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the Late Glacial. As a consequence, when incision exposed Late Glacial gravel, stream power <br />was insufficient to erode the gravel and most drainages initiated a cycle of channel widening. <br />Away from drainages, the middle Holocene loess accumulated. Pithouses were in wide use in <br />the Rocky Mountains, Wyoming Basin, and Colorado Plateau in the interval, suggesting more <br />sedentary populations; Yarmony Site in Eagle County and site 5ME 16789 near Battlement <br />Mesa are local examples. McKean Complex is well represented in western Colorado during <br />the latter part of the interval and the period of transition to warmer climates that followed. <br />After about 3100 BC*, warming temperatures led to erosion of the loess by 2500 to 1850 BC* <br />and the deposition of the middle Holocene alluvium. <br />Droughts in the late Holocene are best dated by periods of erosion, i.e., lacunas, <br />identified by unconformities in loess deposits. Erosion in loess took place between 1850 and <br />950 BC*, 275 BC* and 165 AD*, and 1050 and 1350 AD*, and again in the last 150 years or <br />so. The first interval coincides with the Middle to Late Archaic transition and the third interval <br />coincides with the Medieval Warming Period in Europe. In the alluvial system, deposition of <br />the middle alluvium ended after the first and interval, by 650 BC*. The first of Lightning <br />equivalent alluvium is deposited during the second and interval, at some time after 650 BC*. <br />As the suggested dates imply, the two deposits are nearly continuous and appear this way in <br />sediment choked drainages, but on other ephemeral and small perennial streams, the deposits <br />are more easily separated. <br />5.0 LITERATURE OVERVIEW <br />North America's first human explorers arrived near the close of the Pleistocene as early <br />as 18,000 years ago traveling by passage along Beringia the continental land bridge between <br />what is now Siberia and Alaska. Local and regional archaeological studies indicate nearly <br />continuous human occupation of Northwest Colorado for the past 12,000 years. The prehistory <br />of the region is outlined in the Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists' Colorado <br />Prehistory: A Context for the Northern Colorado River Basin (Reed and Metcalf 1999), <br />Synthesis of Archaeological Data Compiled for the Piceance Basin Expansion, Rockies <br />Express Pipeline, and Uinta Basin Lateral Projects Moffat and Rio Blanco Counties, <br />Colorado, and Sweetwater County, Wyoming, Volume 2, (Metcalf and Reed, ed. 2011), and in <br />the Archaeological Monitoring and Data Retrieval for the Collbran Pipeline Project (Conner <br />et al. 2014). Discussed therein are manifestations of the Paleoindian Era big -game hunting <br />peoples (ca. 11,500 - 6400 BC); Foothill -Mountain Tradition (ca. 9500-6500 BC); Paleoarchaic <br />transition period (ca. 7500-5500 BC); the Archaic Era (Early, Middle, Late) hunter/gatherer <br />groups (ca. 6500 - 400 BC); the Formative Era horticulturalist/ forager (Fremont, Anasazi, <br />Avonlea) cultures (ca. 400 BC- AD 1300); the Early Numic and Athabaskan hunter/gatherers (ca. <br />