Let me start by saying that we never never ever take any archaeology from where we've found it. We also NEVER dig into the ground to find things. The Antiquities Act of 1906 protects all of these artifacts found on public lands (and has given us protected wonders like Bears Ears and Grand Staircase Escalante National Monuments - in fact 4 of Utah's 5 National Parks all received their first protections because of this wonderful law). We find such wonders because we hike where others rarely go and we're not just trying to make huge miles hiked every day. We're trying to learn something about the land and trying to really appreciate it's beauty and wonder. The handle that being held is part of a ladle, in fact it's larger than any ladle handle I've ever seen even those in Museums. It's hard to tell but the scoop part of the ladle was painted. The cup was the most complete cup I've ever seen. Most rare of all was the stick and teeny rock cup, they're a fire starter kit. Note the sharpened end of the stick is burnt. It was spun in the cup by one's hands, to create enough heat to start kindling burning. Thanks to Anne Laylor of the Utah Museum of Natural History for confirming our suspicion that this is in fact what we were looking at. All three of these artifacts are approximately 1,000 years old.
The axe head is Navajo and perhaps 100 years old. All of these artifacts are right where we found them.
Very interesting. Thanks for posting.
47greyfox
Loc: on the edge of the Colorado front range
I’m truly impressed not only with your narrative, but that people have honored and respected the sanctity of the area.
wilderness wrote:
Let me start by saying that we never never ever take any archaeology from where we've found it. We also NEVER dig into the ground to find things. The Antiquities Act of 1906 protects all of these artifacts found on public lands (and has given us protected wonders like Bears Ears and Grand Staircase Escalante National Monuments - in fact 4 of Utah's 5 National Parks all received their first protections because of this wonderful law). We find such wonders because we hike where others rarely go and we're not just trying to make huge miles hiked every day. We're trying to learn something about the land and trying to really appreciate it's beauty and wonder. The handle that being held is part of a ladle, in fact it's larger than any ladle handle I've ever seen even those in Museums. It's hard to tell but the scoop part of the ladle was painted. The cup was the most complete cup I've ever seen. Most rare of all was the stick and teeny rock cup, they're a fire starter kit. Note the sharpened end of the stick is burnt. It was spun in the cup by one's hands, to create enough heat to start kindling burning. Thanks to Anne Laylor of the Utah Museum of Natural History for confirming our suspicion that this is in fact what we were looking at. All three of these artifacts are approximately 1,000 years old.
The axe head is Navajo and perhaps 100 years old. All of these artifacts are right where we found them.
Let me start by saying that we never never ever ta... (
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It is really amazing to me that after all this time there are still remnants of the past that we can appreciate today and learn about the past indigenous people. Thank you for sharing these. I really enjoy this kind of stuff.
Bruce.
Another wonderful set of photos made even more special by your narrative! You deserve a debt of gratitude for leaving these artifacts where you found them and not disclosing their location. Let's hope others that may stumble upon these items will treat them with the same respect!
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