|
THE COLBY SITE, located 2½ miles east of Worland, Wyoming, is one of the largest known mammoth kills in North America and provides the only undisputed evidence of the earliest human occupation of the lower 48 states. The Colby Site is also the only known site in North America where Clovis projectile points were found with a meat cache (a place for concealing and storing provisions). IT SHOULD BE STRESSED that the mammoth bones found were Columbian
mammoth, not Wooly mammoth. There is a difference in facial
structure as well as in size. The Columbian have a more
pronounced head dome, they are a great deal larger, and it is not
proven if they had hair or not. (Click
on photos for larger view of image)
IN 1962 a fluted projectile point identified as
Clovis point was unearthed by a heavy equipment operator, Donald
Colby of Worland, during the construction of a reservoir. Mammoth
tooth plate and tusk fragments were identified at the site by a
team from the University of Wyoming and the State Archaeologists
Office led by Dr. Frison, after heavy rains exposed a lower
jawbone.
THE COLBY SITE reveals very interesting and valuable information on Clovis hunting and storage methods. A limited number of Clovis sites have been discovered in North America and date approximately 11,200 years. Visit
these Washakie Museum exhibits...
Washakie
Museum Hours: The Museum | Exhibits and Events | Education | Gift Shop | Contacts | Links | Home
All Material Copyright Washakie Museum 2001 - 2008 unless otherwise noted |