Feb 1 2011

Moab Area Rock Art II

Saturday, January 29, 2011

 

Kane Creek Canyon & Potash Road

On Saturday, Amanada and I headed back to Moab in search of rock art. We headed to Kane Creek Canyon and climbed up a side canyon filled with petroglyphs. We ended up hiking all the way over to Pritchett Canyon. Here’s a few photos from our hike.

Faint Hunter
Faint Hunter

Faint Anthropomorph
Faint Anthropomorph

Kane Creek Spiral Snake
Kane Creek Spiral Snake

Kane Creek Ruin Panel
Kane Creek Ruin Panel

Many Sheep
Many Sheep

After finishing up in Kane Creek Canyon we headed into town and grabbed some dinner. Before heading home we made our way down Potash Road again to re-photograph some panels that were in bad light last weekend.

Back to Back Elk
Back to Back Elk

Long-Legged Water Bird
Long-Legged Water Bird

 

Check out my other posts in the Moab Area Rock Art Series:

Moab Area Rock Art I | Colorado River Gorge / Golf Course / Kane Creek
Moab Area Rock Art II | Kane Creek Canyon & Potash Road
Moab Area Rock Art III | Mill Creek Canyon / Kane Creek / Bartlett Panel
Moab Area Rock Art IV | The Secret Grotto & More
Moab Area Rock Art V | Hidden Valley & Behind the Rocks
Moab Area Rock Art VI | Yellow Comet Alcove
Moab Area Rock Art VII | Solstice Snake
Moab Area Rock Art VIII | Dark Angel Petroglyphs
Moab Area Rock Art IX | Mill Creek Canyon


Jan 27 2011

Cave 7

Sunday, January 23, 2011

 

Ninety-seven skeletons were taken from this cave. Many of the men showed evidences of having been killed, as spearpoints were found between the ribs and arrowpoints in the backbones. One case where the hip bones were pinned together wtih a huge obsidian spearpoint shows that no small amount of force was used to bury a point of that size into two inches of bone.

– Richard Wetherill, 1896

 

Pastel Alcove Ruin, near Cave 7
Pastel Alcove Ruin

On Saturday while I was in Moab, I got a message from my friend Rick. He wanted to get out of the house on Sunday and wanted to know if I wanted to tag along. He told me that he was interested in visiting Cave 7 in the winter, so I jumped at the opportunity and told him I would definitely go with! Bright and early on Sunday morning I picked him up and headed towards Blanding, topped off the fuel tank and made our way to Cave 7.

*      *      *

On November 29, 1893, Richard Wetherill led the Hyde Exploring Expedition out of Mancos, CO on their way to Grand Gulch. After a stop in Bluff, UT for supplies they headed north on December 11. In a letter written six days later, addressed from “First Valley Cottonwood Creek 30 miles North Bluff City,” Richard Wetherill wrote:

Our success has surpassed all expectations….In the cave we are now working we have taken 28 skeletons and two more in sight and curious to tell, and a thing that will surprise the archaeologists of the country is the fact of our finding them at a depth of five and six feet in a cave in which there are cliff dwellings and we find the bodies under the ruins, three feet below any cliff dweller sign. They are a different race from anything I have ever seen. They had feather cloth and baskets, no pottery–six of the bodies had stone spear heads in them.

*      *      *

Cave 7 Ruin
Cave 7 Ruin

Most of what we know about the route the Hyde Exploring Expedition took and which alcoves they explored is because of the Weatherhill–Grand Gulch Research Project using reverse archeology to figure it out. Some of the alcoves in the area still have legible historic inscriptions that are dated and were used to help retrace the route they took. At the time of the Basketmaker Symposium in May 1990 the location of Cave 7 was still unknown, but by the end of May the team was close to locating it. The final piece of the puzzle that helped them actually find it didn’t fall into place until three months later when they received some new photographs from the Wetherill expeditions from the Museum of Anthropology and Archeology of the University of Pennsylvania. Using those photos and the information of the route they had already figure out, they were finally able to re-located Cave 7 again in September of 1990….almost a century after Richard Wetherill had made his Basketmaker discovery there.

*      *      *

After driving to the proper drainage and hiking over a mile through snow, mud and frozen creek crossings we soon reached the box canyon that contained Cave 7. We started out by hiking to the end of the canyon and taking some photos of Box Canyon Ruin (Pastel Alcove Ruin). This was an interesting ruin perched high up in an alcove with part of an outer wall still standing next to it. This ruin was briefly mentioned by Richard Wetherill in some of his notes, and helped verify that this small box canyon was the correct location of Cave 7.

Box Canyon Ruin

After spending some time at the ruin, we headed back and climbed up to Cave 7. There wasn’t much here, aside from one small wall, but the historical aspect of this site was certainly enough for me.

Cave 7

The line of boulders on the floor had not fallen yet in the photos I have seen from the late 1800’s and even from the Wetherill–Grand Gulch team in the early 1990s.

The remaining wall in Cave 7

This small ruin is right above Cave 7 in a smaller alcove

Before heading back we climbed up the slickrock on the other side of the canyon to a few alcoves. One of the shallow alcoves was lined with metate grooves

After we finished exploring around Cave 7 and looking for historic inscriptions we started our hike back to the Jeep in the snow. The drive back to the pavement was a bit slick with all the melting snow, but we made it out fine. It was a long drive for a day-trip, but well worth it. We even managed to make it home before dark.

 

If you are interested in finding out more about the Rediscovery of Cave 7 and Basketmaker Archeology, I highly recommend the book Cowboys & Cave Dwellers by Fred Blackburn and Ray Williamson.


Jan 25 2011

Moab Area Rock Art I

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Colorado River Gorge / Golf Course Panel / Kane Creek Canyon

Since I am planning on making a number of trips to the Moab area in search of rock art this year, I’ve decided to make it easy on myself with the naming convention for these trip reports. Here’s the first of this years ‘Moab Area Rock Art’ series.

On Saturday Amanda and I headed down to Moab to search out some new petroglyphs along the Colorado River, plus to revisit some that we’ve been to many times before. It always seems that no matter how many times I visit these areas, I always find something new. Here’s some photos of just some of the petroglyphs we found throughout the day. You can click on each photo for a larger view, plus a little more info about it.

Centipede Panel
Centipede Panel

Colorado River Petroglyphs
Colorado River Petroglyphs

Fading Away
Fading Away

Missing Pieces
Missing Pieces

Jeep Under Petroglyphs
Jeep Under Petroglyphs

Small Boxed Sheep
Small Boxed Sheep

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Jan 10 2011

Escalante Canyon Petroglyphs

Sunday, January 9, 2011

On Sunday, Amanda and I took a short trip to Escalante Canyon to locate some new petroglyphs and revisit some ones I’ve been to before. Here’s a few pictures from our afternoon….

The new panels we found were near the Gunnison River.

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Jan 8 2011

Snowshoeing the West Bench Trail

Saturday, January 8, 2011

My first official trip report of 2011. Amanda had to work in Avon today, so I headed up on the Grand Mesa to get in my first snowshoe trip of the season. There was an inversion in the Grand Valley today, so it was nice to get up above the haze and into warmer temperatures, too! When I set out I wasn’t sure which trail I was going to hit, but when I got up there I decided to head out on the West Bench Trail for a few miles and then head back. I ended up snowshoeing about 4.3 miles, which isn’t bad for my first trip of the season. It definitely was a good workout! The conditions on the Mesa were great and it was a beautiful day. Here’s a few photos from my hike…

Strapping on my snowshoes for the first time this winter

Gauge of how deep the snow is

Passing by the first reservoir

Ice on the branches

Aspens and Snow

Seeing what kind of sunburst I could get out of my S90….this was as good as it gets when stopped all the way down to f8

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