Monday, February 13, 2012

Health

Mystery tribe

What happened to the Fremont Indians? New discoveries may tell their tale at last

By Betsy Carpenter
Posted 9/26/04

For rent: secure, high-rise dwelling; light, airy rooms; spectacular views; in Utah's striking canyon country.

If archaeologists doubled as real-estate agents, that might be how they would describe the vertiginous, cliff-top settlements in a remote canyon known as Range Creek. (The term "fixer-upper" could be used, too.) But before they could attract tenants, they would have to explain why the previous occupants packed up in a hurry about 700 years ago, leaving arrows scattered on the ground and a granary still holding corn and rye.

The demise of the Fremont Indians is one of North American archaeology's most enduring mysteries. The group, which flourished for 600 years in the rugged terrain between the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada, were adaptable and surprisingly diverse: Some lived in semisubterranean "pit houses," others in rock shelters. They farmed but also hunted and foraged for food. Yet despite their adaptability, things went south for the Fremont around A.D. 1250. Within a century, their culture had virtually vanished.

So, what became of them? The Range Creek site, unveiled this year, holds important clues. The ruins are not visually spectacular like those of the Anasazi, the Fremont's master-builder neighbors to the south. Still, Range Creek is astonishingly pristine and so should provide a rare window into the daily lives--and fears--of these early Americans.

Remote. Range Creek escaped both the predations of looters and the excavations of archaeologists thanks in large part to local rancher Waldo Wilcox, who guarded the site for over half a century until 2001 when he sold it for $2.5 million. (The ranch is now state land.) But its inaccessibility also helped preserve the hundreds of ruins, sprawling across thousands of acres, 34 axle-crunching miles from the closest stretch of unbroken pavement, over a serpentine thriller of a mountain pass.

Researchers have just begun surveying the canyon, but already the ruins are raising tantalizing questions, says archaeologist Jerry Spangler, author of a recent book on the Fremont called Horned Snakes and Axle Grease. The stubby circular remains of some pit houses, for instance, are 30 feet indiameter--three times as large as the typical Fremont pit house. Archaeologists have long thought of the Fremont as simple farmers who lived in small family groups, says Spangler. But the Range Creek mini-mansions suggest that some lived with extended families or had strong enough bonds with other families to build communal structures for ceremonial or other purposes.

Range Creek may also reveal more about the relationship between the Anasazi and the Fremont, who have long suffered by comparison with them. Until now, it has been thought that the two groups didn't interact much. But at Range Creek, almost all the settlements are littered with Anasazi as well as Fremont pottery. (The two are easy to tell apart: While the Fremont mostly made utilitarian gray pots, the Anasazi crafted ornate black-and-white ceramics, among other types.) Archaeologists aren't sure what to make of this mingling. One intriguing possibility, however, is that the two groups did, in fact, trade with each other and that evidence of these dealings was expunged from other Fremont ruins by early relic hunters who selectively stole the fancier Anasazi ceramics.

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