A small group of archaeologists are blazing a path into places like Wyomings Wind River Range, the Tetons and Montanas Beartooth Plateau, rewriting the understanding of prehistoric peoples use of what are now high elevation wilderness areas.
We really need to be thinking about the Rocky Mountains in a way that we havent been thinking about them, said Bonnie Pitblado, an anthropological archaeology professor at the University of Oklahoma.
By Clovis time (about 13,500 years ago), we have clear, clear evidence people are in the New World and they are in the Rocky Mountains and know them intimately, she added.
Conference
Pitblado was one of 11 researchers gathered at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West earlier this month to speak at a conference of scientists who share an interest in high altitude archaeology. Their work is shedding light on what had long been a dark spot for investigation of prehistoric sites in North America. What they are documenting from stone tools and arrow points to soapstone bowls and woven cordage and basketry, to large campsites, animal traps and even bison jumps are forcing academics to rethink long-held theories namely that the high country was too inhospitable to be inhabited.
http://billingsgazette.com/lifestyles/recreation/archaeologists-uncovering-ancient-peoples-widespread-use-of-mountains/article_b589afe6-194b-58d7-a1b1-7442b8c10220.html