rWE RRIIMT j BETTER $999 | PHOTOS ^sis. s • Developed & printed | •12,15,24 exp X 06 exp. $5 99 ® • 4x6 superpnnts add $ 1 HOUSE RECORDS I iTv BUY A SEU NEW A USED CD'S, IP'S,A ^yossmss \w/ * SSI I. 13th AVINUE EUGENE, OREGON, 97401 Eufriw premier. Only al Thy JV-Ktrnay! 4 A very fine filn> nukiih; debut tn>m Mui .McUcncanip.” F\ u. i N< Grach 5 I Uy* Only! July 11. Sal 6 30pm, July 12. Sun 3pm July H 16. li*** Huh 7 6* ^*ro it. I, 'v\ \m »*\ "■ -»kr» ««. I » U. iHNbiV^y Ma» Mrivnar nvabv -VW»..: -«>•.« ‘Sf*w«F TUESDAY s p A G H E T T I EAT EVERY TUES! includes Gartc Bread It :30 am to 10 pm PIZZ* pete* ITALIAN KITCHEN 2673 Willan»tt« 464-0996 By Derek Cavens f rrw a id Contributor Mow did Native Americana live t mi torn Kuitipeun settlers arrived to tho Ori son territory? University art Ideologists an' attempt ing to rocnnslfut t thn fabric of Native high desert r.ultum by plot ing togelher lint scallcred remnants of thou Minds of years of prehistoric lifts. Excavation viirs scattered aanss southerns! Oregon's Fart Rock Busin have revealed many r lues, but ruseurch is complicated by pol-hunlors, multipin habitations by diffnronl irllxs. over long poriods of time, and mussivo climaclic and environmental changes that have to tally altered the lac e cd the region What is now a desolate; sagebrush urea was until several thousand years ago covered with many lurgo lakes and marshes, and populated with great num bers of animals such as giant sloths, mammaths and c amels University Held Sc hool Supervisor Dennis Jenkins, along with other scientists, is attempting to put together all of the disparate clues as ici heiw Native peoples' lives changed over the; millenia "Wo an1 striving to understand how people made a living out there, how their subsistence; changed through time." Jenkins says. "Wu want to lx; able io understand how people moved through die region throughout tho sea sons and how that changed over the 11,000 vear period we're studying." Central to this investigation is Boulder Village, a duster of 150 house-rings ex tending along a wind swept ridge near Silver Lake. Ore The village;, discovered by University field school surveyors in the summer of 1900, is Iho largest known Native1 village; in the Oreul Basin an area extending fnmi southeastern Oregon to New Mexico and from the Si erra Mountains in California east to ihe Rockies. "Tho wav we discovered ibis village was kind of by accident," remembers Terr! Mann, a field school teaching as sistant at the; lime. “I bad ii t:rc;w of sev en people that was surveying the; top of Squaw Butte and wc; had to go down to get thick to the road So wo Just came straight down lire slope, and when we got down wo started to soo things — a lot of ohsidian flakes Everyone just got this fooling that something was there. "You can't see vorv fur in lhat area Ihi rausn there's a lot of sagobrush and juni per trees, so one of my crow lumped up onto a pllo of dirt to get a bettor view Ho didn't know it limn, but the dirt was a back pllo whom pot-hunters had dug out a motor and a half Into a pit-house ring of rocks,"sho said. “Soon wo started finding more pit houses everywhere It was pretty excit ing Dy the end of the day, we had found .0 and when we returned the next sum mer wo mapped 150 rings " A University team of 23 students and four instructors returned to excavate the village in tho summer of 1981. Unfortu nately, they discovered that many other house-sites hud already boon desecrated by artifact collectors. Despite the vandalism, they found enough undisturbed house-rings to col lect about 300 projectile points (arrow heads), mortars, pestles, and inscribed animal-bone tools and fragments. Radiocarbon date testing anil histori cally known styles of artifacts suggest that the majority of the house-structures are between 500 to 1,500 years old. One stone !e one cultural in stance where you would give up the ef fort that you had put into building that structure, and voluntarily build another one even though you were going track to tho same site.” Jenkins quickly points out that the University team hasn't uncovered any human remains at the Boulder Village site. "Certainly somebody must have died over the long period of time this village was occupied,” he says. "I just suspect that they were disposed of in a way that loft no remains, and wo probably will never find any remains of people there. "We don't want to. As archaeologists, we are not searching for graves. We have a lot of respect for American Indians, by Omemm Jmnm University students in the field studies program (top) work on the excavation of Native American pit houses and artifacts, near the Boulder Village site, by sifting through layers of dirt and documenting the smallest recovered objects. The bottom of a site — a pit house floor — that has been excavated (below) is dug into grid squares tor documentation. and whenever wo do find human re mains, we notify the local people — In this case, either the I’aiulos or tho Kla math. "They come out and tell us what they want us do. If it seems best to remove the burial or the remains, then we'll have a physical anthropologist on the staff. Wo remove the remains, study them and the we turn them over to the Indians immediately They re bury them whorevor they want to." The village's uplund location, 300 me tors tibovu the Fort Rock Biisin floor, Is a symptom of tho changing climate that i>egun to transform tin; region into a (In sert between :i,(HK) and 1,500 years ago. As the region grew increasingly arid, native staple foods of fish, grass seeds, and other aquatic plant and animal life found in the drying lukos and marshes became increasingly unreliable or disap peared completely. Native peoples re sponded by moving upland to collect the more stable root and plant crops available in the higher regions. "The hypothesis that I'm working on is that this was an early spring l8 I MOO • Qpr« Mon Sj» 1 0 t» !i 0% off' anyth in g AT L IN THE STORE Regular or tale Price ■ POSTERS J CONVERSE ■DR. 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