From Deseret News archives:

Archaeological treasure in legislators' hands

Published: Monday, Jan. 31, 2005 9:36 a.m. MST
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"I'm still awed by the density of archaeological sites. We've actually looked at certainly less than 10 percent of the drainage, and we're up to . . . almost 300 sites so far," he added.

"There are thousands of archaeological sites."

The Utah Division of Wildlife Resources has been working on a memorandum of understanding that sets out some of the canyon's future, including hunting.

Corinne Springer, a candidate for a master's degree in archaeology at the U., lives on the ranch and helps protect it. "She monitors the archaeological sites, she patrols the road and just keeps the place up," he said.

With help from the Utah Division of Parks and Recreation, workers reroofed two of the ranch houses and put in a new septic system. The Division of Wildlife Resources installed a pair of new gates.

"This year we'll probably work on the culinary water system and reroof the third house," he said. The ranch complex will be a good research station for archaeologists working in the canyon.

The U. has joined with Salt Lake Community College and the College of Eastern Utah, Price, to field student survey teams. So far, they are cataloguing sites but later may dig some small test pits to check stratigraphy, preservation and depths of deposits.

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"Organic preservation is pretty good," Metcalfe said. "We recovered a cache of arrows last spring, we recovered basketry fragments, the kinds of things we don't expect to find in open sites."

One surprising artifact is a wooden shovel, discovered on a rock ledge about 100 feet above the canyon floor. It was found in a place the scientists have dubbed "granary row" because of the structures along the cliffs.

"It's about 6 inches wide, maybe 8 inches long, and it's got a handle on it that looks as though it's been painted, originally."

The shovel is made of cottonwood, which is a soft wood. "We don't think they were actually using it for digging," he said. Perhaps it was used to mix mud into mortar when granaries were built.

So far, 99 percent of the sites were occupied by the Fremont Indians, a group that thrived from about 500 AD to 1350. Three corncobs, from corn grown by these early Utahns, have been radiocarbon dated from about 900 to 1100.

What people are represented by the other 1 percent? Probably folks called Archaic, from pre-Fremont times.

It's hard to tell how extensive the Archaic settlement in Range Creek was because the place has not been excavated. At other localities around Utah, where illegal pot-hunters have damaged sites, archaeologists can check out the holes they dug and get an idea about underlying habitation levels.

"These sites haven't been looted," said the delighted Metcalfe. "We can't see beneath the ground. There's no holes in it.

"It's what makes this place so phenomenal as a research opportunity."


E-mail: bau@desnews.com

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Rancher Waldo Wilcox protected archaeological sites in Range Creek Canyon.

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