An edition of Cowboys & cave dwellers (1997)

Cowboys & cave dwellers

basketmaker archaeology in Utah's Grand Gulch

1st ed.
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Last edited by MARC Bot
August 3, 2025 | History
An edition of Cowboys & cave dwellers (1997)

Cowboys & cave dwellers

basketmaker archaeology in Utah's Grand Gulch

1st ed.
  • 1 Want to read

The tortuous canyon country of southeastern Utah conceals thousands of archaeological sites, ancient homes of the ancestors of today's Southwest Indian peoples. Late in the nineteenth century, adventurous cowboy-archaeologists made the first forays into the canyons in search of the material remains of these prehistoric cultures.

Rancher Richard Wetherill (best known as the "discoverer" of Mesa Verde's Cliff Palace) and his brothers; entrepreneurs Charles McLoyd and Charles Cary Graham; and numerous other adventurers, scholars, preachers, and businessmen mounted expeditions into the area now known as Grand Gulch.

With varying degrees of scientific rigor, they mapped and dug the canyon's rich archaeological sites, removing large numbers of artifacts and burial goods to exhibit or sell back home - whether "home" was Durango, Chicago, New York, or Helsinki. In the winter of 1893-94, Richard Wetherill uncovered convincing proof that a previously unrecognized group of people had lived in Grand Gulch before the so-called Anasazi, or Cliff Dwellers.

Wetherill named these people the "Basket Makers" and inaugurated a new era of understanding of the region's prehistoric past.

Almost one hundred years later, the modern-day adventure that became known as the Wetherill-Grand Gulch Research Project began as a grassroots effort by a group of avocational archaeologists. Their original plan - to track the nineteenth-century explorers through the signatures and dates they left on canyon walls - soon grew into the larger project of reconstructing the area's lost archaeological history and tracing the current whereabouts of the looted artifacts.

The trail eventually led the Wetherill-Grand Gulch team from Utah to Chicago's Field Museum and the American Museum of Natural History of New York.

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Cover of: Cowboys & cave dwellers
Cowboys & cave dwellers: basketmaker archaeology in Utah's Grand Gulch
1997, School of American Research Press, Distributed by the University of Washington Press
in English - 1st ed.

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-181) and index.

Published in
Santa Fe, N.M, [Seattle, WA]
Other Titles
Cowboys and cave dwellers

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
979.2/47
Library of Congress
E99.B37 B56 1997, E99.B37B56 1997, E99.B37 B56 1997X

The Physical Object

Pagination
188 p. :
Number of pages
188

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL991184M
ISBN 10
0933452489, 0933452470
LCCN
96029572
OCLC/WorldCat
35808277
LibraryThing
1948528
Goodreads
68792
1157651

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL3286853W

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