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Fremont Indian State Park in the Clear Creek Canyon area in Sevier County Utah contains the biggest Fremont culture site in Utah. Thousand-year-old pit houses, petroglyphs, and other Fremont artifacts were discovered at Range Creek, Utah. [2] Nearby Nine Mile Canyon has long been known for its large collection of Fremont rock art.
Residential, Rock art \ Petroglyph: Fremont: National, State: 22: McElmo Drainage Unit (many Site IDs) Montezuma, near Cortez: Ancient Pueblo: AD 1075–1300: Pueblo: National, State: Cannonball Ruins, Roy's Ruin, Sand Canyon, Wallace Ruins and other sites. 23: Mesa Verde National Park (Site ID 5MT.9790) Montezuma, near Cortez: Ancient Pueblo ...
Red Bird River Petroglyphs; Massachusetts. Dighton Rock; Michigan ... Fremont Indian State Park; Horseshoe Canyon (Emery and Wayne counties, Utah) Millsite Rock Art;
The Fremont people lived in the area of what is now Dinosaur National Monument before the 14th century, with archaeological evidence dating from c. 200 to c. 1300. Archaeologists first studied and named the Fremont culture along the Fremont River in south-central Utah and have since traced it through much of the Green and Colorado River ...
Fremont Indian State Park and Museum is a state park in Utah, US, which interprets archaeological remains of the Fremont culture. The park is located in Sevier County, Utah in the Clear Creek Canyon. It was established to preserve and interpret the artifacts and archaeological sites of the Fremont culture, a prehistoric Native American group ...
Paul Nevin ponders his favorite petroglyph on Big Indian Rock in the Susquehanna River south of Safe Harbor Dam. He has published a booklet about the ancient Native American carvings to share what ...
Fremont-culture Native Americans lived near the perennial Fremont River in the northern part of the Capitol Reef Waterpocket Fold around the year 1000. They irrigated crops of maize and squash and stored their grain in stone granaries (in part made from the numerous black basalt boulders that litter the area).
Fremont petroglyph, Dinosaur National Monument. The Fremont culture, named from sites near the Fremont River in Utah, lived in what is now north and western Utah and parts of Nevada, Idaho and Colorado from approximately 600 to 1300 AD. These people lived in areas close to water sources that had been previously occupied by the Desert Archaic ...