date to the
s i te . I t i s l ikely that beads were introduced to the area on a large scale
in the l 8 2 0 s when trappers and traders entered the region (Athearn 1 9 8 1 : 2 1 ) .
To the s outh , howeve r , Indians had obtained beads at a much earl ier date ,
presumably from the Spani sh . Carlson ( 19 6 5 : 9 2 ) documents 17 types and
colors o f beads that were recovered by Earl Morris from a forti fied Navaj o
s i te in northwes tern New Mexico . The s ite was dated to the l ate 1 7 th/early
1 8 th century , and the description of the beads was s imilar to this
collec t ion , especially the l i ght green translucent type . To the north , Mr .
Conn ( 19 84 : personal communication) theorizes that l i ght green translucent
51
b e ads were traded extens ively by the Northwes t Trade Company in Canada prior
to their takeover by the Hudson Bay Comp any . Al though not fully
s ub s tant i ated , he believes trade of this particul ar bead , especially in
Canada , pract ically came to a hal t by the early 1 9 th century . Howeve r ,
beads o f this c o l or , al though smaller in s iz e , were recovered from a Pawnee
burial in Nebraska , dating 1 8 5 7 - 1 8 7 5 ( Carlson 1 9 7 3 : 40 , 45 ) . In fac t , the
vas t maj ori ty of beads from this bur ial are smaller in s iz e than those
recovered from 4 2GR16 2 7 , p erhaps subs tant iating the s iz e preference
discussed above .
I t appears the mos t reali s t ic date for s i te dep o s i tion fal l s between
the l 8 2 0 s and the l880s , with pos s ible overlap on both ends . Actual s i te
type is difficult to a s s i gn , but the two mos t l ikely p o s s ib i l i ties are a
burial o r the remains of a l o s t/discarded article o f clothing or horse
trapp ings .
52
42GR1 6 7 8 i s a railroad trash s catter containing glas s , t i n cans ,
nai l s , o ther metal , bone , wood , ammunition and other refus e . Solde r - dot tin
cans are predominant . The 16 col lected glass art i facts are primarily
medic inal and alcohol i c beverage bottle s , e . g . , Carl Conrad & Co . ,
" Budwe i s er " , 1 8 7 6 - 1 8 8 3 ( Toulouse 1 9 7 1 : 117 , 1 1 8 ) ( Fi gure 2 6 ) , and o ther
probable beer , wine or champagne bottle s . The s e glass items date from ca .
1 8 8 0 - 19 1 8 w i th the maj o r i ty produced dur ing the late l800s to the very early
1 9 00 s . The s e dates indicate that the s ite may have been a railroad
cons truct ion camp s ite , ca . 1 8 8 0 - 18 8 1 (Athearn 1 9 6 2 : 12 3 ) , associated with
42GR9 3 5 , an abandoned narrow gauge railroad bed ( Reed and Nickens 1 9 80 : 3 8 ) .
42GR1 700 is a rec tangular s tone cobble foundation , a depress ion , and
an as soc iated trash s catter containing glas s , tin cans , wire , nails ,
cerami c s , bone , wood and o ther refus e . The maj ority o f the tin cans are
modern s e amed . One c lear glas s " Lone S tar Beer" b ottle i s dated pos t - 1 9 3 0
( F irebaugh 1 9 8 3 : 2 7 ) . The art i facts indicated a date range o f 1 9 2 0 - 1 9 3 0 s for
occupation of the s i te .
53
b
... . :i
.,' , , ' :1 j
"
, ', :
FIGURE 2 6 . 42GR16 7 S . 4 . a ) s ide view " BUDWE I S ER" beer bottle and b )
bottom view " CC&CO" emb o s sed , Carl Conrad & Co . , 1 8 7 6 · 1 8 8 3 ( Toulouse
1 9 7 1 : 11 7 , 1 1S ) . Drawings actual s ize .
54
a
� - _ . - f
", - �- - � ,
�' : ..:.-
. .. �� -
I
(- ", ' ..�
" . " .
� �f
_ .r' "
' .' . :.
,a 1
FIGURE 2 7 . ( above ) 1�
4 2GR1 6 9 9 . 27 . a) s ide view , I ! I,
purp le glass perfume bottle
c a . 1 8 8 0 - 1 9 2 0 ( F ike 1 9 8 4 :
� ,
personal communication)
b) bottom view .
j, ; :
: .
"
,
a
FIGURE 2 8 . ( on r i gh t )
4 2GR1 6 9 9 . 19 .
a ) s ide view , clear glass
medic ine bottle unthreaded
finish , emb o s sed volume
amount s b ) bottom view ,
maker ' s mark , I l l ino i s Glass
Co . , Al ton , I l l ino i s ,
1 9 1 6 - 1 9 2 9 ( Toulouse 1 9 7 1 : 2 6 4 ) .
Drawings ac tual s iz e .
b
55
b
W@7i1�1 u[� (G t®, ,'
�@:� JfYl&�l(GlfJ (0� ��"
, I '
" �'I
,I
, ,
I
I ,
,
,
I ,
"
,
" ,
I ,
, '
"
, , FIGURE 2 9 . 4 2 GR 1 6 9 9 . 5 .
a ) s id e v ie w , c l ear g l as s
s o d a b o t t l e , 6 . 5 o z . , t e n
s id ed , Crown t o p f i n i sh .
"GRAND JUNC T ION B OTTLING
C O . , GRAND JUNC TION ,
C OLO . " b) bo t t om v ie w ,
make r ' s mark o f the Owen s
I l l in o i s Gl a s s Co . ,
To l ed o , Oh i o ,
1 9 2 9 - 1 94 0 .
56
42GR1 7 2 6 i s a rail road trash s catter containing glas s , t in c ans , and a
hearth . Purp l e glas s and fragments of a brown glas s bottle w i th a cork
c lo sure are present . Another brown glas s bottle exh ib i t s an applied top ,
c a . 1 8 5 0 - 1 9 1 8 ( F irebaugh 1 9 8 3 : 2 0 ) . S o lder - top t in cans are pre dominant .
Thes e ar t i facts sugges t that the s i te mate r ials were dep o s ited dur ing the
late l 8 0 0 s to the e arly 1 9 00s . The s i te may have been related to
c ons t ruct i on of 4 2GR9 3 5 (Reed and N ickens 1 9 80 : 3 8 ) , 1 8 8 0 - 1 8 8 3 ( Athearn
1962 : 12 3 ) .
b) that are assoc iated with the l ives o f persons s i gnificant i n our
p as t ; o r
c) that embody the dis t inct ive charac ter istics o f a typ e , period , o r
me thod o f cons truc t ion , or that represent the work o f a mas ter , o r
that p o s s e s s high art i s t i c value s , o r that repres ent a s i gnificant and
dis t inguishab l e entity who s e components may l ack individual
d i s t inc t i on ; or
57
the under s tanding of aboriginal occupation/uti l i z ation of the s e marginal
areas .
The following discus s ion summari z e s e l igib i l i ty rec ommendat i ons for
the 1 2 6 recorded s i tes . The numbe r of preh i s to r i c s ites recorded
nec e s s i tates group des c r ipt ion rather than individual s tatements o f
s ignificance . Prehi s to r i c resources will be addr e s s e d fir s t , followed by
h i s to r i c resourc e s .
58
FIGURE 3 0 . 42GR16 6 1 . Rockshe l ter . facing eas t .
59
Formative ( Fremont ) art i facts were no t recorded in thi s area . Grounds tone
artifac ts and p oint types , inc luding large and me dium corne r - notched and
P into vari e t ie s , sugges t Early Archaic and later utilization ( Figure 24) .
S everal s i tes have been previous ly recorded in thi s area during humate mine
surveys ( c f . Lee and Clements 1 9 8 1 ) and the s e , though not noted on forms
accompanying thi s proj ect , also fall within the propos e d district .
Not E l igib l e
E l ig ib l e H i s toric Re s ourc e s
Not El igible
D i s cu s s ion
60
are recommended as e l igible for nominati on and ten s ites , l acking p otential
t o yield further important information , are recommended as not e l igib l e . In
addit ion , the 2 5 historic isolated f inds have b een fully recorded and are
not e l igible for inc lus ion in the NRHP .
Table 9 summar izes the management recommenda ti ons for the 1 2 6 s i tes
recorded dur ing th is proj ect .
61
TABLE 9 . Management Recommendat ions Summary .
I I I
I Category I S i te Numbers I
I I I
I I I
I I 42GR - 1606 , 1607 , 1608 , 1 6 11 , 1612 , 1615 , 1618 , I
I I 1 62 3 , 1625 , 1627 , 1628 , 16 2 9 , 1631 , 1632 , I
I I 1633 , 1 6 34 , 1635 , 1636 , 1637 , 1638 , 1639 , I
I 1 I 1642 , 1643 , 1644 , 1645 , 1 65 3 , 1655 . 1656 , I
I I 1657 , 1658 , 1661 , 1664 , 1667 , 166 8 , 1672 , I
I I 1673 , 1674 , 1676 , 1677 , 1680 , 1 68 2 , 1686 , I
I I 1687 , 1 68 8 , 1689 , 169 2 , 1 6 94 , 1 69 6 , 1 69 7 , I
I I 1702 , 1706 , 1712 , 1720 , 1723 , 1725 , 1732 , I
I I 1733 I
I I I
I I I
I I 4 2GR - 1 6 0 5 , 1609 , 1613 , 1 6 14 , 1 6 16 , 1617 , 1619 , I
I t 1620 , 1 62 2 , 1624 , 1626 , 1630 , 1662 , 1 66 3 , I
t 2 I 1 66 5 , 1666 , 1669 , 1670 , 167 1 , 1678 , 1679 , I
I I 1681 , 1690 , 1691 , 1693 , 1 69 5 , 1698 , 1701 , I
I I 1703 , 1708 , 1709 , 1715 , 1717 , 1718 , 1719 , I
I I 1721 , 1722 , 1 7 24 , 1726 , 1 7 34 I
I I I
I I I
I I 42GR - 1 5 9 8 , 15 9 9 , 1 600 , 1601 , 1602 , 1603 , 1 6 04 , I
I 3 I 1610 , 1 62 1 , 1640 , 1642 , 1646 , 1 6 54 , 1 65 9 , I
I I 1660 , 1 67 5 , 1683 , 1684 , 1 68 5 , 1699 , 1700 , I
I I 1 7 04 , 1705 , 1707 , 1710 , 1711 , 1713 , 1 7 14 , I
I I 1716 I
I I I
62
CHAPTER V
PREDICTIVE MODELING
Reed and N i ckens ( 19 8 0 ) presented and partially tes ted hypo the ses
re garding the extremely low s i te dens i ty areas and the s e hypotheses would be
further t e s te d and expanded w i th the additional data base . They
hypo thes ized that the " low" s ite dens ity ( . 3 8 s i tes per square m i le ) ,
"medium" s i t e dens i ty ( 2 . 5 5 s i te s per s quare mile ) and "high " s i te dens i ty
( 9 . 6 s i te s per square mile ) areas were the result of di fferential
dis tributi on o f resources in the region . In the low s i te dens i ty areas
( de s e r t shrub s tratum) and the medium s ite den s i ty areas ( dra inage s tratum )
that dominated mos t of the 1 9 7 8 - 7 9 proj ect areas , the general sc arc i ty o f
cri t ical r e s ourc e s was thought to be respons ible . They hypothe s ized that
the se areas were probably used as tho roughfares for spe c i fi c resourc e
gathe ring , w i th the l arger mo re pe rmanent s i te s be ing located to the north
near the Book C l i ffs and the j uniper covered r idge s at the i r base , and to
the s outh and s outhwe s t along the Col orado River . The se high s i te dens i ty
are as ( j uniper/s age s tratum) were the re sul t o f the more diverse
environmental resource s that occurred there .
63
environmental var iab l e s found to b e important in predictive mode l ing
attempts in s im ilar environments would also be included in the analy s i s .
64
TABLE 1 0 . Var iables Coded for the 10% Mode l .
I I I
I VARIABLE I DESCRIPTION I
I I I
I I I
I HDPH20 I Horiz ontal dis tance to near e s t pr imary water I
I I I
I VDPH20 I Ver t ical dis tance to nearest pr imary water I
I I I
I HDNBD I Horizontal dis tance to ne ar e s t named b luel ine drainage I
I I I
I VDNBD I Verti c al dis tance to nearest named b luel ine dra inage I
I I I
I * VANTAGE I Horiz ontal dis tance to ne ar e s t vantage p o int I
I I I
I JUNIPER I D i s tance to nearest j uniper c ommuni ty I
I I I
I SAGE I D i s tance to near e s t s age communi ty I
I I i
I GRA S S I D i s tance to neare st grass c ommuni ty I
I I I
I GREASEW I D i s tance to near e s t greasewood c ommun i ty I
I I I
I DESHRUB I D i s tance to neare s t desert shrub c ommuni ty I
I I I
I ELEV I S i te e l evat ion ( ft . ) I
I I I
I * SLOPE I Percent grade us ing USGS topographic map contour l ines I
I I I
I * EXPOSURE I Prominent s l ope direction with 0 ° indicat ing north , I
I I 9 0 ° east or we s t and 1800 south I
I I I
I * V I EW - I Downh i l l view angle ( 0 - 3 60 ° ) I
I SPREAD I I
I I I
I * RELIEF I Re l ie f with in a 500 meter radius us ing map contour l ine s I
I I I
* Adapted from Larralde and Chandler ( 1 9 8 1 ) and Kvamme ( 1 9 8 0 ) .
65
Tab l e 1 1 shows the canonical discr iminant func tion coefficients ( CDFC )
and a s s o c iated s i te and nons ite group means for the original 10% p r eh i s toric
model at the . 0 5 confidence l imit ( Data Set 1 ) . The variab l e s selected
repre s ent important dis c r iminators b e tween the s ite and nons ite locations .
When the s ign i s i gnored , each s tandardized CDFC " repres ents the relat ive
contribut ion o f its as s o c iated var iable to that func t ion" ( Nie et al .
1 9 7 5 : 44 3 ) . For example , elevation , viewspread , dis tance to a vantage p o int
and s lope were s e lec ted , in thi s o rder of importance , as variables
discr iminat ing between preh i s toric s ite and nons i te locations . While
viewspre ad , distance to vantage and s lope contribute equally to the
funct ion , with coeffic ients o f approximately . 40 , e levation with a
coeffic ient o f . 8 8 is roughly twice as important as each o f the s e .
C l as s if icat ion accuracy results for Data S e t 1 are depi c ted in Table
12 . H i ghes t s i te clas s i fication accuracy i s 8 7 % at the . 05 confidence
l eve l . Assoc iated nons i t e class ificat ion accuracy i s 8 3 % re SUl t ing in an
overall accuracy o f 84% . Highes t nons i te class i ficat ion accuracy i s 9 1% at
the . 10 and unres tr i c ted c onfidence levels . As soc iated s ite c l a s s ificat ion
ac curacy , however , is lower at 84% for an overall accuracy of 8 8 % . D i s tance
to s age and de sert shrub plant communities were selected as addit i onal
dis c r iminators at the . 10 confidence leve l . S ince i t i s preferab l e to
mi s c las s i fy nons ites rather than s i tes , the . 0 5 confidence leve l was us e d .
66
TABLE 11. Canonical Discriminant Funct ion Coe ffic ients and Associated
Group Means for Or iginal 10% Prehistoric Mode l.
I I
I DATA S ET 1 I
I PREHISTORIC SITES I
I I
I Var i ab l e s S tand . CDFC Group Means *Unstand . CDFC I
I ( Nons i t e ) I
1 ____________________________________
S�
� te
i�� _______________________
1
I I
I Elevation - . 8 8465 ( 48 29. 30 ) ft . - .0 0356 I
I 5243.63 ft . I
I I
I Vi ew Spread . 44071 ( 175 . 1 8 ) Degrees .00598 I
I 148 . 0 8 Degrees I
I I
I Di s t . to Vantage .40896 ( 1 . 19 ) KIn . .602 8 7 I
I . 67 KIn . I
I I
I S 10pe .37523 ( 7 . 02 ) % .08464 I
I 4 . 37 % I
I I
I ( cons tant) 15 . 69235 I
I I
I I
1 * All unstandardized values have been rounded to five dec imal places. I
I I
I
I DATA SET 1
I PREHISTORIC S I TES
I
I Confidence
I Level Nons it es S ites Overall
I
I
I . 05 83 87 84
I . 10 91 84 88
I
I unr e s tr icted 91 84 88
I
67
At thi s po int . i t was realized that the parameters were c omp l e tely
different than originally assumed by the BLM when preparing the Scope of
Work . The Contracting Officer ' s Representative ( B ruce Louthan) was
contacted and informed of the results and the dens i ty proj e c t ions . I t was
mutually agree d that maj or revis ions in the research des ign and s ampl ing
s trategy would be neces s ary . Cho ices included a reduct ion of the samp l e
s iz e . a cons tric tion o f the proj ect area or a sub s tantial increase in the
contrac t amount and continuance of the sampl ing as planned . After much
discuss ion and ons ite field inspect ion . the contract was modi fied , resul t ing
in what came to be known as " The 5% solution" .
I t was dec ided that the mos t prudent and feas ible alternative would be
to reduce the s ample s iz e to 5 % o f the original 8 0 , 000 acre s tudy are a .
Whi l e thi s would not be directly comparable to the p revious 1 0 % s amples , i t
allowed the maj o r i ty o f the C isco O i l and Gas Field t o b e included i n a
s ample survey . The s i te dens i ty proj ection for 4 , 000 acres ( 100 transe ct s )
was approximately 1 2 5 s i te s , which would provide an adequate s ampl e for
building a model for s i te locations . The contract was modified to allow for
the p r ep aration and testing of a new mode l , due to the difference s of s ample
s i z e , environment and s i te dens i t ie s . The firs t 100 transects o r iginally
s e lected from the random number table were used to del ineate the 4 , 000 acres
for inclus ion in the 5 % sample . This select ion proc e s s included 23 o f the
already surveyed transects . Data collected from the remaining 17 transects
were no t used in model bui lding , but were used to independently test the
predic t ive accuracy of the 5 % model .
The data collected dur ing the initial survey were analyzed with the
aid o f the 7 . 5 minute ace tate overlay s o i l maps init ially us ed in the remote
s ens ing analys i s . S i tes misclas s ified by the 10% model s eemed to correlate
wel l with spec i fic s o i l units . For example , sand dune s ites were
cons i stently associated with s o i l unit 3 ( minor s o i l uni t 6 1 ) . This
encouraged the bui lding o f two separate 5 % mode l s ; one us ing the traditional
vari ab l e s and another based s tr ic tly on maj or and minor s o i l units . The
advantages o f the s o i l data included not only a f iner breakdown o f the
environmental uni t s o f intere s t , i . e . , drainage s , j uniper and des e r t shrub
areas . but also included information on s lope . elevation , landform and
fauna . Used in conj unc t ion with the tradi tionally important variab l e s , i t
was bel i eved that the s o i l model would accurately predict s i te and nons i te
locat ions . I f s o , a ready - made s i te dens i ty and s ens i t iv i ty map . at a 7 . 5
minute scale , would be available for use by BLM cultural resource managers .
Some change s in the traditional var iables to be coded were made from
the one s used in building the original mode l . Exposure and r e l i e f were
dele ted from the var iables measured . These vari ables did not appear as
s igni f i c ant d i s c r iminators at any confidence level in the original mode l .
Hori z ontal and vert ical distance to the Colorado River were added as
vari able s , in that the high s i te dens ity areas were generally closer to the
Colorado River than the previously surveyed areas .
The s o i l s model was cons tructed us ing the s o i l overlays and USGS
topographic map s . S ix o f the twelve general s o i l uni t s were found in the
68
p roj e c t are a , e ach containing numerous subunits de s ignated by field symbols
(Tab l e 1 3 ) . All s i tes reco rded in the 1 9 8 3 proj ect area wer e located in
f ive o f the s e s ix general s o i l units and they we re used as var i ables t o
d i s c r iminate between s ite and nonsite locations . Distance to the nearest
s o i l subuni t for each o f the five general soil groups was then enco ded for
each s i te and nons i te . An addit i onal var iable , " X " ( s andstone c l i ffs ) , was
enco de d to include ac tual and po tent ial rock she l te r locations along the
base o f the Book C l i ffs and r iver c l i ffs .
The tradit i onal and s o i l s var iables were c oded for use in mode l
c ons truc t i on us ing 8 8 preh i s to r ic s i tes ( 40 l i thic s c atters and 48
camps i te s ) and 5 1 nons i te p o ints . Data from 1 3 his toric s ites were
init i al ly enco ded , however , class ificat ion accuracy for all s i t e s comb ined
was l ow and no further analyses were performed us ing the h i s to r i c s i te s .
The nons i te data were measured from the c enter p o int o f the surveyed
trans ects containing no rec orded prehi s toric or h i s toric s i tes . Recorde d
i s o lated f ind locat ions were not encode d , and w e r e not used t o rej e c t a
nons i t e transect from the mode l . Data collec ted from the 17 surveyed
transe c t s not in the 5% model were used as an independent tes t .
69
TABLE 1 3 . General S o i l s Uni t s and Corre sponding Field Symbols .
70
TABLE 14 . C l as s ification Accuracy in % for Traditional
and S o i l Var i ab l e s .
, S i te Typ e s , Confidence , , , I
I and variab l e s I Level I Nons i te s I S i te s I Overall I
I I I I I I
I I I , I ,
, Data S e t 2 a , .....QL. I 88 , 87 , 88 ,
, L i thic Scatters - , . 10 , 88 , 90 , 84 I
, traditional , unre s . , 86 , 92 I 89 ,
, , , , I I
I I , , I ,
, Data S e t 2b , .....QL. , 92 , 85 , 89 ,
, Camp s i t e s - , . 10 , 88 , 83 , 86 ,
I tradi tional I unre s . I 88 I 81 , 85 I
I , I I I ,
, , I , I I
, Data S e t 3 a , .....QL. I 92 , 80 I 87 I
I L i thic Scatters - , . 10 , 92 I 80 , 87 I
I soils , unre s . I 92 I 80 I 87 ,
I I I I , I
I I , I , ,
, Data S e t 3b I .....QL. , 90 I 81 I 86 I
I Camp s i t e s - I . 10 , 90 I 81 I 86 ,
I soils I unres . I 90 I 81 I 86 I
I I I , I I
I I I , I I
71
TABLE 1 5 . Canonical Discriminant Function Coefficients
and As soc iated Group Means for Tradi tional
Var iables at the . 0 5 Confidence Level .
I I
I DATA SET 2A- LITHIC SCATTERS I
I I
I VARIABLES STAND . CDFC GROUP MEANS *UNSTAND . CDFC I
I ( NONSITE) I
I S ITE I
I D i stance to : I
I I
I Vantage . 65 6 1 9 ( 1 . 5 8 ) KIn . . 69919 I
I . 80 KIn . I
I Other H2O - . 58951 ( 28 . 14 ) Ft . - . 00 8 6 0 I
I (Vertical} 7 1 . 43 Ft . I
I S age - . 53873 ( 6 . 19 ) KIn . - . 11 7 84 I
I 8 . 48 KIn . I
I Greasewood . 48 7 7 6 ( . 7 3 ) KIn . . 64549 I
I . 5 8 KIn . I
I Desert Shrub - . 46 5 0 7 ( . 04 ) KIn . - 2 . 3 1 150 I
I . 2 6 KIn . I
I Colorado River . 43195 ( 16 . 54 ) KIn . . 06 6 7 9 I
I 9 . 31 KIn . I
I S lope . 34015 (6 . 22) % . 06 0 9 2
I 4 . 20 % I
I I
I (Cons tant � - 9 . 3391 I
I I
I DATA S ET 2 B - CAMPS ITES I
I I
I D i s tance to : I
I I
I Desert Shrub - . 59438 ( . 04 ) KIn . - 2 . 7 39 8 2 I
I . 3 3 KIn . I
I Colorado River . 53262 ( 5 3 0 . 40 ) Ft . . 00 2 7 4 I
I (Vert ical} 3 5 5 . 2 1 Ft . I
I Pr imary H2O . 504 5 7 ( 3 . 80 ) KIn . . 22289 I
I 1 . 1 3 KIn . I
I O ther H2O - . 3 5045 ( 2 8 . 14 ) Ft . - . 00 3 8 1 I
I (Vertical ) 5 1 . 3 0 Ft . I
I I
I ( Cons tant ) - 1 . 1 3 1 5 2 I
1 * A l l uns tandardized values have been I
I rounded to five dec imal places . I
I I
72
TABLE 1 6 . Canonical Discriminant Function Coefficients
and Assoc iated Group Means for S o i l Variab les
at the . 05 Confidence Level .
I I
I DATA SET 3A� LITHIC S CATTERS 1
1 I
I VARIABLES STAND . GDFG GROUP MEANS *UNSTAND . CDFG I
1 ( NONS ITE ) I
1 S ITE I
I D i s tance to : I
( 3 . 38 ) Km .
I 1
1 #8 . 67 8 0 2 . 26 3 9 3 I
1 1 , 34 Km . I
( . 9 8 ) Km .
1 1
. 5 8 Km ,
1 #3 . 64 8 6 1 . 65396 I
I I
( 2 . 19 ) Km .
1 1
1 #1 � . 5 1169 � . 20966 1
I 5 , 1 5 Km . I
( 10 . 6 1 ) Km .
1 I
1 #5 . 49 9 9 8 . 08 6 34 1
I 4 . 14 Km .
I
I 1
1 �Cons tant� - 1 . 12801 1
\ \
\ DATA SET 3 B � CAMPS ITES I
\ \
1 D i stance to : I
( 3 . 3 8 ) Km .
1 \
1 , 81 Km .
\ #8 1 . 89576 . 76307 1
I I
( 3 . 16 ) Km .
1 I
IX - l . 42639 - . 59481 1
1 2 , 44 Km . I
( . 98 ) Km .
I 1
1 #3 . 5 9019 . 63 7 7 0
. 40 Km .
1
I I
( 1 0 . 6 1 ) Km .
1 1
1 #5 . 54174 . 09 5 9 0 1
1 5 . 08 Km . I
( 2 . 12 ) Km .
I 1
1 #1 � . 45 4 7 1
4 . 04 Km .
- . 18 7 9 0 I
1 I
1 I
I ( Constant ) - . 95486 1
1 * All uns tandardized values have been 1
I rounded to five dec imal places . I
I I
73
S catters or Data S e t 3 B -Camp s ites . Thi s s o i l uni t has been i denti fied as
having the lowe s t s i te dens ity in the proj ect area .
D i s c r iminant s cores for 17 camp s i tes not used in buil ding the 5 % model
were calculated . Only s even of these s ites wer e accurately predicted for a
rate o f 4 1 % . Two o f the misclass i fied s ites were rockshe l ters . The small
s ample of rockshelters relative to other prehi s toric camp s i te s used in model
cons truct ion and the unique nature of thei r locat ions are thought to be
factors in the i r m i s c lass i fication .
According to the mo del for prehis toric camp s ites and l i thic scatter s ,
thes e s ites should l ie c l o s e to o r within general s o i l uni ts 3 , 5 , and 8 and
far from o r outs ide o f s o i l unit 1 . S o i l unit 2 was not s e le c ted as an
impor tant discr iminating variable . Prehis toric camp s i tes and l i thic
s catters , as wel l as nons ites , sometime s occur in this general soil uni t .
Howeve r , i t was apparent that the maj o r i ty of s ites lo cated in s o i l unit 2
were ac tually distributed al ong the edges of the al luvium ( so i l uni t 3 ) and
j uniper ( so i l unit 8 ) . Landform X ( c l iffs ) , an important var iable for
camp s i te s , could not be tes ted in that thi s landform doe s not corre spond to
a spe c ific general s o i l cate gory . I t was , ther e fore , dec i ded to test the
hypothe s i s that prehistoric s i tes , regardless o f type , will be loc ated in
general s o i l uni t s 3 , 5 , and 8 , but not in s o i l units 1 and 2 . Nons ites , on
the o ther hand , will be located in s o i l uni t s 1 and 2 , but no t in s o i l units
3 , 5 and 8 .
74
Three tests we re made us ing data generated independently from the data
used to bui l d the mode l . A total of 57 s ites and 57 nons i te s no t used in
model c onstruc t ion was tes ted by s imply plac ing the app ropr i ate 7 . 5 minute
s o i l over l ay on the USGS topographic map of intere s t and not ing the s o i l
f i e l d symb o l o r symb o l s o f the s ite o r trans e c t area o f intere s t . I f more
than one symb o l o ccurred , then all symbols with in the area of interes t were
recorded . The field symbols were then c onverted to the ir corresp onding
gene ral s o i l uni t number ( s ) us ing Table 1 3 . In all cases , if an area o f
interest included even a small portion o f a s ite assoc iated s o i l , i t would
be c l as s i fied as the s ite assoc iated s o i l type . For examp l e , 42GR1 6 0 9 , the
f i r s t s ite recorded outs i de the 5 % s amp le area , fel l w i thin the area o f
field symb o l 4 1 3 . Tab l e 1 3 clas s ifies field symbol 413 as be longing to unit
8. Therefore , 42GR1 609 ( the area o f its locat ion) was correctly i dent i fied
as b e longing to the prehis toric s i te group .
Test 2 c ons i s ted of visually inspecting the s o i l/s ite relationship for
37 preh i s to r i c s it e s recorde d by Nickens and As s o c iates in 1 9 7 8 and 1 9 7 9 .
Thi r ty - two o f the thi r ty - seven were accurately predicted for an accuracy
rate o f 8 6 % . One of the m i s c l as s ified s ites was assoc iated w i th a s o i l that
did no t o ccur in our proj ect area ( fi e ld symbol 500) .
Discus s ion
75
shrub areas in the Manco s Shale p l a ins and alluvial fan pediments , and
greasewood in the quaternary alluvium o f the primary drainages ( Tab le 1 7 ) .
U t i l iz ing the s o i l model s and s o i l overlays , in conj unc tion with the
t radit i onal mode ls when additional information on microenvironmental fac tors
i s o f intere s t , s impl if i e s both res our c e management and addit ional
archae o lo gical research in the C isco Desert . Thi s report demons trates the
c l o s e relationship between tradit i onal and s o i l mode l s and that us ing the
latter is a l o g ical and s impler cont inuation of the predic t ive model ing
process .
76
TABLE 1 7 . General Landform , S o i l , Vegetation and Location
Data for S ite Types and Dens i ty Zone s .
I I I I
I S ITE TYPES I SOIL I LOCATION LANDFORM I VEGETATION
I AND DENSITY I UNIT I I
I ZONES I I I
I I I I
I I I I
I Low dens it;:x: I I I
I I I I
I Lithic scatters I 2 I Mancos shale I des ert shrub
I and c amp s i tes I I Shale p lains plains I
I I I I
I I I I
I Medium dens i t;:x: I I I
I I I I
I L i thic scatters I 1 I intermittent quaternary I desert shrub
I I I drainages pediments , I
I I I shale p lains I I
I I I I I
I I I I I
I High dens i t;:x: I I I I
I I I I I
I Li thic s catters I 3 I pr imary quaternary I greas ewood I
I and camp s i tes I I drainages alluvium I I
I ( s and dune areas ) I I I I
I I I I I
I I I I I
I High dens i t;:x: I I I I I
I I I I I I
I Lithic scatters I 5 I r iver c l i ffs I rock outcrops I barren to I
I and camp s ites I I I I minimal I
I ( quarry areas ) I I I I gra s s e s and I
I I I I I desert shrub I
I I I I I I
I I I I I I
I High dens i t;:x: I I I I I
I I I I I I
I Lithic scatters I 8 I Book C l iffs I structural I j uniper I
I and c amp s i te s I I and river I benches and I I
I ( rockshel ter I I c l i ffs I cues tas I I
I areas ) I I I I I
I I I I I I
77
CHAPTER VI
A s imp l i fied method o f predi c t ing potenti a l s ite locat ions , us ing the
s o i l mode l s , was deve loped and tested succe s s fully us ing the BLM s o i l
overlay maps . Rather than calculating discr iminant s c o r e s for an unknown
location , the acetate 7 . 5 minute s o i l maps were s imply laid over the area
plo tted on a 7 . 5 minute USGS topographic map . I f the area o f intere st
occurred within a soil type des ignated " s i te " , it was predi c ted as such and ,
i f it fel l within a s o il unit c l as s i fied as " nons ite " , the opp o s i te was
predicte d . U t i l i z ing s o i l s a s a management tool t o predic t the probab i l i ty
of locating preh i s toric s i tes in the proj ect area i s s ta t i s t ically val id and
a l s o has the benefits of offering addi tional information over and above
type s of s o i l s p r e s ent . For example , depth o f the s o i l o f intere s t and data
on e l evat ion , prec ip itation , landform , temperature , s lope , drainage ,
ve getati on and fauna are availab l e for each s o i l type w i thin the general
s o i l uni t s . The ecological relationships among the s e fac tors are important
for under standing the c omplex of var i ables involved in aboriginal s e l e c tion
of s ite l ocations . Speci fic data such as s o i l depth and s trat i graphy may
also prove valuable for predic t i on and evaluation o f s ite s ignificance and
National Reg i s ter e l i gib i l i ty .
Intens ive survey o f the 100 randomly selected 40 · acre sample uni t s
( to tal ing 6 . 2 5 square m i le s ) resul ted in the reco rding o f 1 0 4 s i tes .
E i ghty . e ight preh i s toric s i tes recorded in thi s 5% sample were used dur ing
the model building s tage . Forty of thes e were l i thic s c atters and forty
e i ght were camp s ites , defined by the presence/ab s ence o f hearths , f i re
cracked rock and/or grounds tone tools . Prehistoric c amp s ites and l i thic
78
s c atters were analyzed s eparately agains t the s ample o f 5 1 nons i t e s in order
to determine if different environmental variab l e s were factors in the i r
locations .
79
TABLE 1 8 . S i te Dens i ty in the Proj ect Area .
1 ( 6 , 494) 2 0 2 2 . 66 0 2 . 66 Medium
Dens i ty
5 ( 2 , 18 3 ) 7 0 7 2 2 . 40 0 2 2 . 40
3 ( 10 , 7 1 8 ) 45 7 52 27 . 35 4 . 25 3 l . 60
9** ( 6 , 2 64 ) 0 0 0 0 0 0
1
1
Over 1
All ( 80 , 000 ) 1 90 14 104 14 . 40 2 . 24 1 6 . 64
1
80
h':i::%1
� Soil
IllnillY
Soil u n i t 3 : 2 7 . 3 5 sites/ s4.mi.
u n i t 8: 2 4 . 9 3 s i t e s / sq. m i .
] Sensitivity
High
CJ S o i l u n i t 5 : 2 2 .40 s i t e s / s q . m i .
R.24E.
81
The low s ens i t ivity z one , s o i l unit 2 , corresponds to Reed and Nickens
( 19 8 0 ) des e r t shrub s tratum of the Mancos Shale plains . S i te dens i ty is . 9 6
s it e s p e r s quare mile and inc ludes 48 . 3 % o f the survey area . In thei r
previous surveys , corrected for erroneous ly clas s i fied s tratum , Reed and
N i ckens recorded . 3 8 s i tes per s quare mile in thi s s o i l unit . Again , the
f i gures compare favorab ly .
The Archaic and Late Preh i s toric diagnos t ic s ites o ccur princ ipal ly in
the Cottonwoo d and Wes twater Archaeo logical D i s tricts , with only a s ingle
Late Preh i s toric camps ite recorded on the firs t terrace below the Book
Cl i ffs ( Fi gure 2 4 ) . Two hypothe ses are sugge s ted by this d i s t r ibution . The
nomadic populations may have been moving north to south between the h i gher
e l evat ions of the Book Cl i ffs and the lower e l evations j us t above and along
the Colorado River . Cot tonwood Wash and Wes twater Creek drainages c ould
82
have b een utili z e d as migrat ion corridors concurrent w i th seasonally
available resourc e s . Another pos s ib ility is that the seasonal migration
routes p aralleled the Colorado River in a northeast/southwe s t fashion . A
w i der var i e ty of re source s and shelter would have b een available t o the
aboriginal populat ion i f they remained near the juniper/ s age/de sert shrub
ecotone above the Colorado River , than if movement was ac tually w i thin the
c anyon .
RECOMMENDATIONS
I f the BLM land managers choose to use this s tudy as a tool for
determining prob ab ilities of prehi s toric s i te occurrence in the C i sco are a ,
two models have b een pres ented for the ir cons i derat ion . However , based on
the results of the s e s tudies , only one me thod is recommended . While the
tradi tional variables can be measured and encoded for any 4 0 - acre s tudy
trac t , re sulting in a discriminant score for that are a , the te s t s of this
model have resulted in a le s s than 80% predictive rate . The method i s also
t i me - consuming and s omewhat cumbersome to use . There fore , a much s impler
and more accurate me thod i s recommende d .
The correlation b e tween s ites and soils has been demons trated and
te s te d , and a s i t e s ens i t ivity map pre s ented ( F igure 31 ) . For spec i f ic
areas of concern , it i s recommended that the soil overlays be used in
conjunction w i th the BLM ' s soils data and the results of th i s s tudy . Any
area that i s included in the high sens i t ivity zones of general soils units
3, 5 and 8 should b e surveyed. Areas in soil un it 9 should also b e surveyed
prior to ground - dis turb ing ac t ivities , as th is was included in Re ed and
N i ckens ( 198 0 ) h i gh den s i ty zone and the result s of s ampling during th i s
projec t are inconclus ive due t o the small s ample s i z e .
Soil uni t 2 , the low sens i t ivity zone , generally corresponds with Ree d
and N ickens ' low s i te dens i ty zone , i . e . , the de s er t shrub s tratum . If
83
survey requirements in thi s zone are waived by the B1M , i solated e l igible
s ites may be endangered . It is recommended that all areas within a . 8 mile
buffer z one of soil uni t s 3 , 5 , 8 and 9 continue to be surveyed in order to
protect the s e s ites and further test the model ' s accuracy . Thi s . 8 mile
buffer z one includes s i te s misclass i fied by the soils mode l ( Fi gure 3 2 ) .
Add i t ional care should be taken when act iv it i e s are p l anned w i th in the
two p ropo s e d archaeological districts due to the high p otential for
encountering cultural resources . Thi s i s espec ially appl icable in the
propo sed Cottonwood D i s trict because o f the type o f s o i l ( alluvium) .
Monitor ing certain ac tivi t ie s , such as road construc tion , i s recommended , as
there i s a high l ikel ihood o f buried s i tes .
S o i l maps are avai lable for many areas , especial ly when l arge tract s
o f Federal land are involved . S o i l map s , however , are not nec e s s ar ily a
p anacea for predict ive models . As demons trated , a s t at i s ti cally val id model
mus t be developed and tested with independent data p r i or to reli ance solely
on map information .
84
o S o il unit 1
o Soil unit 2
o Soil unit 5
� Soil unit 8
EEB S o i l u n it 9
C) Buffer zone: . 8 m i .
Cross Section
(Figure 5)
R.25E.
85
Predict ive mode l s can be a bene f i t to archaeologists and l and managers
a l ike , if they are cons tructed and use d in a proper fashion . The final
reminder s are to be flexib l e , be p roj ect or area specific , and to keep it as
s impl e as pos s ib l e .
86
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Reed , Alan D .
1 9 84 Wes t - Central Colorado Preh i s toric Context . Colorado H i s tor ical
S o c ie ty .
92
1 9 8 1d " Snowfal l . " In Atlas o f Utah , edited by Wayne L . Wahlquis t , p .
7 0 . Brigham Young Unive r s i ty Press .
Schroedl , Alan R .
1 9 7 6 The Archaic o f the Northern Colorado Plateau . Unpub l i shed Ph . D .
d i s sertation on file at Department of Anthropology , Univers ity o f
Utah .
S o i l Conservati on Service
1 9 8 2 " So i l Survey o f Grand County , Central Part , Utah . "
Thorn , C . J ordan
1947 Handbook of Old Pottery and Porcelain Marks . Tudor Pub l i shing
Company , New York .
Toll , Henry W . I I I
1 9 7 8 " Quartz i te Lithic Material i n Archaeology : Qualities and
Quandries with Spec ial Reference to Use - Wear . " Plains
Anthropologi s t 2 3 ( 7 9 ) : 47 - 68 .
Wormington , H . Marie
1 9 5 5 itA Reappraisal o f the Fremont Culture . n Proceedings , No . 1.
Denver Museum o f Natural H i s tory . Denver , Colorado .
93
APPENDIX 1
94
Appendix lA
95
Appendix lB
97
Appendix IB
General Soil Units , Grand County , Utah , Central Part ( Cont inued)
98
APPENDIX 2
99
APPENDIX 2 . The fol l owing sect ion tabulates cul tural features recorded at
each o f the I I I aboriginal s i tes . Symbols us ed to ident ify s i te type s , and
the frequency of each s ite type is as fo l l ows :
I I I I
I SYMBOL I S ITE TYPE I TOTAL I
I I I I
I LS I Lithic S c atter I 46 I
I I I I
I LC I Lithic/ceramic s catter I 3 I
I I I I
I CH I Camps i te with hearth ( s ) I 42 I
I I I I
I CG I Camp s i te with grounds tone I 5 I
I I I I
I GH I C amp s i te with hearth ( s ) and grounds tone I 4 I
I I I I
I Q I Quarry I 2 I
I I I I
I Q/CH I Quarry and Camp s i t e with hearth ( s ) I 3 I
I I I I
I RS I Rockshelter I 6 I
I I I I
I TOTAL I I 111 I
I I I I
100
APPENDIX 2 . PREHISTORIC S ITE SUMMARY
I I I I S i te I I I I I Dune
I S ite I S i te ! Elevation ! S i� e I I I I I I Alluvial I N . R . I
I Numbe r I Type I ( feet ) I (m ) I Tool s I Groundstone l Sherds I Hearth ! Core l or Aeolian I s tatus I
I I I I I I I I I I I I
I I I I I I I ! I I I
I 4 2GR15 9 8 I LS I 4565 I 725 I I I I I I No I
I I I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 0 3 I LS I 5320 I 10 I I I I I I No I
I I I I 1 I I I I I I
I 4 2GR1 6 04 I LS I 5280 I 45 I I , I 1 I I No I
I I I I I 1 I I I I
I 42GR1 6 0 5 I LC I 5280 I 544 1 1 b i face I I + , I Yes I
, I I I I , 1 1 I
I 42GR1606 I GH , 4560 , 1 2 , 100 1 2 b i faces 1 3 metate I + 1 1 Aeol ian I Yes*
I 1 I I I I fragments , I I I
I I I I 1 1 2 mano I , I
I-'
0 I I I 1 I , fragments I I I
I-'
I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 0 7 I CH , 4560 I 5 , 000 1 3 points I I + 1 1 Aeolian 1 Yes*
I I I I 12 s crapers I I I
1 I I I 1 1 1 I
I 42GR1608 I CG I 4560 I 3 , 600 1 1 b i face 1 mano , I I Aeo l i an I Yes *
I 1 1 I I 1 metate I I I
I I I I I frag . I I I
I 1 I I I 1 unidenti - I I I
I I I I I f ied frag l I I
I 1 I I I I I I
I 42GR1609 I LC I 5240 I 1 , 050 I I + I I Yes
I I I I I I I I
I 4 2GR1 6 10 I CH I 5050 I 50 I I 1 I Aeol ian 1 No
I I 1 I I I I I
I 4 2GR16 1 1 I LS I 4520 I 26 , 325 I I I I Yes*
I I I I I I I I
I 42GR16 1 2 I LS I 4500 I 2 , 100 12 b i faces I I I Yes*
I I I I 11 :Qo int I I I
* Denotes part o f Cottonwood Archae o l ogical D i s tr i c t
** Denotes part o f Wes twater Archaeological D i s tr i c t
APPENDIX 2 . PREHISTORIC S ITE SUMMARY ( CONTINUED)
I I S ite I I I Dune
S i te S i te I Elevat ion I S i� e I I I I I Alluvi al I N . R . I
Numbe r Type I ( fe e t ) I (m ) Tools I Grounds tone l Sherds I Hearth I Core l or Aeo l i an l s tatus I
I I I 1 I 1 I I I
I 1 I 1 I
4 2 GR1 6 l 3 I LC I 4510 1 , 2 5 0 1 2 b i faces + 1 Yes* 1
1 I I I 1
42GR16 l4 I LS 1 4 5 10 80 I 1 Yes* I
I 1 I I I
42GR16 l 5 1 LS I 4500 8 9 , 3 04 1 1 b i face 1 Yes** 1
1 I 1 1 p oint 1 I
1 I I I I
42GR1 6 l 6 1 LS 1 4560 1 2 , 8 0 0 1 1 p oint 1 Yes** 1
1 I 1 2 b i faces I 1
I I I 1 I
42GR1 6 l 7 1 LS I 4620 1 , 05 0 1 1 p o int I Yes** 1
1-'
0 1 I 1 1 I
N
I 42GR1 6 18 I CH I 4720 9 9 0 1 2 b i face 1 Alluvial Yes** 1
I 1 1 fragments I I
1 1 1 I I
42GR1 6 l 9 I LS I 4 7 20 3 , 60 0 1 I Yes** 1
I I I I
4 2GR1 6 2 0 I CH I 4640 750 I + 1 Yes** 1
I I I I
42GR1 6 2 2 I LS I 4600 2 , 800 I 1 I Yes** 1
I 1 I I I
4 2 GR1 6 2 3 I RS I 4480 50 I I Yes** 1
I I I I I
4 2GR1 6 2 4 I LS I 4 6 00 80 I I Yes** 1
I I I I I
42GR1 6 2 5 I LS I 4 540 6 , 000 1 2 p oints I Yes** 1
I I 1 4 b i faces 1 I
I I I 1 1
4 2 GR1 6 2 6 I LS I 4520 6 , 05 0 I I Yes** 1
I I I I 1
I I I I S ite I I I I , Dune ,
S i te Si e , I I Alluvial I N . R . I
, , S i te , Elevati on ' � , I ,
I Numbe r I Type , ( feet) , (m ) I Tool s I Grounds tone l Sherds I Hearth , Core l or Aeo l i an l s tatus '
I I I I I I , I , I I I
I , I I , I , , , , , I
, 42GR1 6 2 7 I CG , 4720 I 3 , 60 0 1 1 b i face/ I + , I + I I I Yes I
I , , I I chopper , I , I I I I
I I I I I I I I I , I ,
I 42GR16 2 8 I CH , 4490 , 14 , 000 , I I I + I I I Yes I
I I I I , I I , , I , I
I 42GR1 6 2 9 I GH I 4490 I 5 , 510 I 1 1 metate I 1 + 1 2 I I Yes I
1 I I I I I fragment I I I I I I
I J J 1 I 1 2 manos I I I I I I
I I I I I I I I I I I
I 4 2GR1 6 3 0 I LS I 4500 , 2 , 4 90 1 1 b i face , I I I 1 I Yes* I
I I , I I I I I I I ,
I-'
0 I 42GR1 6 3 1 I CG I 4520 I 2 7 , 000 2 b ifac e s , I unidenti - I I I Yes* ,
w
, I , I 1 knife , fled frag . , , I I
I I I I I I I ,
I 42GR16 3 2 , LS I 4510 I 9 , 000 I I I Yes* I
I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 3 3 I LS I 4490 I 600 I I I Aeol i an Yes* I
I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 34 I LS I 4520 I 5 6 0 1 b i face I I Aeol i an Yes* I
I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 3 5 I CH I 4520 I 7 , 200 1 biface I I + Aeo l i an Yes * I
I I I I 2 points I I I I
, I I I I I I I
I 42GR16 3 6 I LS I 4520 I 3 , 600 1 1 b i face I I Aeo l i an I Yes * I
I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 3 7 LS I 4520 I 144 I I I Alluvial I Yes* I
I
I I I I I I I I ,
, 42GR1 6 3 8 , LS I 4520 2 , 600 I I , 1 I Yes* ,
,
I I
42GR1 6 3 9 I
I , I
I
I , I ,
I LS � 4640 100 I I I + , Yes ,
, I I I S i te I I , I Dune
I S i te I S i te I E levation ' S i� e , , , , , Al luvial I N . R .
I Number , Type I ( fe e t ) I (m ) Tools I Grounds tone , Sherds , Hearth , Core l or Aeo l ian ' s tatus I
, I I I I , I I I I ,
I I I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1642 I LS , 4515 I 9 , 600 1 p o int , , I , 1 , Aeol i an , Yes* ,
, I I I 1 b i face , I I I , I
I I , I 1 chopper I I I I I
I I I I I I , I I
I 42GR1 6 4 3 I LS , 4510 , 2 , 49 6 , , , Aeo l i an , Yes* ,
I I I I I I I I ,
I 4 2GR1644 I LS I 4520 I 10 , 200 1 b i face I I I Aeo l i an I Yes* I
I I I I fragment I I I I I
I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 645 I CH I 4510 I 4 , 800 1 po int I + I Aeol i an I Yes* I
I I I I I I I I
t-'
0 I 42GR1646 , LS I 4530 , 280 I I I No I
�
I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 5 3 I CH I 4740 I 726 I + 2 I I Yes I
I I I I I I I
I 42GR1654 I CH I 4580 I 40 I + I I No I
I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 5 5 I CH I 4780 I 2 , 800 1 1 mano +C/14 I I Yes* I
I I I I I Samp l e I I I
I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 5 6 I CH I 4780 I 125 I + I I Yes* I
I I I I I , I ,
, 42GR1 6 5 7 I CH I 4820 I 675 1 1 metate + I I Yes* I
I , I I I fragment I I I
I I I I I I I I
I , , I S i te I , I I I Dune I
, S i te , S i te , Elevati on l S i�e I I I I I I Alluvial I N.R. I
I Number I Type I ( feet) I (m ) , Tools I Groundst one l Sherds I Hearth I Core l or Aeo l i an I s tatus I
I I I I I I I I I I I I
I I , I I I I I I I I I
I 4 2GRl 6 5 8 I CH I 5060 I 5 , 100 I I I I +C/14 , I I Yes* I
I I I , I I I I S ample ' , I I
, , I I , I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 5 9 I LS I 5480 , 1 , 645 1 1 p o int I , I I I I No I
I I I I I I I I I I I I
I 4 2GR1 6 6 0 I LS I 4540 I 4 , 675 1 1 scraper I I I I I , No ,
I I I , I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 6 1 I RS I 4600 I 72 I I I I I I I Yes** 1
I I 1 1 I I 1 I 1 I 1
, 4 2GR1 6 6 2 I LS I 4580 I 4 , 12 5 I I I I 1 I I Yes** 1
I I I I I I I I I I
t-'
0 I 42GR1 6 6 3 RS I 4600 I 7 I I I I I I Yes** 1
VI
I I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 6 4 LS I 4620 I 7 , 140 2 b i face s I I I I 10 I I Yes** 1
I I I 1 hammer - I I I I I I I
I I I s tone I I I I I I I
I I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 6 5 CH I 5 5 8 0 I 14 , 400 2 p o ints I I + I + I I I Yes I
I I I I I I I I I I
I 42GR1 6 6 6 CH I 4 3 6 0 I 640 1 b i face I I I + I 1 I I Yes I
I I I I I I I I I I
I 4 2GR1 6 6 7 Q/CH I 4320 1 105 , 000 3 b i faces I I I + I 20 I I Yes I
I 1 I I 1 I I I I I
1 42GRl 6 6 8 LS 1 4 3 2 0 1 7 , 200 2 b i faces 1 I I 1 2 1 1 Yes I
1 I I I I I 1 I 1 I
I 42GRl 6 6 9 LS I 4420 1 2 , 800 1 b i face 1 I I I 2 1 I Yes 1
I I I I I I I I I I
S it e 1 I I I Dune
S ite S ite 1 Elevation 1 S i� e I I I I I Alluvial I N . R . I
Numbe r Type I ( feet) I (m ) Tools 1 Grounds tone I Sherds I Hearth I Core l or Aeo l ian l s tatus I
I I I I I I I I I
I I I I I '
4 2GR1 6 7 0 , LS 4400 1 , 332 2 s c rapers ' I I 2 I Yes I
I I I I I I
42GRl 6 7 1 I CH 4600 1 , 750 1 po int I I + I 1 I Yes** 1
, I I ' I I
42GR1 6 7 3 I CH 4830 2 , 97 5 1 s craper I + I + I I Yes* I
I I I I I I
42GR1 6 7 5 I GH 4480 3 , 6 00 1 1 mano I + I 1 I No I
I I fragment I I I I
I I I I I
42GRl 6 7 6 I CH 5220 8 7 , 500 3 p o ints 1 metate I + I I Yes I
I 4 b i faces fragment I I I I
t-'
0 I I I I I I
0\ 2
I 4 2GRl6 8 0 I CH 4600 30 , 250 1 2 points I +C/14 1 I Yes I
I 11 uniface I S ample I I I I
1 12 b i faces I I I I I
I 1 hamme r - I I I I I
I s tone I I I I I
1 I I I I
42GRl 6 8 l I LS 5320 8 , 80 0 2 points I I I I Yes
I 2 b i faces I I I I
I 1 knife I I I I
I , I 1 1
42GR1 6 8 2 1 RS 4700 720 1 knife , + I I I Yes
I 2 b i faces I I I I
I 1 hammer - I I I I
I s tone I I I I
I I 1 1 I
42GRl6 8 3 I CH 443 0 6 , 00 0 3 b i faces I No
I
I + I I
I 1 I I
I I I I S i te , , I , Dune ,
I S i te I S i te , Elevati on l S i� e , I I , I Alluvial I N . R . I
I Numbe r I Type 1 ( fe e t ) I (m ) Too ls I Groundstone l Sherds , Hearth I Core l or Aeo l i an l s ta tus I
I I I I I I I I I I I
, I I , , , , I I I
I 42GR1 6 8 4 I LS I 447 5 , 3 , 500 I I I , I No I
I , J / I I I / I I
I 42GR1 6 8 5 , CH I 4440 , 900 , , + , , , No I
I / I / / / / / / /
/ 42GR1 6 8 6 / GH I 5080 I 3 0 , 000 1 1 mano + / + / 1 / Ye s /
/ / I / / I I / / /
/ 42GR16 8 7 I CH / 4500 I 2 , 475 1 uniface / / + / 1 / / Yes* /
/ / I I I / I I / I
/ 42GR1 6 8 8 I CH / 4520 / 3 , 000 2 b i faces I I + I 1 I I Yes* /
I I I I I I / / /
/ 42GR1 6 8 9 , CH 4520 I 4 , 000 I , +C/14 / I I Yes* I
I"-'
0 / I I / , S ample I I I I
-...J /
/ I / / I 1 / I
/ 42GR1 6 9 0 CH 4520 / 1 , 250 I I + 1 1 I Ye s* I
I , I I I / I I
, 42GR1 6 9 1 LS 4520 I 675 1 1 b i face I I I I / Yes* /
I I I fragment , I I 1 I I
I I 1 I I I I / I
I 42GR1 6 9 2 CH 4480 I 8 , 00 0 / 2 b i face s I / + / / I Yes* /
/ I 11 triface I I I / / /
/ I / I I / I / 1
/ 43GR1 6 9 3 Q 4520 1 247 , 500 I / 1 / test / / Yes I
, , / / , / c ob - I I I
/ I I I I , bles I I I
, I I I I I / I I
S i te I I I I Dune
S ite S ite I E levation I S i�e I I I 1 I Alluvial I N.R. 1
Number Type I ( feet) I (m ) Tools I Groundstone l Sherds I Hearth J Core l or Aeo l ian l status J
I I I I I I I I
I I I
42GR1694 I CH 4520 1 , 350 2 b i faces I + I I Yes*
I I I
42GR1 6 9 5 I CH 4520 400 1 b iface I + 1 I Yes*
I c o rel I I
I chopper I I
I I I
42GR1 6 9 6 I CH 4 540 2 , 2 50 3 b ifaces I + 1 I Yes*
I I I
42GR1697 I CH 4520 2 , 47 5 I + I Aeo l i an I Yes*
I I I
42GR1 6 9 8 I CH 4520 5 , 600 1 p oint I + I Yes*
I-' 1 chopper
o I I I
co 1 b i face
I I I
I I I I I
4 2GR17 0 l I CH 4540 3 50 I + I I Yes* I
I I I I I
4 2GR1702 I CH 4480 5 , 52 5 I + I I Yes* I
I I I I I
4 2GR1 7 0 3 I CH 4580 1 , 225 I + I I Yes* I
I I I I I
42GR1704 I CH 4550 375 1 b i face I + I I No I
I I I I I
4 2GR1705 I LS 4700 198 1 b iface I 1 I I No I
I I I I I
42GR1706 I CH 4640 5 , 700 1 p oint I + 1 I I Yes I
I 1 hammer - I I I I
I stone I I I I
I 2 b i faces I I I I
I I I I I
42GR1707 I CH 4680 900 1 point 1 metate I + I I No I
I I I I S ite I I I , Dune I
I S i te I S i te I Elevat ion , S i� e I I , I , I Alluvial I N . R .
I Numbe r I Type I ( feet) I (m ) , Tool s I Groundstone l Sherds I Hear th , Core l or Aeo l ian I s tatus I
, I I I I I I I I , I
I I I I I , , I I I
I 4 2GRl 7 0 8 I LS I 4600 I 255 , , I I Yes I
I , I I , I I I ,
I 42GRl 709 I LS I 4650 I 3 , 5 00 , , I I 4 Yes I
I , , I I I I I ,
I 42GRI 7 1 0 I CG I 4640 , 200 I 1 1 mano I I 1 No I
I I I I I , , I I
, 42GR1 711 I LS I 4680 I 8 , 250 I I I , 2 No I
, I I I I , I I I
I 42GRI7 1 2 I CH I 4680 I 1 0 , 000 I I I + I 12 Yes I
I I I I I I I I
I-'
I 42GRl713 I LS I 4640 I 750 I I I No I
0 I I I I I I I
""
, 42GRI714 LS/HC I 4660 600 I I 1 No I
I I I I I
, 42GRl715 Q I 4 6 80 2 5 , 200 I I test I Yes I
I , I I cob - I I
I I I I bles I I I
I , I I , , I
I 42GRl 7 1 6 RS I 4400 220 1 b i face I I 5 I I No I
I I I I I I I
I 42GRl7 1 7 CH I 4480 3 , 1 50 I I + I I Yes * I
I I I I I I I
I 42GRl 7 1 8 CH , 4640 9 , 100 I b i face I I + I I Yes* I
I , , I , , ,
I 42GRI 7 1 9 LS , 4600 425 I b i face I I 1 I I Yes* I
I I 1 hammer - I I I I I
, I s tone I , I I I
I I I I I I I
, , S i te , I I Dune '
S ite S ite , Elevat ion l S i�e , I I I , Alluvial I N . R .
Number Type I ( fe e t ) I (m ) Tools I Groundstone l Sherds I Hearth I Core l or Aeo l ian l s tatus I
I _ . I I I I I ' I I
I I I I I I I
42GRl 7 2 O I LS , 4 6 6 0 I 1 , 5 00 1 1 point I 6 I Yes I
I , I 1 1 b i face I I I
I I I I I I I
42GRl 7 2 1 I CH I 4 7 6 0 I 2 2 , 100 1 1 b i face + I I Yes I
, I I I I I I
42GRl 7 2 2 I QjCH I 4 5 20 I 40 1 10 ham- + I 20 Aeo l i an I Yes I
I I I acres+ merstone s I I I I
I I I I I I I
42GRl 7 2 3 I RS I 4640 I 4 3 , 7 5 0 1 b i face 1 1 mano + I 1 I Yes I
I 1 I I I I I
42GRl 7 2 4 I LS I 4480 I 4 , 400 1 b i face I I I Yes* I
t-'
I-' I I I I I I
0
I 42GRl 7 2 5 I Q/CH I 4480 I 1 8 , 000 2 points I + I Yes* I
I I I 6 b i faces I I I I
I I I I I I I
42GR1 7 3 2 I CG I 4 6 2 0 I 8 , 500 3 b i faces \ 2 metates I Aeol ian I Yes* I
I I I 2 chopper s I I I I
I I I 1 hammer - I I I I
I I I s tone I I I I
I I I I I I I
42GRl 7 3 3 I CH I 4 6 2 0 I 7 , 000 1 b i face I + I Aeol i an I Yes* I
I I I 1 I I I
42GRl 7 34 I LS I 4 6 2 0 I 2 , 500 1 p oint I I I Yes* I
I I I I I I I
111
APPENDIX 3 . This sec tion tabulates cultural features recorded at the 16
p o s t - contact(h i s toric s i tes . The fol l owing symbols are used to key s i tes ,
art i facts and features as follows :
I
SYMBOL I S I TE TYPE TOTAL
I
HC I Historic Camps ite 4
HT I H i s toric Trash Scatter 2
HS I Historic Structure 2
MN I Mine 1
TC I Tin Can S c atter 2
RR I Rai l r oad S tation 1
RT I Railroad Trash S c atter 3
BS I Bead Scatter 1
I
TOTAL I 16
I
I I I
I SYMBOL I ARTI FACTS I
I I I
I B I Bottle I
I TC I T in Cans I
I GL I Glass I
I WD I Woo d I
I ME I Metal I
I NC I Common Nails I
I TCU I Tin Cup I
I BO I Bone I
I CS I Ceramics I
I LE I Leather I
I WI I Wire I
I AM I Ammuni tion I
I RB I Rubber I
I I I
I I I
I I I
I SYMBOL I FEATURES I
I I I
I HE I Hearth/c ampfire I
I MT I Mine tail ings I
I DE I Depress ion I
I TR I Trai l/Road I
I DU I Dump I
I I I
I ! I
112
APPENDIX 3 . H ISTORIC S I TE SUMMARY