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Houses

Early     8200-7000 BP (BP = Before Present)

Archaic structures have been found that date to the earliest Archaic and maybe to late Paleoindian periods.  These earliest structures are round or oval, shallow, basin-shaped features about 4-5 meters in diameter.  Some have postholes.  The best-preserved structures have interior hearths, bell-shaped storage features, and other pits in the floors.  The southern side of the houses seem to be constructed of rock and daub.   Burned houses show that the superstructure incorporated plentiful brush and wood.   One early house had an associated outside hearth, rock-lined storage feature, and a series of postholes in a U-shaped windbreak.  We believe these structures were occupied throughout the winter season.

Middle    5500-7000 BP

Houses during this time incorporate considerable amounts of rock into the 4-5-meter-diameter stucture.  These house are built into very shallow soils between bedrock exposures.  Interior firepits and storage pits are found inside the houses.   Some have associated outside firepits and activity areas.  We believe these structures were occupied throughout the winter season.

feature 96 annotated.jpg (410640 bytes)

Late    4500-3000 BP

A wide range of structure types is represented in this time period.  A cribbed-log structure covered with brush and daub has been excavated and reported.  Daub structures are reported, as well as basin-shaped structures.  Test excavations in the trash deposit of one village site showed almost two meters' accumulation of charcoal, ash, bone, and stone tool debris.  We believe these structures were occupied throughout the winter season.

Post Piņon     3000 BP-historic

The archaeological evidence in the Upper Gunnison Basin shows very little occupation during this time.  The few structures are ephemeral and probably not much more than windbreaks or sunscreens. These house were probably occupied only seasonally.

Features through time

Features in the Upper Gunnison Basin changed through these time periods, as to both type and distribution.  The following chart shows these changes, which probably reflect environmental changes.  Each triangle represents one radiocarbon-dated feature (firepits, structures, fire-cracked rock feature, or game drive system).  The time axis is radiocarbon years BP (before present).

features through time.JPG (90035 bytes)




  • Administrative Assistant: 
    LuAnna Bryant
    970.943.2015
    lbryant@western.edu
  • Department Chair:
    Dale Orth
    970.943.3437
    dorth@western.edu
  • Address:
    Anthropology Program
    Hurst Hall 110
    Western State College of Colorado
    Gunnison, CO 81231