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The
rugged canyons of what is now Canyonlands National
Park have witnessed many human events since
the earliest Americans. Paleoindians first entered
the region around 10,000 years ago. Since then,
the tides of human occupation have ebbed and
flowed in concert with the availability of various
resources and the technology to take advantage
of those resources.
Human
Prehistory
People have visited what is now Canyonlands
National Park for over 10,000 years. Over time,
various groups moved in and out of the area
in concert with the availability of natural
resources and the technology for exploiting
those resources.
Hunter-Gatherers
The first humans known to visit Canyonlands
were Paleoindians, who searched for large game
animals and edible plants as long as 10,000
years ago. While some of their projectiles have
been found in the park, it was not until about
5,000 years ago that people routinely lived
in the area. During the time period from about
5000 to A.D. 250, people continued to gather
wild plants and animals, utilizing stone tools
and throwing devices like the atlatl. The importance
of grasses is recorded on many archaic rock
art panels, especially those representative
of the "Barrier Canyon" style that
can be seen in Horseshoe Canyon.
Ancestral
Puebloans
By A.D. 250, farming techniques from Mesoamerica
had reached the southwest, and the hunter-gatherers
were cultivating corn and constructing slab-lined
cists for storing the collected grains. Intially,
the agriculturalists did not have much use for
the hot, dry climate of Canyonlands. However,
growing populations in nearby Mesa Verde and
new techniques of flood-water farming caused
people to take advantage of bottomlands and
alluvial banks in many canyons of the southwest.
By A.D. 1200, there was a major occupation in
Salt Creek Canyon in the Needles District. You
can see the storage structures or granaries
used by the ancestral puebloans in the Needles
District at Roadside Ruin, and at the Island
in the Sky on Aztec Butte. Around A.D. 1300,
the Ancestral Puebloans left the region and
moved south to Arizona and New Mexico, probably
due to climatic changes.
Utes,
Navajos and Paiutes
Utes moved into the area as early as A.D. 1300,
living without permanent dwellings much like
the hunter-gatherers in the Archaic period.
Ute, Navajo and Paiute Indians all occupied
southern Utah when Spanish explorers entered
the area in the late 1700's, though their use
of the Canyonlands area appears to have been
minimal.
European
History
Exploration
In the 1770's, the Escalante and Dominguez parties
circled Canyonlands, looking for a route between
Santa Fe, New Mexico and Monterey, California.
Though southern Utah was recognized as a Spanish
possession with the signing of the Adams Onis
treaty in 1819, this did not deter French and
American trappers from entering the area in
the early 1800's. From 1836 through 1838, a
trapper named Denis Julien carved his name throughout
the Canyonlands area, including in the Colorado
River canyon. The U.S. Army sent Captain John
N. Macomb on an expedition to explore the Colorado
Plateau for a wagon route from New Mexico to
Utah in 1859. The expedition members drew the
first accurate maps of southeast Utah, and compiled
geographical and geological information of the
area. river
Mapping
Europeans knew little of the Colorado River
and its tributaries until 1869, when Major John
Wesley Powell completed his first expedition
from Green River, Utah through the Grand Canyon.
Powell repeated the expedition in 1871-72, continuing
his studies of the geological, natural and cultural
history of the area. Bert Loper, Charles S.
Russell, and E.R. Monett made the first pleasure
run down the Colorado River through Cataract
Canyon in 1907. Julius Stone was the first to
hire a guide, Nathaniel Galloway, to take him
down the river in 1909. The first motion pictures
of the canyons were filmed by Emery and Ellsworth
Kolb on their 1911 trip, and in 1937 Norman
Nevills started commercial river trips down
the Colorado.
Settlement
In March 1883, the Denver & Rio Grande railroad
joined with the Rio Grande Western railroad
near Green River, Utah, providing rail transportation
to southeastern Utah. This, combined with the
removal of Native Americans to reservations
during the late 1800's and early 1900's, nurtured
the growth of farming and ranching communities
such as Moab and Bluff. With the Utes removed
to the Uinta Reservation, Mormon settlers reclaimed
the abandoned pioneer community of Moab, and
Mormons from the town of Bluff settled Blanding,
Monticello, and La Sal.
Ranching
The first Europeans to permanently settle southeast
Utah were ranchers. From the 1880's until 1975,
much of Canyonlands was used for ranching, and
features in each district of the park bear the
names of these early cowboys. Deb Taylor, Al
Holman, John Shafer and many others grazed both
cattle and sheep around what is now the Island
in the Sky.
Don
Cooper, Mel Turner, D.L. Goudelock and Joe Titus
ranched the Indian Creek area until 1914, when
their holdings under the Indian Creek Cattle
Company were bought by a pair of brothers named
Scorup and Sommerville. Headquarted at the Dugout
Ranch, just outside the Needles District, the
Indian Creek Cattle Company operates today under
ownership of the Nature Conservancy.
The
Biddlecomes, Ekkers, Tidwells and Chaffins are
names common to the Maze, and A.C. Ekker continues
to ranch inside the Orange Cliffs Unit of Glen
Canyon National Recreation Area today. In addition
to cattle, the rugged country around Canyonlands
harbored cattle rustlers and other outlaws.
Robbers Roost, a mesa top west of the Maze,
served as a secluded refuge for Robert Leroy
Parker (Butch Cassidy), Tom and Bill McCarthy,
Matt Warner and others.
Mining
Due to the rugged topography of the Canyonlands
area, much of it was accessible only by foot
or horse until the Uranium boom of the 1950's.
With the growth of the country's nuclear arms
program, the Atomic Energy Commission offered
monetary incentives for the discovery and delivery
of Uranium ore. Certain rock layers in Canyonlands
contain Uranium, and prospectors built many
exploratory roads on public lands in search
of radioactive "gold". Many of these
routes, including the White Rim Road at the
Island in the Sky, are popular four-wheel-drive
roads today; others exist as scars that are
slowly revegetating.
The
Creation of Canyonlands
In the 1950's and early 60's, Arches National
Monument Superintendent Bates Wilson began advocating
for the creation of a "Grand View National
Park" in what is now Canyonlands. Wilson
first visited the area by horse in 1951, and
spent four years working on a National Park
Service archaeological investigation of the
Needles District. The Secretary of the Interior,
Stewart Udall, visited the area in 1961, and
began lobbying Capitol Hill for a national park
on what were then Bureau of Land Management
lands.
On
September 12, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson
signed Public Law 88-590 establishing Canyonlands
National Park
"...in
order to preserve an area in the State of Utah
possessing superlative scenic, scientific, and
archaeological features for the inspiration,
benefit and use of the public...".
Initially consisting of 257,640 acres, the park
was expanded in 1971 to its present 337,570
acres.
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