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Cowboys & Cave Dwellers: Basketmaker Archaeology in Utah's Grand Gulch

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The tortuous canyon country of southeastern Utah conceals thousands of archaeological sites, ancient homes of the ancestors of today's Southwest Indian peoples. Late in the 19th century, adventurous cowboy-archaeologists made the first forays into the canyons in search of the material remains of these prehistoric cultures, called basketmaker. Rancher Richard Wetherill and numerous other adventurers, scholars, preachers, and businessmen mounted expeditions into the area now known as Grand Gulch. With varying degrees of scientific rigor, they mapped and dug the canyon's rich archaeological sites, removing large numbers of artifacts and burial goods to exhibit or sell back home.Almost 100 years after these explorers matte their way through the Gulch, a group of avocational archaeologists began to track the original explorers by tracing the signatures they had left on the canyon walls as they moved from site to site. This adventure grew into the Whetherill-Grand Gulch Project, an effort to recover the history and discover the current whereabouts of the many artifacts extracted from southeastern Utah's arid soil.In Cowboys and Cave Dwellers, Fred M. Blackburn and Ray A. Williamson tell the two intertwined stories of the early archaeological expeditions into Grand Gulch and the Wetherill-Grand Gulch Project. In the process, they describe what we now know about Basketmaker culture and present a stirring plea for the preservation of our nation's priceless archaeological heritage. Cowboys and Cave DwelLers is lavishly illustrated with color and black-and-white photographs, many of them by Bruce Hucko, author and photographer of Where There Is No Name for Art.

188 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 1997

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Ike Rakiecki.
47 reviews
March 5, 2018
This book discussed early work conducted by archaeologists and Wetherill family members in southeastern Utah. The Wetherill family were ranchers and the first non-natives to see Mesa Verde in the late 19th century. The description of the Grand Gulch and the Mesa Verde area was very effective. The writer made me wish I could be hiking in the areas he described as I was reading the book. I haven't read much about the Basketmaker eras of the Ancestral Puebloan culture and it served as a good primer on the topic.
1,330 reviews2 followers
November 12, 2018
Interesting book with great photos of a group of lay people who set out to investigate through museum archives and traveling to sites in Grand Gulch, Utah to find where late 1800's Puebloan artifacts actually came. These artifacts were dug up by scrupulose and not so scrupulose people who dug up the sites in Grand Gulch and sold them to museums and private collection, losing the integrity of the site and even its location.
Profile Image for Matt.
165 reviews
January 2, 2022
"Written by a local Southwest Utah native, the book focuses on Cedar Mesa's Grand Gulch, a system of canyons west of Blanding, UT, first explored by the Wetherill brothers, discoverers of Mesa Verda ruins. Richard Wetherill and his brothers have been much maligned by modern archaeologists, who accuse them of systematically looting the treasures of the four corners region, with llittle observance of proper digging techniques. Nevertheless, based on his stratigraphic observations, Richard Wetherill correctly identified existence of an earlier culture of basket making ancients that predated the Anasazi in Grand Gulch. This book is the author's detective hunt to re-trace an early Whetherill expedition through the Grand Gulch. Part detective story and all archaeology this book is one of my favorites."
Profile Image for Kazia Trujillo.
205 reviews7 followers
December 3, 2017
This is a FASCINATING testament to the dedication and professionalism of many archeologist.
An interesting study into reverse archeology using old photographs and original essays.
This is a very readable account of the discovery of the Basketmaker people or for anyone interested in the subject of archeology.
Profile Image for Kirk Astroth.
205 reviews3 followers
March 21, 2015
Great read and wonderful photos and illustrations. As Ed Abbey wrote: "God bless America. Let's save some of it."
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews