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<br />elevation of 6880 feet in Section 32, T6N, R901J, bth P.M. The site area <br />consists of a grassy opening surrounded by dense brush in which springs <br />emerge and a small drainage passes. A series of stock ponds tap the <br />water of the springs and the drainage. A dirt road enters the site from <br />the north and forks vaest and south just west of the vrater developments. <br />The previous recorders of the site mention the presence of an out- <br />house, sheep pen, the water developments, and a ring of rocks. They <br />concluded the site was a sheepherder's camp. Our reconnaissance of the <br />site showed that the site form only superficially described the site as <br />it existed. Therefore, the site was rerecorded and an entirely new site <br />form prepared. <br />Site 5f4F950 appears to have been occupied periodically from pre- <br />historic times until the relatively recent present. A prehistoric <br />component was detected at the site of unknown cultural affiliation. <br />Artifact material consisted of 40 to 50 chert and quartzite flakes, a <br />chert biface and two quartzite manos. The vast majority of the prehis- <br />toric items were found in highly disturbed contexts resulting from the <br />boading of the roads through the site. Only five or six flakes were <br />found on the undisturbed surface of the site just northwest of the road <br />junction. No temporally diagnostic items or cultural features were <br />observed. <br />The historic component of the site appears to date to at least two <br />periods of use. The first occupation is most likely related to George A. <br />Wilson who received a Homestead patent to the land on January 5, 1924. <br />Artifacts dating to the 1910s and 20s are scattered around the remains of <br />a small dugout and a standing outhouse building. Unfortunately most of <br />the artifacts have been disturbed by road construction (pre-dating <br />operations of the Trapper Mine) and a portion of the dugout possibly <br />removed. In situ artifacts do exist adjacent to the northwest of the <br />dugout. Because of the road construction disturbance it is uncertain <br />whether the artifacts around the outhouse are related to that structure <br />or whether the outhouse is in its original location, possibly having been <br />moved during roadwork. <br />Two other structure locations at the site are probably the result of <br />later use as a sheep camp. P.ssociated with these are a series of stock <br />ponds on a small drainage with two spring developments feeding the ponds. <br />Artifacts date these improvements to the 1960s or 1970s. One of the <br />spring enclosures may be of an earlier date and would be expected with a <br />homestead, tJumerous trace roads, fencelines and the remains of a pole <br />sheep corral with a loading chute are present at the site. Whether they <br />are old enough to be associated with the homestead is unknown. <br />Site 5MF2427: Located on a moderate northwest-facing slope above a <br />small, intermittent drainage in Section 3, T5N, R91W is a homestead <br />complex designated 5MF2427. The parcel of land on ~vhich the complex of <br />buildings is situated was homesteaded by Arthur 41. Peck who received <br />title on January 27, 1927. The Raftopoulos family of Craig, Colorado <br />reportedly inhabited the site for several years. <br />