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Some scholars maintain the Fremont were country cousins of the Anasazi, or "ancestral puebloans"—a term contemporary Native Americans prefer. ("Anasazi" is said to be a Navajo word for "ancient enemy.") Others contend they developed from a distinct desert culture established before the Anasazi. Until recently, researchers had believed that the Fremont simply packed up when the climate turned dry. "The easy answer for a long time has been the 1300 A.D. drought," says Michael Berry, a Bureau of Reclamation archaeologist based in Salt Lake City. But the Fremont had endured similar droughts in the past. In another view, the drought, population pressures and an invasion combined to make life untenable for the Fremont. Utes, a tribe of hunter-gatherers, may have migrated into the area from California around the same time the Fremont were starting to retreat to the cliffs, and the competition for food perhaps turned ugly.
Archaeologists have also theorized that warfare among the Fremont broke out during this period."You know, if your family is starving to death, if you get corn farming pushed to the limits and you're only getting a quarter of what you need to make it through a Utah winter, then going in and raiding your neighbors is going to seem more and more like a better alternative," Metcalfe says. That Fremont life was treacherous seems obvious even from their rock art. Perhaps the most haunting petroglyph I see at Range Creek is an upside-down figure with a bucket-shaped head and either a tail or penis. It was colored red and etched on the rock at the base of a cliff. It may depict a Fremont who fell to his death.
About the only thing researchers know for sure is that by around A.D. 1350, all the physical trappings that shouted Fremont—the distinctive sandals, baskets and pottery—disappear from the archaeological record. It's possible the Fremont people just moved on. Scientists have recently uncovered potential evidence of Fremont hearths and dwellings, dating from around 1500, along a tributary of the Green River in northwestern Colorado, 75 miles north of Range Creek. Barlow and others wonder if the culture shifted from farming back to full-time hunter-gathering. "When you become a hunter-gatherer again, you don't stay in one place long," says Metcalfe. "You'll change your look to an archaeologist. The material culture will be very different, but it might be exactly the same people."
Like the story of the Fremont, the story of Range Creek is complicated. For starters, the canyon is not entirely pristine. Fur trappers arrived in the late 1800s, and cattle ranching began then too. One rancher, Clarence Pilling, found 11 clay figurines made by the Fremont. He later donated some of them to the College of Eastern Utah Prehistoric Museum in nearby Price, where they are now on display as the "Pilling figurines."
The Wilcoxes themselves have also done some collecting over the years. "Oh, if I seen an arrowhead, I picked it up. I won't lie to you or anyone else," Waldo Wilcox says. "I don’t have very many. But I do have half a dozen or so." Wilcox’s niece, Jeanie Jensen, says that members of the family often picked up artifacts. In 1999, Ellen Sue Turner, an archaeologist from Texas, visited the ranch, and Wilcox's wife, Julie, showed her a number of artifacts, including Fremont sandals, a wide-mouth jar, arrow points and a grinding stone. (Turner writes about her visit at www.staa.org/fremont/index.html.) Steve Gerber, the official historian for the Range Creek archaeological research project, whose father owned a ranch adjacent to the property, says the Wilcoxes "certainly did make an effort to preserve the place," adding: "That’s not to say they didn't take anything or that people before them didn't take anything. The value to scientists is that they didn’t go digging potholes."
"I have been on many sites that I am confident have not been walked in on in 1,000 years," says Renee Barlow. "A lot of the sites we have recorded, the artifacts are still right where they were dropped." There are so many artifacts that less than 10 percent of the ranch has been surveyed since work began in 2002. Jerry Spangler, a Utah archaeologist working at Range Creek, says: "Waldo has forgotten more sites than any of us will step on in a lifetime."
Meanwhile, the Wilcox legend continues to grow, and he continues to win awards and accolades for his Range Creek stewardship. It's less widely known that, although Wilcox sold the property, he retains the rights to exploit any subsurface mineral or energy deposits, including oil and natural gas. He says he hasn't ruled out leasing access to the deposits to natural gas developers. That prospect horrifies some of the archaeologists.
Wilcox and I were driving back through the old ranch when we passed two hikers. They were about a mile from the gate, where their car was parked, so Wilcox pulled over to give them a ride. When the middle-aged tourists saw Wilcox, they were as giddy as a couple of teenagers meeting their favorite rock star. "You're a hero," one gushed. Wilcox shrugged and allowed himself a little smile.


Comments
I am thankful that Waldo had the forsight to protect the ruins of Range Creek. If ever guided walk thru tours become available I would want to know. My hobby is photographing ruins, pictographs, and petroglyphs of the "ancient ones". A reasonable fee would help in the costs of preservation and security. Warner Erickson, retiree
Posted by Warner Erickson on May 12,2008 | 09:19AM
I will be visiting Range Creek to do some hiking and photography in two days. The $5.00 permit is a bargin. Hopefully Range Creek is remote enough and the road there is rough enough to keep it from being overrun. I will post more after my visit.
Posted by Mark Heslop on June 8,2008 | 09:56PM
I just got back from Range Creek and all I can say is wow. A word to the wise, if you think you can waltz in and see all the sites you will be disipointed. The granaries and the best petroglyphs are hard to find for the untrained eye. My buddie and I hike 12 miles yesterday with only fair sucess until we were tracked by by officer Mark Connolly. He was kind enough to show us all the sites we had hiked right past. There are tours offered by outside touring companies for those that do not have the time or inclination to hike. Whatever way you choose, do it soon, Range Creek's future is far from secure. Chevron owns 2 gas well sites on Range Creek and wants to exploit them. It looks like the BLM is going to give them the go a head. If you want to know what impact that would have on Range Creek just visit Nine Mile Canyon.
Posted by Mark Heslop on June 11,2008 | 10:59AM
Amazing I would love to hike this area. Exploring American history. Glad the Wilcox family preserved this land.
Posted by Mary Tremonti on July 29,2009 | 10:59AM
I am thrilled to be able to see one man like Mr. Wilsox who did not want to let grave robbers tear up value sites. I live in Indiana and use to hunt for arrowheads lying on the ground.I watched pot hunters dig up sites along the Ohio River in Harrison County, then to just leave a hole. Everything I have found was on top of the ground and cataloged as to where it was found. I have even hunted in Indian Creek here in Floyd County. We have several Mounds here but they were never searched or preserved. I will be watching for more information on Range Creek.
Louise R. Brown
Posted by Louise Ralston Brown on July 29,2009 | 07:50PM