|
Utah's
rich archaeological heritage has lured scientists and
antiquarians from around the world to excavate in the
deep caves of the western deserts, explore the well-preserved
Anasazi ruins, and study the enigmatic and unique Fremont
culture. Some of the most respected scholars in North
American archaeology have spent time unraveling the prehistory
of this highly varied region: the Wetherills, Neil Judd,
A.V. Kidder, John Brew, Julian Steward, and Jesse D. Jennings,
to name a few. Surprisingly, however, the history of Utah
archaeology has been largely ignored since Elmer Smith
published a short overview of Utah anthropology in 1950.
Smith traced the history of the discipline by describing
the research activities and publications of the faculty
at the University of Utah, since much of the archaeological
research to that time had been done by that institution.
Today all the major universities in the state, the Utah
Historical Society, various federal agencies, and several
private archaeological contracting firms employ archaeologists
to teach, do research, and manage cultural remains. As
a consequence of this increased activity, the number of
professionals has increased exponentially, as has the
amount of archaeological data generated and reported.
Archaeology in Utah can be divided into five chronological
periods characterized by particular interests and activities:
1776-1875: Early Explorations
and Observations;
1875-1910: Institution- and University-sponsored,
Exploring and Collecting Expeditions
1910-1947: Beginnings of Professional
Archaeology
1947-1980: The Jennings Era
1980-Present: Hunter-Gatherers
and Ethnoarchaeology, Public and Cultural Resource Management,
(CRM) Archaeology.
1776-1875: EARLY EXPLORATIONS
AND OBSERVATIONS
The earliest written description of archaeological sites
in the state was made by the renowned Spanish explorers
and Catholic fathers Dominguez and Escalante, who traveled
north from New Mexico into western Colorado and then west
into the Uinta Basin of northern Utah in 1776. Their detailed
journal contains priceless descriptions of the countryside
and its inhabitants and mentions ruins in the Uinta Basin
near the confluence of the Uinta and Duchesne rivers.
Little archaeological information was recorded during
the succeeding seventy-five years.
After the arrival of the Mormons in 1847, settlers who
encountered archaeological ruins occasionally described
them in journals and letters. Intriguing observations
were made, for example, by members of the 1849-50 southern
exploring expedition who traveled south to the Virgin
River area and back to Salt Lake City under the direction
of Parley P. Pratt. Journal entries from members of the
expedition include references to rock art and "ancient
potter" in the vicinities of modern Manti, St. George,
and Parowan. Brigham Young in an 1851 letter described
ruins that he saw at Paragonah in Parowan Valley: "We
visited the ruins of an ancient Indian village on Red
Creek, where we found quantities of broken, burnt, painted
earthenware, arrow points, adobes, burnt brick, a crucible,
some corn grains, charred cobs, animal bones, and flint
stones of various colors. The ruins were scattered over
a space about two miles long and one wide. The buildings
were about 120 in number, and were composed apparently
of dirt lodges, the earthen roofs having been supported
by timbers, which had decayed or been burned, and had
fallen in, the remains thus forming mounds of an oval
shape and sunken at the tip. One of the structures appeared
to have been a temple or council hall, and covered about
an acre of ground."
Government exploration of the Four Corners region in southeastern
Utah commenced at about the same time as Mormon settlement
in the north. Between 1849 and the late 1870s individuals
such as J.H. Simpson, J.N. Macomb, J.S. Newberry, W.H.
Jackson, F.V. Hayden, W.H. Holmes, and others traveled
the Four Corners area discovering and documenting many
Anasazi sites in the Mesa Verde Region of southwestern
Colorado and southeastern Utah. In the 1870s members of
the Untied State Geographical Survey expedition led by
Lt. George Wheeler excavated sites at Beaver and Provo
and wrote provocative descriptions of mounds in Parowan
Valley. At the latter location (described earlier by Brigham
Young above), they estimated that there were 400 to 500
structures.
The initial explorations and observations identified the
locations of some of the rich archaeological sites or
regions in the state. This knowledge was used to direct
the numerous intensive artifact-collecting expeditions
that characterized archaeological interests over the next
few decades.
1875-1910: INSTITUTIONS AND
UNIVERSITY-SPONSORED EXPLORING AND COLLECTING EXPEDITIONS
In the late 1800s large museums such as the Peabody Museum
of Archaeology and Ethnography at Harvard, the American
Museum of Natural History and the Museum of the American
Indian, Heye Foundation, both in New York, the Smithsonian
Institution, and others sponsored expeditions specifically
to gather collections for display and study. The Smithsonian
and the Peabody, for example, provided support for Edward
Palmer, a medical practitioner and professional collector,
who visited Utah in the 1870s gathering up archaeological
and ethnographic artifacts. Palmer excavated in "mounds"
at Santa Clara near St. George, and at Kanab, Paragonah,
and Payson, and made ethnographic collections from artifacts
of the Southern Paiute Indians. The driving force behind
his collecting activity was the preparation of exhibits
for the 1876 United States centennial celebration to be
held in Philadelphia.
The World's Columbian Exposition at the 1893 Chicago World's
Fair also demanded antiquities exhibits, and the Utah
Territorial World's Fair Commission appointed Don Maguire
of Ogden as chief of the Department of Archaeology and
Ethnology with the mandate to acquire collections. Maguire
proceeded with great energy to excavate at numerous locales
in the state, including the massive Paragonah site described
earlier, at mounds in the Virgin River drainage near St.
George, and in San Juan County, where he also purchased
collections from locals. Henry Montgomery, professor of
natural history at the University of Utah, worked side
by side with Maguire at Paragonah and explored numerous
other sites around the state. Montgomery's essay "Prehistoric
Man in Utah," published in 1894, provides the first
overview of Utah archaeology.
Southeastern Utah was the focus of intense archaeological
collecting in the 1890s by several expeditions - first
by Charles McCloyd and Charles Graham, and later by the
Wetherill brothers, all from southwestern Colorado. Importantly,
the Wetherills recognized and documented the presence
of an aceramic, atlatl-wielding farming people whose remains
lay under, and therefore predated, the "Cliff Dwellers"
ruins in many of the dry alcoves of Grand Gulch and other
spectacular canyons of the area.
The massive collections made by McCloyd and Graham and
the Wetherills eventually went to eastern museums such
as the American Museum of Natural History and the Chicago
Field Museum. The success of these professional collectors
inspired Byron Cummings, a professor of classical languages
at the University of Utah, to make several trips to the
Four Corners area to make collections for the university.
Accompanying him were students Neil Judd, A.V. Kidder,
and Jesse Nusbaum, whose interests in Utah archaeology
continued during their professional careers. In 1914 Cummings
founded the Department of Archaeology at the University
of Utah.
The museum-sponsored collecting activities in Utah during
the late nineteenth century established the state as one
of the rich archaeological regions of the West. Although
little attention was given to documentation or the publication
of findings during this period, the various explorations
verified the importance of previously known regions and
identified new areas for research. This knowledge influenced
the research emphasis of the new professionals of the
twentieth century.
1910-1947: BEGINNINGS OF PROFESSIONAL
ARCHAEOLOGY
Neil Judd was the first trained, professional archaeologist
to work in the state and was an important figure in early
Utah archaeology. Between 1915 and 1920 Judd surveyed
and excavated at numerous mounds in several Wasatch Front
valleys and at Anasazi sites in northwestern Arizona and
near Kanab, Utah. Based on this research, Judd concluded
that the ruins along the Wasatch Front were related to
the Puebloan cultures of the Southwest. Judd's findings
influenced subsequent researchers, who continued to refer
to the mound sites along the Wasatch as Puebloan until
the 1950s.
In the late 1920s the Peabody Museum at Harvard University
renewed its interest in Utah archaeology with the Claflin-Emerson
Expedition. At the suggestion of A. V. Kidder, Boston
businessmen William H. Claflin, Jr., and Raymond Emerson
took a pack trip to Utah west and north of the Colorado
River to scout for rich archaeological areas. Encouraged
by their finds, they financed four years (1928-31) of
archaeological research in eastern Utah, focusing on regions
such as the Green River north of the Colorado, Nine Mile
Canyon, and the Fremont River. Ads part of the Claflin-Emerson
research, Noel Morss excavated a number of sites at the
latter locale in 1928 and 1929. He reported his work in
The Ancient Culture of the Fremont River in Utah
and defined a new archaeological group which he called
the Fremont after the river where he worked. The Fremont
Culture, he maintained, was clearly influenced by the
Southwest but was "not an integral pat of the main
stream of Southwestern development." The Claflin-Emerson
Expedition also introduced John O. Brew to Utah archaeology.
Brew returned in 1931 to excavate at Alkali Ridge east
of Blanding and, based on that field work, wrote Archaeology
of Alkali Ridge, Southeastern Utah, which stands as
the definitive work on the early Puebloan period in the
Four Corners area.
Julian H. Steward came to the University of Utah as chair
of the department of anthropology in 1930 and remained
on the faculty until 1933. Steward's contributions to
the anthropology of the Great Basin and Utah cannot be
overstated. His archaeological work is overshadowed by
the ethnographic research presented in his classic monograph,
Basin-Plateau Aboriginal Socio-political Groups,
which focused on the Western Shoshone Indians of Nevada.
These studies were central to the development of Steward's
ideas about cultural ecology, a perspective that continues
to be highly influential in archaeology. Steward excavated
at various mounds along the Wasatch Range and, like Judd
and Morss, noted artifactual and architectural similarities
to those artifacts and ruins of the Southwest; he used
the phrase "Northern Periphery" to characterize
farming cultures in Utah north of the range of the Anasazi.
Steward also excavated several caves around the Great
Salt Lake and reported on his efforts in his Ancient
Caves of the Great Salt Lake Region.
Following Steward at the University of Utah, John Gillin
spent two years (1935-37) in the department and, with
Peabody sponsorship, excavated numerous Fremont sites
in the state. In 1937 Elmer Smith joined the faculty at
Utah and continued the tradition of reconnaissance and
mound and cave excavations. Also during the 1930s, Albert
Reagan initiated an archaeology program at Brigham Young
University (BYU) and actively pursued research in the
Uinta Basin and Utah Valley.
Professional archaeology was well established in Utah
by the 1940s. The most influential practitioners were
Judd and Steward, both of whom went on to brilliant, nationally
prominent careers in anthropology. The 1940s also brought
significant changes in archaeological methods, such as
the development of radiocarbon dating, a tool that revolutionized
archaeology by enabling researchers to construct absolute
regional cultural chronologies. No one was more aware
of the importance of these changes and the opportunities
they offered than Jesse D. Jennings, who can rightly be
called the father of Utah archaeology.
1947-1980: THE JENNINGS ERA
Jesse D. Jennings came to the University of Utah in 1948
and, over the succeeding thirty years, brought stability
and a fundamental understanding of the culture history
of Utah and the Great Basin. His ability to synthesize
archaeological data in a readable and coherent fashion,
combined with a steady focus over his long tenure, set
Jennings apart as the most influential figure in Utah
archaeology.
Jennings's impact on the archaeology of Utah particularly
and the Great Basin generally was immediate and significant.
In 1949 he organized the Utah Statewide Archaeological
Survey and established the University of Utah Anthropological
Papers monograph series. The following three decades were
a time of intense archaeological activity at the University
of Utah. The important Danger Cave work and several smaller
excavations at Fremont sites occupied much of the early
1950s, while the massive Glen Canyon project, a joint
effort with the Museum of Northern Arizona, was the focus
of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Jennings, with various
graduate student assistants, directed excavations in all
parts of the state, although research tended to focus
on caves (for example, Hogup Cave, Swallow Shelter, Sudden
Shelter, Cowboy Cave) or Fremont structural sites (for
example, the Bear River sites, Injun Creek, Old Woman,
the Garrison Site, Nephi Mounds, Pharo Village, Snakerock,
Caldwell Village, Median Village, Evans Mound, Bull Creek,
and others).
The Desert Culture concept, developed after excavations
at Danger Cave and other dry caves in the western deserts,
was Jennings's most significant theoretical contribution
to Great Basin archaeology. Although controversial, this
model stimulated research and archaeological inquiry for
at least three decades. Jennings summarized his views
on the Desert Culture (or Desert Archaic) model at the
Leigh Lecture at the University of Utah in 1975: "From
10,000 or more years ago, until A.D. 400, the only culture
represented in Utah, as well as the rest of the Great
Basin, was the Desert Archaic. That culture is characterized
as a hunting-gathering one, a flexible, highly adaptive
lifeway that has characterized most of man's worldwide
history."
The Desert Culture may be the contribution that most often
comes to mind when Jennings's work is discussed, but others
are equal in importance. Primary among these are the archaeological
data generated at Utah during the course of his thirty
years of field work, which were promptly analyzed and
reported, primarily in the University of Utah Anthropological
Papers. In addition, Jennings established the Utah Museum
of Natural History in 1963 and directed it for ten years.
In 1973 he shepherded the first state antiquities law
through the legislature, establishing the Antiquities
Section within the Utah State Historical Society and providing
for a state archaeologist. Jennings was also instrumental
in founding the Great Basin Anthropological Conference.
Finally, through the Utah field school and graduate program,
Jennings trained several generations of archaeologists.
Jennings dominated Utah archaeology for thirty years,
but others also made important contributions during that
era. Highlights include Marie Wormington's research at
the Turner-Look site and her comprehensive report of "Northern
Periphery" archaeology. Research by the University
of Colorado in Dinosaur National Monument under the direction
of Robert Lister and David Breternitz provided a basic
understanding of the prehistory of northeastern Utah.
During the Glen Canyon project, the Museum of Northern
Arizona excavated at Sand Dune and Dust Devil caves on
Navajo Mountain and defined the Desha Complex dating to
the early Archaic period (7,000 to 8,000 B.P.).
In 1945 a department of archaeology was established at
BYU. Over the next two decades, Ross Christensen, Ray
Matheny, and Dale Berge directed research in Utah Valley,
mostly at Fremont mound sites. Dale Berge directed historic
archaeological projects at Goshen and Camp Floyd in Utah
Valley as well as at the Pony Express station at Simpson
Springs. During the 1960s and early 1970s, Matheny investigated
Anasazi sites in Montezuma Canyon of southeastern Utah
as part of the BYU archaeological field school program.
Also in southeastern Utah, William D. Lipe of Washington
State University and R. G. Matson of the University of
British Columbia have made steady contributions to our
understanding of the Anasazi Basketmaker Culture through
ongoing work on Cedar Mesa and in Grand Gulch. Matson's
book The Origins of Southwestern Agriculture synthesizes
much of the Grand Gulch research. Beginning in the late
1970s Richard Thompson at Southern Utah State College
in Cedar City directed excavations at numerous Anasazi
sites in the Virgin River drainage and on the Utah-Arizona
border near St. George.
The nature of archaeology in Utah and in the United States
generally was drastically altered in the 1970s by the
passage of federal legislation requiring that archaeological
sites on public land be protected from destruction by
development projects such as highways, reservoirs, and
power line construction. The passing of the Utah Antiquities
Act in 1973 and the appointment of a state archaeologist
to manage the increased archaeological activity in the
state was part of this national trend. Another consequence
of this legislation was the hiring of agency archaeologists
to manage archaeological sites on public lands. These
changes ushered in the era of Cultural Resource Management
(CRM) archaeology, resulting in a dramatic increase in
both the numbers of archaeologists and in the amount of
archaeological data being generated.
The 1960s and 1970s were also a time of foment and change
in professional archaeology generally. The "New Archaeology"
emphasizing explanation and cultural process largely supplanted
the cultural historical paradigm in archaeology. Middle
range theory, which focused on understanding how the archaeological
record was formed, became an important interest. Some
turned to studying extant peoples, especially hunters
and gatherers, to document site organization and the behaviors
responsible for material patterning, an interest that
developed into a field of study called ethnoarchaeology.
During the 1980s and into the 1990s, middle range studies,
ethnoarchaeology, and especially CRM archaeology have
influenced Utah archaeological research in a number of
ways.
1980-PRESENT: HUNTER-GATHERERS
AND ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY, PUBLIC AND CRM ARCHAEOLOGY
Hunter-gatherers and Ethnoarchaeology. For several reasons,
not the least of which was Jennings's departure from the
University of Utah in 1978 and the burgeoning field of
CRM archaeology, field research in the state since the
late 1970s has not been dominated by the University of
Utah, although that institution continues to be highly
influential in terms of theoretical direction. CRM firms,
federal agencies, and especially the Antiquities Section
in the Utah Division of State History became more actively
involved in archaeological field work. Since 1973 the
Antiquities Section has been directed by David B. Madsen,
whose position and publications have made him a central
figure in Utah archaeology over the past two decades.
Madsen's interests in paleoenvironmental reconstruction
and subsistence, especially during the first years of
his appointment, resulted in a greater emphasis on those
topics, especially in Fremont studies. Fremont Perspectives,
published by the Antiquities Section and edited by Madsen
in 1980, was an important result of Madsen's influence.
In 1978 James F. O Connell joined the faculty at the University
of Utah. In the early 1980s O'Connell collaborated with
Madsen in coediting Man and Environment in the Great
Basin, an important synthesis of Great Basin paleoenvironments
and cultural history, and in the final chapter (coauthored
with Kevin Jones and Steven Simms), called for a different
theoretical emphasis in Great Basin research - evolutionary
ecology. This new interest was based on O'Connell's interest
in hunter-gatherer studies and ethnoarchaeology resulting
from his field work with Australian aborigines and, later,
the Adza people of Africa. Several of O'Connell's students,
Steven Simms at Utah State University, Duncan Metcalf
at Utah, and Kevin Jones at the Antiquities Section, have
brought this theoretical perspective and interest in middle
range issues (for example, butchering practices, transport
decisions, and site structure analysis) to studies of
hunter-gatherer behavior generally. These interests have,
since the mid-1980s, dominated academic research in the
state, although some, such as Joel Janetski (at BYU),
who studied under both Jennings and O'Connell at the University
of Utah, bridge the interests with both culture-historical
and ecological research.
The interest in hunters and gatherers and middle range
studies continues in Utah to the benefit of our understanding
of the past. Research by Simms and Janetski on late prehistoric
hunter-gatherers along the Wasatch Front, for example,
has provided important data on that heretofore undescribed
period and the transition from farming to hunting and
gathering at about A.D. 1300. Much of the contract archaeology
being done in the state in the 1990s reflects a renewed
interest in hunter-gatherers generally, a lifeway that
persisted in Utah for at least 8,000 years prior to the
Fremont and several centuries thereafter.
Crm and Agency Archaeology. Cultural Resource Management
archaeology in Utah has its roots in salvage projects
like Glen Canyon and initially was performed solely by
university-affiliated archaeologists. The proliferation
of contract work related to oil and coal exploration and
federally mandated management work from the 1970s on,
however, has supported many private contracting firms
and university contracting offices at BYU, U of U, Southern
Utah State University, and Utah State University. Beyond
providing more jobs for archaeologists and vastly increasing
the amount of archaeological data reported, CRM projects
have, on occasion, resulted in other benefits to the public,
such as the construction of visitors centers or museums
to present and interpret project findings. Examples include
centers at Anasazi State Park at Boulder, built following
the excavations at Coombs Village during the Glen Canyon
project, and Fremont Indian State Park south of Richfield,
which was built to house and display the collections excavated
at nearby Five Finger Ridge and other Fremont sites in
Clear Creek Canyon. Visitors centers at Edge of the Cedars
State Park in Blanding and Hovenweep National Monument
east of Blanding were also constructed as a result of
archaeological research at adjacent ruins.
Since the mid-1970s the number of agency archaeologists
- both state and federal - has grown slowly but steadily.
Initially, the primary activity of agency archaeologists
was to identify and manage (protect) cultural resources
on their lands. During the 1980s and 1990s, however, federal
archaeologists have increasingly encouraged research through
cooperative agreements with university archaeologists
and have emphasized public participation on these and
other projects. The emphasis on public-oriented archaeology,
especially by federal agencies, has led to increased funding
for publications and educational programs for schoolchildren.
The increase in the number of professionals doing archaeology
in the state resulted in the establishment of the Utah
Professional Archaeological Council (UPAC) in 1980 to
monitor and encourage high standards of professional work
and to increase preservation efforts, especially through
legislation. Richard N. Holmer, then the contracting archaeologist
at the University of Utah, was elected the first president.
Since its inception, UPAC has played an ever-increasing
role in politics by participating in writing and reviewing
legislation relative to antiquities and by playing watchdog
on preservation issues. One of the more important changes
came in 1992 with the Antiquities Protection Act, which
prohibited the sale of antiquities obtained on state land,
required State Lands and Forestry departments to manage
archeological sites, and contained a state reburial law
for human remains.
Public and Avocational Archaeology. Archaeology has always
been supported by active non-professionals or amateurs
and Utah archaeology is no exception. The efforts of Don
Maguire of Ogden in the 1890s have already been mentioned,
but, more recently, amateurs such as Bud Peterson of Logan,
Francis Hassell of Ogden, Robert and James Bee of Provo,
John Hutchings of Lehi, Leo Thorne of Vernal, and Eldon
"Doc" Dorman of Price, among others often collaborated
with professionals in various capacities.
Amateur interests were formalized in 1962 with the founding
of the Utah Statewide Archaeological Society (USAS), with
support from Jennings. From the outset, USAS was a statewide
organization with chapters in various communities, a structure
that continues to the present. Its newsletter, Utah
Archaeology, served as a means to communicate research
findings to the amateur community. During the late 1960s
membership lagged, but in the mid-1980s USAS was revitalized
through the joint efforts of David Madsen and amateur
George Tripp of Salt Lake City. Importantly, as new chapters
were formed, professionals either from universities or
from state or federal agencies stepped forward to act
as advisors and to identify and coordinate productive
group projects. As a consequence, USAS membership boomed.
Membership in 1990 was over 400 in ten chapters scattered
throughout the state. In 1988 Utah Archaeology
was reconceptualized as an annual state journal supported
by UPAC, USAS, and the Division of State History, and
edited jointly by a representative from UPAC and one from
USAS. The founding editors were Joel Janetski (UPAC) and
Steve Manning (USAS). In its new, more formal format the
journal has been widely accepted by professionals and
amateurs as an important source of information about local
archaeology.
Utah archeology in the 1990s is a dynamic and highly diverse
field, dramatically different from what it was in the
early part of this century when professional work began.
At that time practitioners were few, and the literature
on human prehistory in the state would barely fill a shelf.
Today, archaeologists are employed by every major land
managing agency and university in the state, and publications
on Utah archaeology would fill rooms. A chronological
framework was established by the 1950s and patterns of
subsistence and settlement have been described for much
of the state. Archaeologists are now building on this
foundation to explore issues of economics, group interaction,
and regional diversity, as well as provide explanations
for the ebb and flow of cultural change over the past
10,000 years of human presence in the area. The past remains
elusive, but Utah is fortunate as it continues to attract
some of the best minds in the field to tell the story
of its complex and intrinsically fascinating history and
prehistory.
Archaeology's greatest challenge at the end of the twentieth
century has not changed since the 1930s when an alarmed
Elmer Smith drew attention to the incessant looting of
archaeological sites around the state. Vandalism has,
in fact, escalated over the past fifty years despite the
efforts of many preservation-minded citizens. Without
better protection of our precious and irreplaceable surviving
cultural resources, much information and understanding
about the history of the native peoples and early settlers
of Utah will certainly be lost.
Joel C. Janetski
|