
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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185 pp.
with contributions by Danny N. Walker, Patricia A. Dean, and Shawn
McVey |
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INTRODUCTION:
Between 1994 and 1997, the Weber State University Archaeological Field
School spent a total of nine weeks excavating the Rock Springs site
(10-OA-210), a multi-component prehistoric bison kill and processing camp
situated in the extreme northwestern portion of the Curlew Valley, Oneida
County, southeastern Idaho. Our investigations of these 1.5 m deep cultural
deposits revealed the presence of at least seven distinct occupational
episodes dating between approximately A.D. 1000 and 1800, which indicate
that the Rock Springs locality served as a traditional, long-term bison
hunting area for local Native peoples. Given the natural topography of
the area, it seems likely that the predominant communal hunting strategy was
to drive bison into natural traps or bottlenecks such as that formed by two
converging finger ridges at the head of Rock Creek. With the exception of
previous excavations at Malad Hill (Swanson and Dayley 1968), Bissell
Springs (Franzen 1977), and Weston Canyon Rockshelter (Miller 1972; Arkush
1999a), and small cultural resource management-related surveys, this region
has received little or no attention from professional archaeologist, and the
prehistoric record therein is only superficially understood. The Rock
Springs project has improved our understanding of regional prehistoric
subsistence systems and settlement practices, and its presence suggests that
additional bison drive and butchering sites exist within the greater Curlew
Valley region.
Rock Springs is located in
rolling hills east of the Sublette mountains where water from the springs
flows eastward between two finger ridges into a narrow drainage about two
meters deep. Site 10-OA-210 occurs on the southern stream terrace
immediately east of the ridges; bison apparently were driven through the
natural funnel formed by the finger ridges, forced into the creek bed,
dispatched in this confined area, and then butchered and extensively
processed along the stream terrace. The Rock Springs site lies within
the extreme northern Bonneville Basin--Rock Creek flows southward into Deep
Creek which in turn flows into the northwestern arm of Great Salt Lake near
Locomotive Springs--and is somewhat unique because it represents one of the
few known prehistoric bison kill and/or processing sites within, or adjacent
to, the northeastern Great Basin. As such, it is an extremely interesting
and important cultural resource. Intensive excavations at 10-OA-210 were
conducted in order to improve our understanding of communal late prehistoric
bison procurement in northern Utah and southern Idaho, especially in regard
to the frequency, seasonality, technological organization, and butchering
practices associated with an important, but heretofore poorly documented,
aboriginal activity within this region.
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