Laserfiche WebLink
RULE 2 PERMITS <br />Northern Colorado River Basin that are directly applicable to the frameworks proposed for the <br />surrounding regions, a new four -part scheme consisting of Pioneer, Settled, Transitional, and Terminal <br />periods has been proposed that would more accurately fit the site type chronology of this region. This <br />period witnessed expanded hunter gather subsistence strategies that utilized a wide variety of animal and <br />plant resources in season and at varying elevations. <br />Formative Era (400 B.C. -A.D. 1300) This era refers to a prehistoric occupation that focused primarily on <br />horticulture, especially corn, on the Colorado Plateau. Formative sites in western Colorado are usually <br />attributed to the Fremont tradition. Evidence of horticulture, increased sedentism, ceramics, and rock art <br />characterize Fremont sites. As proposed by Reed and Metcalf (1999), the aspen tradition is assigned to <br />non - horticulture hunting - gathering groups in the region that are contemporaneous with Fremont <br />occupations. The permit expansion area boundary occurs near the extreme eastern edge of the Fremont <br />cultural area. <br />Protohistoric Stage (A.D. 1300- 1800s) As described by Reed and Metcalf (1999), this era reflects an <br />ethnohistoric perspective of regional aboriginal cultural change and distribution. Inhabitants were highly <br />mobile hunter and gatherers. They constructed wickiups for shelter, manufactured brown ware ceramics, <br />and hunted with bows and arrows. The period reflects less intensive use of the region, probably by <br />Numic- speaking groups. Desert Side - notched and Cottonwood Triangular arrow points and brown ware <br />ceramics are diagnostic of the Numic (Ute) occupation in the region. <br />Historic Context — Spanish explorers Dominguez and Escalanate, in search of a route to California, <br />passed through the region southwest of the permit expansion area during their expedition of 1776 ( Hafen <br />and Hafen 1954). American fur traders and trappers utilized the region in the early to mid — 1800s, and <br />explorer Thomas Farnham passed through the Yampa River valley in 1839. United States topographic <br />expeditions led by John Fremont and John Gunnison explored the general region in the 1840's and early <br />1850s, respectively (Goetzmann 1959), with Fremont passing east along the Yampa River and its <br />tributaries in 1844 (Fremont 1845). Clarence King surveyed the western region of Colorado during his <br />exploration along the Fourteenth parallel in 1868 for the Union Pacific Railroad survey, and geologist <br />Ferdinand Hayden passed through the region and along the Yampa River on his 1877 exploration of <br />Wyoming and Idaho Territories (Hayden 1879). Exploration for precious minerals and coal followed, <br />which continued throughout the late nineteenth century, and coal mining developed into the principal <br />extractive industry in the region. Railroads constructed through western Colorado after 1880 fostered <br />homesteading and ranching throughout the region in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Ranching and coal <br />production continue to be important economic pursuits to the present day. <br />Historic periods used to discuss historic sites, events, and National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) <br />eligibility recommendations include: Territorial Period (1861 -1876, actually begins with the gold rush in <br />1859); Early Statehood (1876- 1890); Expansion -era, (1890- 1920); Depression -era (1920 - 1939); and <br />World War II -era (1940- 1945). <br />The Territorial Period is largely associated with the initial gold rush and early homesteading under the <br />1862 Homestead Act. During Early Statehood, precious mineral discoveries continued throughout the <br />remainder of the nineteenth century, homesteading increased under expanded homestead acts and <br />railroads and large irrigation projects were built that fostered continued settlement and economic <br />expansion. Homesteading continued to increase, railroad construction penetrated northwestern Colorado <br />and non - precious mineral production increased during the Expansion -era. The Depression -era witnessed <br />a general post -World War I economic slump, including the coal industry and a failure of many <br />homesteads. During the World War II -era, gold mining was shut down and minir g of industrial minerals <br />increased; livestock, wool, and agricultural productions increased proportionately to meet the demands of <br />Collom — Rule 2, Page 23 Revision Date: 9/28/11 <br />Revision No.: PR -03 <br />