Description

Book Synopsis
The study of the last remaining Ute wickiups, or brush shelters, along with the historic artifacts found with them has revealed an understudied chapter of Native American history—the early years of contact with European invaders and the final years of Ute sovereignty. Ephemeral Bounty is the result of this archaeological research and its findings on the protohistoric and early historic Ute Indians of Colorado.

The Colorado Wickiup Project is documenting ephemeral wooden features such as wickiups, tree-platforms, and brush horse corrals that remain scattered throughout the mesas, canyons, and mountains of the state. They date from the arrival of European newcomers.

The project is unique in using the techniques of metal detection, historic trade ware analysis, and tree-ring dating of metal ax–cut wickiup poles to distinguish the Ute sites from historic Euro–American ones. Researchers have demonstrated that not all Utes left Colorado for the reservations in Utah during the “final removal” in 1881, as has been generally believed. A significant number remained on their homelands well into the early decades of the twentieth century, with new tools and weapons, but building brush shelters and living much as they had for generations.

Trade Review
“A wealth of new data, written in a relaxed and readable style.” —Michael Metcalf, Metcalf Archaeological Consultants, Inc.

“The study adds an important component to the late cultural history of the Colorado Utes, one that has almost escaped notice by white documentarians. It also provides a blueprint for the study of wickiups and related timber structures, one that has been honed by the team’s long-standing investigation in the field and that may be applied from Alaska to Patagonia—anywhere that people have built shelters at high altitudes.”—W. Raymond Wood, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the University of Missouri and author of A White-Bearded Plainsman

Table of Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Prologue

1. The Colorado Wickiup Project: Investigation of the Rarest and Most Fragile of Native American Sites
2. A Safer World in Woods Embraced: Ute Origins and Culture History
3. Ephemeral Bounty: The Golden Years of the Protohistoric Era
4. Gimme Shelter: Aboriginal Wooden Features
5. Field Methodology for Expedient Wooden Feature Sites
6. Dating Aboriginal Wooden Features
7. The Decker Big Tank Wickiup Village
8. The Pisgah Wickiup Village
9. The Ute Hunters’ Camp
10. Disappointment Draw Lodge
11. Musick Lodge
12. The Tea House Wickiup
13. Future Directions and Proposed Research

Epilogue
Appendix A. Tree-Ring Dating Results from the Colorado Wickiup Project
Appendix B. The Aboriginal Wooden Feature Component Form: Samples of Blank and Filled-Out Forms
Appendix C. Quantifiable Aspects of the Colorado Wickiup Project’s Wooden Features
Appendix D. Consultation with Ute Tribal Members at the Tea House Wickiup References
Index

Ephemeral Bounty: Wickiups, Trade Goods, and the

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    A Paperback / softback by Curtis Martin

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      View other formats and editions of Ephemeral Bounty: Wickiups, Trade Goods, and the by Curtis Martin

      Publisher: University of Utah Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 30/04/2016
      ISBN13: 9781607814672, 978-1607814672
      ISBN10: 1607814676

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The study of the last remaining Ute wickiups, or brush shelters, along with the historic artifacts found with them has revealed an understudied chapter of Native American history—the early years of contact with European invaders and the final years of Ute sovereignty. Ephemeral Bounty is the result of this archaeological research and its findings on the protohistoric and early historic Ute Indians of Colorado.

      The Colorado Wickiup Project is documenting ephemeral wooden features such as wickiups, tree-platforms, and brush horse corrals that remain scattered throughout the mesas, canyons, and mountains of the state. They date from the arrival of European newcomers.

      The project is unique in using the techniques of metal detection, historic trade ware analysis, and tree-ring dating of metal ax–cut wickiup poles to distinguish the Ute sites from historic Euro–American ones. Researchers have demonstrated that not all Utes left Colorado for the reservations in Utah during the “final removal” in 1881, as has been generally believed. A significant number remained on their homelands well into the early decades of the twentieth century, with new tools and weapons, but building brush shelters and living much as they had for generations.

      Trade Review
      “A wealth of new data, written in a relaxed and readable style.” —Michael Metcalf, Metcalf Archaeological Consultants, Inc.

      “The study adds an important component to the late cultural history of the Colorado Utes, one that has almost escaped notice by white documentarians. It also provides a blueprint for the study of wickiups and related timber structures, one that has been honed by the team’s long-standing investigation in the field and that may be applied from Alaska to Patagonia—anywhere that people have built shelters at high altitudes.”—W. Raymond Wood, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the University of Missouri and author of A White-Bearded Plainsman

      Table of Contents
      List of Figures
      List of Tables
      Acknowledgments
      Prologue

      1. The Colorado Wickiup Project: Investigation of the Rarest and Most Fragile of Native American Sites
      2. A Safer World in Woods Embraced: Ute Origins and Culture History
      3. Ephemeral Bounty: The Golden Years of the Protohistoric Era
      4. Gimme Shelter: Aboriginal Wooden Features
      5. Field Methodology for Expedient Wooden Feature Sites
      6. Dating Aboriginal Wooden Features
      7. The Decker Big Tank Wickiup Village
      8. The Pisgah Wickiup Village
      9. The Ute Hunters’ Camp
      10. Disappointment Draw Lodge
      11. Musick Lodge
      12. The Tea House Wickiup
      13. Future Directions and Proposed Research

      Epilogue
      Appendix A. Tree-Ring Dating Results from the Colorado Wickiup Project
      Appendix B. The Aboriginal Wooden Feature Component Form: Samples of Blank and Filled-Out Forms
      Appendix C. Quantifiable Aspects of the Colorado Wickiup Project’s Wooden Features
      Appendix D. Consultation with Ute Tribal Members at the Tea House Wickiup References
      Index

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