Paleo-Indian Procurement of Camelops on the Northwestern Plains
- 31 October 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 10 (3) , 385-400
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(78)90028-5
Abstract
Camelops have been recorded in a number of Paleo-Indian sites that lack evidence of past procurement methods. Recently, two occurrences of Camelops remains have been recorded in Paleo-Indian animal kills in Wyoming. One kill situation was in a Hell Gap cultural context that produced remains of a single Camelops taken along with about 100 bison in a parabolic sand dune trap. The other Camelops was in a Clovis cultural context and deals with a single animal believed to have been taken in an arroyo trap that was used to take bison at several Paleo-Indian time periods. Identification of geomorphic features involved in these kill sites offers a basis for beginning to interpret Paleo-Indian camel procurement methods.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cultural Activity Associated with Prehistoric Mammoth Butchering and ProcessingScience, 1976
- Fossil Bison and Artifacts From an Early Altithermal Period Arroyo Trap in WyomingAmerican Antiquity, 1976
- Hell Gap: Paleo-Indian Occupation on the High PlainsPlains Anthropologist, 1973
- Site 48SH312:Plains Anthropologist, 1968
- The Sister’s Hill Site: A Hell Gap Site In North-Central WyomingPlains Anthropologist, 1965
- Fluted Projectile Points: Their Age and DispersionScience, 1964
- The Powers-Yonkee Bison TrapPlains Anthropologist, 1962
- The Physiology of the CamelScientific American, 1959
- Arroyos and the semiarid cycle of erosion [Wyoming and New Mexico]American Journal of Science, 1957
- Specimens from Sandia Cave and Their Possible SignificanceScience, 1955