Hunchback Shelter: A Fremont Lithic Production Site in the Mineral Mountains of Eastern Utah
General Material Designation
[Article]
First Statement of Responsibility
Greubel, Rand A.; Andrews, Bradford W.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Hunchback Shelter (42BE751) is a small rockshelter in the northern Mineral Mountains, located less than 10 km. from one of the major obsidian sources in the eastern Great Basin. Excavation of the site yielded a large flaked lithic assemblage associated with occupations dating from the Late Archaic to the post Formative Late Prehistoric period. The data suggest that the shelter functioned as a seasonal campsite that was heavily oriented toward biface production throughout its long occupational history. Based primarily on flaked lithics and secondarily on other lines of evidence, we hypothesize that the flaked stone tools and debitage associated with the Fremont occupations may represent the work of independent, part-time craft specialists.
SET
Date of Publication
2008
Title
Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology