Paleontology in South Dakota

Paleontology in South Dakota refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of South Dakota. South Dakota is an excellent source of fossils as finds have been widespread throughout the state.[1]:254–255 During the early Paleozoic era South Dakota was submerged by a shallow sea that would come to be home to creatures like brachiopods, cephalopods, corals, and ostracoderms. Local sea levels rose and fall during the Carboniferous and the sea left completely during the Permian. During the Triassic, the state became a coastal plain, but by the Jurassic it was under a sea where ammonites lived. Cretaceous South Dakota was also covered by a sea that was home to mosasaurs. The sea remained in place after the start of the Cenozoic before giving way to a terrestrial mammal fauna including the camel Poebrotherium, three-toed horses, rhinoceroses, saber-toothed cat, and titanotheres. During the Ice Age glaciers entered the state, which was home to mammoths and mastodons. Local Native Americans interpreted fossils as the remains of the water monster Unktehi and used bits of Baculites shells in magic rituals to summon buffalo herds. Local fossils came to the attention of formally trained scientists with the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The Cretaceous horned dinosaur Triceratops horridus is the South Dakota state fossil.

The location of the state of South Dakota

Prehistory

Type specimen (YPM 3000) of Archelon ischyros in the Yale Peabody Museum, Yale University

No Precambrian fossils are known from South Dakota, so the state's fossil record does not begin until the Paleozoic. At the start of the Paleozoic South Dakota was submerged by a sea. The state's Cambrian life left behind a rich trace fossil record. Paleozoic marine life of South Dakota included brachiopods, cephalopods, and corals. The sea temporarily withdrew from South Dakota during the Ordovician period.[2] But, in the middle or late Ordovician, ostracoderms swam over South Dakota. Similar ostracoderms were preserved near Canon City, Colorado.[1]:258 Later, during the Carboniferous period, sea levels again began to rise and fall. Marine life from this time included brachiopods and corals, but the rock record preserves evidence for local brackish and freshwater environments as well. The sea withdrew from the state altogether during the Permian and local sediments began being eroded rather than deposited.[2]

During the Triassic period sedimentation resumed. The geologic record reveals that South Dakota was moist coastal plain at that time. Seawater once more covered South Dakota during the Jurassic. This sea was home to creatures like ammonites, clams, crinoids, and starfish. As the sea retreated South Dakota became a terrestrial environment dotted with lakes, streams, and swamps. The state was covered again by the sea during the Cretaceous period.[2] This sea was called the Western Interior Seaway.[3]:5 This sea was home to many invertebrates, aquatic birds, and marine reptiles.[2] The Cretaceous life of South Dakota was similar to that of Wisconsin.[1]:256 Some of South Dakota's ammonites were very unusual for the group.[1]:256 During the Late Cretaceous the region now occupied by the Black Hills of South Dakota may have attracted long necked plesiosaurs from hundreds of miles away as a source of gastroliths.[4]:137–138 Short-necked plesiosaurs like Dolichorhynchops also lived in the Western Interior Seaway of South Dakota during the Campanian. They were fast swimmers who fed on contemporary small fish and cephalopods. Most short-necked plesiosaurs were relatively small, with body lengths of less than ten feet. However, one South Dakotan individual was 6–7 meters (20–23 ft) long.[4]:129 More shark species are known from the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway deposits of South Dakota than other states with rocks from the same environment like those of Kansas.[5]:66 Otherwise these two states had similar shark communities.[5]:69 During the Late Campanian, South Dakota was home to the colossal sea turtle Archelon ischyros. The first specimen was 3.5 meters (11 feet) long.[6]:108 Archelon is the largest known turtle in history. Its size is comparable to that of a small car.[6]:114 Also during the Cretaceous, geologic uplift was forming the Black Hills in the western part of the state.[2] Local dinosaurs included the armored Edmontonia, duck-billed Edmontosaurus, the ostrich dinosaur Ornithomimus, Pachycephalosaurus, Triceratops, and Tyrannosaurus.[7]

During the early part of the Cenozoic, central and eastern South Dakota was still covered by the sea. The uplift responsible for the Black Hills continued to elevate their topography.[2] As the Cenozoic continued the sea shrank away from the state. In its place, grasslands formed and were roamed by herds of grazing mammals.[2] Later, during the Oligocene, at least part of South Dakota was covered in seawater.[1]:256 The White River Formation was being deposited in the White River badlands as the sea gradually receded.[1]:255–257 The Oligocene flora left behind few fossils, but among them were hackberry seeds and petrified wood.[1]:256 Although plant fossils are scarce, these deposits preserve one of the best Tertiary mammal faunas in the world.[1]:255–257 More than 175 different kinds of animals were preserved from this time.[1]:256 The local mammals included the three-toed horses, pig-like animals, the camel Poebrotherium, Protoceras, rhinoceroses, rodents, saber teeth, tapirs, and titanotheres.[1]:255–256 Contemporary birds also left behind bones and even an egg. These are significant because bird fossils are very rare.[1]:256 Many streams carried even more sediment into the region from the young Rocky Mountains and Black Hills.[1]:256–257 At the time South Dakota consisted of plains dotted with marshes and shallow lakes and split by wide streams.[1]:257 Some of the local Oligocene wildlife left behind footprints that would later fossilize. The Brule Formation preserves one of only seven Oligocene fossil tracksites in the western United States.[8]:260 Volcanic activity sporadically showered the state with ash.[2] During the Ice Age, glaciers scoured the state. As they melted, they deposited sediments that would preserve the fossil remains of creatures like bison, horses, mammoths, and mastodons.[2]

History

Indigenous interpretations

Baculites fossils.

Fossils feature in some of the legends of local people. The Sioux believed that in the first creatures in creation were the insects and reptiles, who were ruled by the Water Monster Unktehi. Reptiles were very diverse and came in all shapes and sizes, but they became violent and bloodthirsty until they were petrified by lightning sent by the Thunder Birds. The physical bodies of the Thunder Beings killed by the lightning, including Unktehi, also ended up being buried. The Sioux believe that earth has a history of four distinct ages. These events occurred during the Age of Rock. This portrayal of the Thunder Birds may have been influenced by associations of fossils of the Cretaceous pterosaur Pteranodon with marine reptiles of the same age in the western US.[9]:221

Local people also employed fossils in ritual. Plains Indians like the Blackfeet and Cheyenne have a tradition of using Baculites fossils to summon buffalo herds. When used this way the fossils are called "buffalo-calling stones" or Iniskim. This practice derives from the complex shapes of the fossil's internal structure, which can sometimes bear shapes resembling buffalo. Iniskim have been discovered in South Dakota archeological sites. Archeological evidence exists for the buffalo-calling stone tradition that is at least 1,000 years old.[10]:227

One interesting South Dakota fossil was actually found not far from the Gobernador ruins in New Mexico during the 1980s. It was the jawbone of an Oligocene mammal endemic to South Dakota. This means someone would have had to transport the bone for 800 miles from the place it was discovered. The Blackfeet engaged in regular trade with the Cliff Dweller and Navajo peoples of the southwest, which may explain how the fossil ended up so far from its place of origin.[11]:165–166

Scientific research

On September 10, 1804, four members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition recorded in their journals a fossil discovery along the banks of the Missouri River in what is now Gregory County of south-central South Dakota. The find was a 45-foot-long articulated vertebral column with some ribs and teeth associated that was located at the top of a high ridge. The men interpreted the remains as originating from a giant fish, but today scientists think the specimen was probably a mosasaur, or maybe a plesiosaur. The expedition sent back some of the fossils, but these were later lost.[12]:15 Later, in 1847, Dr. Hiram A. Prout published a description of a fragmentary titanothere jaw discovered in the White River Badlands in the American Journal of Science. Not long afterward, Joseph Leidy described the Oligocene camel Poebrotherium, which was discovered in the same general region as Prout's titanothere jaw. The government responded to these discoveries by dispatching an expedition into the area. In 1850 the Smithsonian sent its own collectors into the area. The Tertiary deposits of the White River Badlands was active for decades and still ongoing in 1920 when the South Dakota School of Mines published its Bulletin No. 13. This publication summarized the results of all the paleontological fieldwork done in the White River Badlands.[1]:255 In 1877, the United States Geological Survey published a report on the ancient plants and invertebrates of South Dakota.[1]:255–256

In 1895, George Wieland discovered YPM 3000, the nearly complete and articulated type specimen of the giant sea turtle now known as Archelon ischyros, which had been preserved in the Pierre Shale. The discovery was the likely instigator for Wieland's subsequent research into Late Cretaceous sea turtles that began the next year. After more work reconstructing the specimen, Wieland noticed that its plastron was very similar to that of Protostega gigas and he began to doubt that Archelon was truly distinct. Therefore, in 1898, he reclassified it as a species of Protostega, P. ischyros. After examining the pelvis and skull of "Protostega" ischyros, however, Wieland recovered his confidence in his original view that YPM 3000 belonged to a genus distinct from Protostega and reclassified "P." ischyros as Archelon ischyros again.[6]:109

Later, in 1940, the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology collaborated with National Geographic on an expedition into the badlands. They uncovered tons of fossils from at least 175 different species of Oligocene life. The fossils were taken to the South Dakota School of Mines in Rapid City. Among the mammal discoveries were the remains of rhinoceroses, tapirs, three-toed horses, pig-like animals, and rodents. The team also uncovered some bird fossils, which are very rare. One of these was a fossil egg, which author Marian Murray has called "[t]he best find" of the entire expedition. Only a few plant specimens were discovered, but these included fossil hackberry seeds and petrified wood. Some of the fossils were so precariously located that the excavators had to use block and tackle to lower the fossils down from the tops of "slender pinnacles". The fossils were preserved in channel sandstones that had received little scientific attention prior to the expedition.[1]:256 In June 1947 the South Dakota School of mines sent another expedition into the Badlands. They uncovered a wide variety of fossils preserved in the Oligocene White River Formation. Among the creatures discovered were rhinoceroses, saber teeth, giant pig-like animals, Protoceros, tapirs, horses and more.[1]:256 In 1990, Sue Hendrickson discovered a new specimen of Tyrannosaurus rex that would later be nicknamed in her honor.[13] The specimen made headlines when a dispute over ownership rights raged for more than five years.[14] "Sue" was determined to rightfully belong to the owner of the property it was found on. The rancher put the specimen up for auction and was purchased by the Chicago Field Museum for 8.36 million dollars.[15]

In 1996 Bell and others reported the discovery of a mosasaur of the genus Plioplatecarpus in South Dakota's Pierre Shale. The specimen was important because it preserved several juvenile skeletons inside its pelvic region. Similar fossils have been put forward as evidence of live birth in other types of marine reptiles.[4]:139

Protected areas

National Register sites by region/county

It is intended that all National Register-listed archeological sites (places that have Smithsonian trinomials) in the state be listed here. This includes sites in counties of Fall River, Custer, Pennington, Meade, and Harding in the west of the state, and Corson, Stanley, and Jackson in next north-to-south swathe of states, and Campbell, Walworth, Potter, Sully, Hughes, Hyde, Hand, Buffalo, and Lyman in the next, and from Roberts, Spinks, Beadle, Jerauld, Sanborn, Davison, Hanson, McCook, Minnehaha, Hutchinson, Turner, and Lincoln in the last. This may not be complete; other sites might be included in large historic districts or listed under non-obvious names.

Numerous archeological sites in Fall River County were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in batches in 1982, 1993, 2005 and 2016. These were deemed significant for their information potential. The specific locations of these sites are not disclosed, but their general regions are. [These should be re-arranged into regions: southern Black Hills, north Cave Hills, Sandstone Buttes, etc.]

They are:

NRHP reference Smithsonian Trinomial Archeological region
County
NRHP listing date Note
93000804 39FA86 Fall River 1993-08-06 Rock art site, including Ponca, and including inscription(s) by member(s) of the 1874 Black Hills Expedition.[16]:380,603
93001040 39FA88 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:392,603
93000806 39FA89 Fall River 1993-08-06 Rock art site[16]:379,603
93001041 39FA90 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:379,602,603
93001042 39FA99 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379,603
93001043 39FA243 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:379,391–2,603
93001044 39FA244 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379,603
93001045 39FA316 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site, including painted rock art (see images, Figure 88, page 375)[16]:375,
93001046 39FA321 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site, including Ponca[16]:343 / II-278
93001047 39FA395 Fall River 1993-10-20 Middle Archaic "Pecked Realistic" rock art (see images, Figure 81 & 82); a McKean rock shelter and cave site[16]:143,371,391–2
93001048 39FA446 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001049 39FA447 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001050 39FA448 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:379,391
93001051 39FA542 Fall River 1993-10-25 Rock art site[16]:379
93000801 39FA678 Fall River 1993-08-06 Rock art site[16]:379
93001052 39FA679 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001053 39FA680 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001054 39FA682 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001055 39FA683 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:379,391
93001056 39FA686 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:379,391
93001057 39FA688 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site. See photo from 2006 in Figure 92, p385.[16]:379,385,391
93001058 39FA690 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; see photo from 2000 showing incised cattle brands and graffiti in Figure 91, p382.[16]:379,382
93001059 39FA691 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site, Late Prehistoric.[16]:199,379
93001060 39FA767 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site; rock shelter and cave site[16]:199,379,391
93001061 39FA788 Fall River 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93000790 39FA806 South Fork of the Cheyenne
Fall River County
1993-08-06 Rock art site[16]:379,404,535
93001062 39FA819 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001063 39FA1010 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001064 39FA1013 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001065 39FA1046 Fall River 1993-10-20
93000791 39FA1049 Fall River 1993-08-06
93001066 39FA1093 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001067 39FA1152 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001068 39FA1154 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001069 39FA1155 Fall River 1993-10-20
93001070 39FA1190 Fall River 1993-10-20
93000792 39FA1201 Fall River 1993-08-06
93001071 39FA1204 Fall River 1993-10-20
05000690 39FA1336 Fall River 2005-07-14
05000689 39FA1337 Fall River 2005-07-14
05000691 39FA1638 Fall River 2005-07-14
16000051 39FA2530 Fall River 2016-02-23
16000052 39FA2531 Fall River 2016-02-23
82004771 39FA7 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004765 39FA58 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004760 39FA75 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004772 39FA79 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004773 39FA91 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004774 39FA94 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004761 39FA277 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004762 39FA389 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004764 39FA554 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004766 39FA676 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004767 39FA677 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004769 39FA681 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004768 39FA684 Fall River 1982-05-20 Pecked rock art (see MPS Figure 10, p. 33)[17]:19,33
82004906 39FA685 Fall River 1982-05-20
82004770 39FA687 Fall River 1982-05-20
05000587 39FA1303 Fall River 2005-06-08
05000586 39FA1639 Fall River 2005-06-09
93001039 39CU70 Custer 1993-10-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93000803 39CU890 Custer 1993-08-06 Rock art site[16]:379
99000679 39CU1619 Custer 1999-06-03 "A very large stone circle camp" site, with cairn(s) and stone circle(s)[16]:403,424,427,601
16000047 39CU2565 Custer 2016-02-23 Rock art site[16]:379
16000048 39CU3178 Custer 2016-02-23 Rock art site[16]:379
16000049 39CU3393 Custer 2016-02-23 Rock art site[16]:379
16000050 39CU4164 Custer 2016-02-23 Rock art site[16]:379
82004759 39CU91 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site known as Scored Rocks, identified by a historic marker as a Lakota site, at least partly of "proto-historic" era, as depicts guns.[16]:379,586
82004752 39CU510 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004754 39CU511 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004753 39CU512 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004755 39CU513 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004756 39CU514 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004757 39CU515 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
82004758 39CU516 Custer 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379
93001072 39PN376 Pennington 1993-10-25 Rock art site known as "The Ice Cave" with red-painted handprints (see photo in Figure 117, p. 467); rock shelter(s) and cave(s) used in Paleoindian, Middle Archaic, Late Archaic, Late Prehistoric, and Historic eras[16]:391–92,467
82004778 39PN57 Pennington 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]:379–80
82004775 39PN108 Pennington 1982-05-20 Rock art site. See Figure 2, p58.[16]:58,379–80
82004776 39PN438 Pennington 1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]
82004777 39PN439 South Fork Cheyenne region
Pennington
1982-05-20 Rock art site[16]
93000798 39MD20 Meade 1993-08-06 Rock art site; has stone circle. Also listed as 39MD1, the site is in the eastern foothills of the Black Hills "lying in a deep arroyo"; the "rimrock above the arroyo contained a stone circle and a scatter of chipped stone artifacts"; the stone circle was "test excavated" and found, however, to have very little "chipping debris".[16]:379,397,538
93000818 39MD81 Meade 1994-04-14
93000797 39MD82 Meade 1994-04-14
94000108 39HN1 Harding 1994-03-07 Ludlow Cave, in North Cave Hills, a multiple-component ceremonial rock art site, stratified. See Figure 95: View of Ludlow Cave, p. 389. Had Early Archaic projectile points, but "these appear to be relics—that is, artifacts found and carried to a site by later people". Possible Late Archaic projectile points. See Figure 30: Late Historic projectile points, which are possibly of Avonlea complex but might possibly belong to Midle Missouri tradition, as the site includes some Mandan Tradition pottery, and was associated historically with Mandan and Hidatsa groups. Excavated using poor field methods, including that points from elsewhere may have mistakenly been mixed into its collection. It was "essentially cleaned out" in 1920 by W.H. Over. This is a McKean site. Has historic inscriptions. See Figure 95, p. 389. Late Archaic and Late Prehistoric and Historic rock shelter and cave site. Turtle effigies. Petroform. site; effigies now destroyed (p. 436). Late Prehistoric but not including rock art, and Protohistoric but not including rock art. Plains Village association. :107,202,382,383,388,389,391,433,436,487,494 Visited by Custer etc. in 1874 Black Hills Expedition; location is known.[18]

It's an Avonlea Complex site.

"See The Archaeology of Ludlow Cave and Its Significance", by W. H. Over, American Antiquity Vol. 2, No. 2 (Oct., 1936), pp. 126–129 (6 pages) (at JSTOR).

94000109 39HN5 Harding 1994-03-07
93000805 39HN17 Harding 1993-08-06
94000088 39HN18 Harding 1994-03-07
94000124 39HN21 Harding 1994-03-07
94000123 39HN22 Harding 1994-03-07
94000122 39HN26 Harding 1994-03-07
94000121 39HN30 Harding 1994-03-07
94000119 39HN50 Harding 1994-03-07
94000118 39HN53 Harding 1994-03-07
94000120 39HN54 Harding 1994-03-07
94000117 39HN121 Harding 1994-03-07
94000114 39HN150 Harding 1994-03-07
94000115 39HN155 Harding 1994-03-07
94000116 39HN159 Harding 1994-03-07
94000113 39HN160 Harding 1994-03-07
94000091 39HN162 Harding 1994-03-07
94000093 39HN165 Harding 1994-03-07
94000092 39HN167 Harding 1994-03-07
94000129 39HN168 Harding 1994-03-07
94000128 39HN171 Harding 1994-03-07
94000127 39HN174 Harding 1994-03-07
94000126 39HN177 Harding 1994-03-07
94000125 39HN198 Harding 1994-03-07
94000110 39HN199 Harding 1994-03-07
94000095 39HN205 Harding 1994-03-07
94000094 39HN207 Harding 1994-03-07
93000794 39HN208 Harding 1993-08-06
94000107 39HN209 Harding 1994-03-07
94000106 39HN210 Harding 1994-03-07
94000105 39HN213 Harding 1994-03-07
94000104 39HN217 Harding 1994-03-07
94000103 39HN218 Harding 1994-03-07
94000102 39HN219 Harding 1994-03-07
94000111 39HN227 Harding 1994-03-07
94000112 39HN228 Harding 1994-03-07
94000101 39HN232 Harding 1994-03-07
94000100 39HN234 Harding 1994-03-07
94000098 39HN484 Harding 1994-03-07
94000099 39HN485 Harding 1994-03-07
94000097 39HN486 Harding 1994-03-07
94000096 39HN487 Harding 1994-03-07
82003930 39HN204 Harding 1982-08-02 Lightning Spring site in Sandstone Buttes area, in vicinity of Ludlow, a Middle Archaic occupation site. A McKean site.:143 Also a Late Archaic and/or Plains Woodland site.:144

Late Archaic:488

With Middle Archaic, Late Archaic, Plains Woodland (part of Woodland period?) and Late Prehistoric era artifacts.

It is "a complex, stratified site with Middle Archaic through Late Prehistoric levels. Lightning Spring is a based camp with at least 12 episodes of use.":152 a Pelican Lake Complex site.:152 An Avonlea Complex site :154 A Plains Village Pattern site.:216

"The Lightning Spring site is a Middle Archaic base camp that provides indirect evidence of communal hunts. A series of distinct occupation layers contained pronghorn, bison, bighorn sheep, and canid bone, with pronghorn dominating. Researchers hypothesized that the large amount of pronghorn bone resulted from large-scale communal game drives (Keyser et al.1984; Keyser and Davis 1985). More direct evidence for Middle Archaic meat and hide procurement comes from 39HN108. This is recorded as a very extensive kill and butchering site assigned to the Hanna Complex. The site has not been excavated."[16]:414

"Excavations intended to stabilize the rapidly eroding Lightning Spring site (39HN204) revealed 14 separate layers dating to the Middle and Late Archaic periods (Keyser 1985; Keyser and Davis 1984, 1985; Wettstaed et al. 1991). The site was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1983."[16]:414

With some Middle Missouri Tradition Middle Missouri pottery

McKean phase lithic technology including stone axes ("bifaces") found; Duncan points Duncan phase Duncan projectile points found.[19]

93000765 39CO39 Grand Mareau
Corson
1993-08-06 Cairn and rock art site[16]:379,425,427,643
86002737 39ST55 Stanley 1986-08-14 Antelope Creek Site Antelope Creek Site (39ST55)
86002736 39ST230 Stanley 1986-08-14 Bloody Hand Site Bloody Hand Site (39ST230)
76001756 Stanley 1976-04-03 Fort Pierre Chouteau Site, a U.S. National Historic Landmark
88000732 39ST217 Stanley 1988-08-15 Fort Pierre II Fort Pierre II (39ST217)
75002104 39JK84 Jackson 1975-06-11 Lip's Camp, in White River Badlands, in vicinity of Wanblee. Historic Period Lakota site of "Early Reservation Period", was occupied 1880-1904 by the Wazhazha band of the Upper Brule Sioux[16]:613,617,619
97000342 Campbell 1997-02-18 Vanderbilt Archeological Site, a National Historic Landmark
93000795 39MP3 McPherson 1993-08-06 Archeological Site No. 39MP3: rock art panel likely depicting bison heads[17]
86000834 39WW203 Walworth 1986-04-03 Gravel Pit Site Gravel Pit Site (39WW203), in vicinity of Mobridge
93000799 39PO205 Potter 1993-08-06 in vicinity of Gettysburg
93000800 39PO63 Potter 1993-08-06 in vicinity of Gettysburg
03000504 Sully 2003-06-02 Cooper Village Archeological Site, vic. of Onida
84003297 39HU66 Hughes 1984-02-23 part of the Petroforms of South Dakota Thematic Resource (TR)
84003307 39HU189 Hughes 1984-02-23 part of the Petroforms of South Dakota TR
84003308 39HU201 Hughes 1984-02-23 part of the Petroforms of South Dakota TR
66000715 Hughes 1966-10-15 Arzberger site, a National Historic Landmark, on bluff above McClure Site
86002732 39HU7 Hughes 1986-08-14 McClure Site (39HU7), part of Big Bend Area MRA
86002739 Hughes 1986-08-14 Cedar Islands Archeological District
86002741 Hughes 1986-08-14 Fort George Creek Archeological District, part of the Big Bend Area MRA
86002740 Hughes and Lyman 1986-08-14 Medicine Creek Archeological District, has 21 contributing sites including a village site
86002731 39HU52 Hughes 1986-08-14 Old Fort Sully Site (39HU52)
93000793 39HE331 Hyde 1993-08-06 Archeological Site No. 39HE331, in vicinity of Holabird
84003296 39HD22 Hand 1984-02-23 in vicinity of Danforth
66000710 Buffalo 1966-10-15 Crow Creek Site, a National Historic Landmark relating to Crow Creek massacre
86002738 Buffalo 1986-08-14 Fort Thompson Archeological District presumably in or near Fort Thompson, South Dakota Fort Thompson
66000711 Buffalo 1966-10-15 Fort Thompson Mounds, a National Historic Landmark District, in or near Fort Thompson
03000505 Buffalo 2003-06-02 Talking Crow Archeological Site, vic. of Fort Thompson
86002735 39LM207 Lyman County 1986-08-14 Burnt Prairie Site (39LM207) Burnt Prairie Site, vic. of Lower Brule
03000501 Lyman 2003-06-02 Dinehart Village Archeological Site, vic. of Oacoma
90001940 Lyman 1990-12-31 Fort Lookout IV, vic. of Oacoma
86002734 39LM208 Lyman 1986-08-14 Jiggs Thompson Site (39LM208) Jiggs Thompson Site, vic. of Lower Brule
03000502 Lyman 2003-06-02 King Archaeological Site (Lyman County, South Dakota) King Archeological Site, vic. of Oacoma
66000717 39LM209 Lyman 1966-10-15 Langdeau Site, vic. of Lower Brule. A National Historic Landmark
05000588 39RO71 Roberts 2005-06-08 Also known as Thunderbird Rock, in vic. of Sisseton
84003408 39SP2 Spink 1984-02-01 vic. of Frankfort
05000590 39SP4 Spink 2005-06-08 vic. of Tulare
84003403 39SP12 Spink 1984-02-01 vic. Ashton
84003405 39SP19 Spink 1984-02-01 vic. of Spink Colony
84003411 39SP37 Spink 1984-02-01 vic. of Crandon
84003413 39SP46 Spink 1984-02-01 vic. of Crandon
93000802 39BE3 Beadle 1993-08-06 vic. of Wolsey
05000589 39BE2 Beadle 2005-06-08 vic. of Wessington Springs
84003199 39BE14 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Huron
84003201 39BE15 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Huron
84003206 39BE23 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Huron
84003208 39BE46 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Huron
84003210 39BE48 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Huron
84003212 39BE57 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Yale
84003215 39BE64 Beadle 1984-01-30 vic. of Yale
84003336 39JE10 Jerauld 1984-02-23 vic. of Wessington Springs
84003337 39JE11 Jerauld 1984-02-23 vic. of Gann Valley
84003384 39SB15 Sanborn 1984-02-01 vic. of Mitchell
84003397 39SB18 Sanborn 1984-02-01 vic. of Forestburg
84003399 39SB31 Sanborn 1984-02-01 vic. of Forestburg
66000712 39DV2 Davison 1966-10-15 Mitchell Site, site of a prehistoric Mississippian culture village, open to the public.
84003260 39DV24 Davison 1984-01-31 vic. of Mitchell
84003275 39DV9 Davison 1984-01-31 vic. of Riverside
66000714 Hanson 1966-10-15 Bloom Site, a National Historic Landmark, vic. of Bloom
84003290 39HS48 Hanson 1984-03-15 Fort James (South Dakota), vic. of Rosedale Colony
84003292 39HS23 Hanson 1984-03-15 Sheldon Reese Site, vic. of Mitchell
84003294 39HS3 Hanson 1984-01-31 vic. of Mitchell
93000796 39MK12 McCook 1993-08-06 vic. of Bridgewater
01000664 Minnehaha 2001-06-14 Brandon Village, vic. of Brandon
84003320 39HT14 Lower James
Hutchinson
1984-01-31 vic. of Olivet. Mound site of Plains Woodland period.[16]:162,455,710,712
84003323 39HT27 Lower James
Hutchinson
1984-02-01 Mound site of Plains Woodland period.[16]:162,455,710,713
84003325 39HT29 Hutchinson 1984-02-01 vic. of Clayton. Mound site of Plains Woodland period.[16]:162,455,710,713
84003327 39HT30 aka 39HT202 Hutchinson 1984-02-01 vic. of Clayton. Randall Phase site. Mound site of Plains Woodland period.[16]:162,189,455,710,713
84003417 39TU5 Turner 1984-02-23 At Turkey Ridge, vic. of Freeman. Petroform site, includes a thunderbird effigy "said to mark the campsite of a leader named Swan, according to Northern Cheyenne oral tradition" in 1750–1825 era.[16]:429,749–50
70000246 Lincoln 1970-08-29 Blood Run Site, on the Iowa/South Dakota border along the Big Sioux River, a National Historic Landmark

Natural history museums

  • The Journey Museum, Rapid City
  • The Mammoth Site Museum of Hot Springs, SD, Hot Springs
  • Museum of Geology, South Dakota School of Mines & Technology, Rapid City

See also

Footnotes

  1. Murray (1974), "South Dakota".
  2. McCarville, Bishop, Springer, and Scotchmoor (2005) "Paleontology and geology".
  3. Everhart (2005); "One Day in the Life of a Mosasaur".
  4. Everhart (2005); "Where the Elasmosaurs Roamed".
  5. Everhart (2005); "Other Times, Other Sharks".
  6. Everhart (2005); "Turtles: Leatherback Giants".
  7. Weishampel, et al. (2004); "3.15 South Dakota, United States", pages 585-586.
  8. Lockley and Hunt (1999); "The Puzzle of Miocene Tracks in the Oligocene".
  9. Mayor (2005); "The High Plains: Thunder Birds, Water Monsters, and Buffalo-Calling Stones".
  10. Mayor (2005); "Buffalo-Calling Stones".
  11. Mayor (2005); "Archaeological Evidence of Ancient Fossil Collecting".
  12. Everhart (2005); "Our Discovery of the Western Interior Sea".
  13. SUE at the Field Museum "SUE's Discovery".
  14. SUE at the Field Museum "The Dispute Over SUE".
  15. SUE at the Field Museum "The Purchase of SUE".
  16. Linea Sundstrom April 2019. South Dakota State Plan for Archaeological Resources, 2018 Update (PDF). South Dakota State Historical Society.
  17. Linea Sundstrom (February 25, 1993). "National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation: Prehistoric Rock Art of South Dakota MPS". National Park Service. Retrieved February 28, 2021. (with 11 rock art sketches) (from partly NPS-funded project directed by Linea Sundstrom)
  18. Waymarking site
  19. James D. Keyser; John L. Fagan (1993). "McKean Lithic Technology at Lightning Spring". Plains Anthropologist. 38 (145): 37–51. doi:10.1080/2052546.1993.11931644. JSTOR 25669181.

References

  • Everhart, M. J. 2005. Oceans of Kansas - A Natural History of the Western Interior Sea. Indiana University Press, 320 pp.
  • Lockley, Martin and Hunt, Adrian. Dinosaur Tracks of Western North America. Columbia University Press. 1999.
  • Mayor, Adrienne. Fossil Legends of the First Americans. Princeton University Press. 2005. ISBN 0-691-11345-9.
  • McCarville, Kata, Gale Bishop, Dale Springer, and Judy Scotchmoor. July 1, 2005. "South Dakota, US." The Paleontology Portal. Accessed September 21, 2012.
  • Murray, Marian (1974). Hunting for Fossils: A Guide to Finding and Collecting Fossils in All 50 States. Collier Books. p. 348. ISBN 9780020935506.
  • "SUE's Journey: From Field to Field Museum." Sue at the Field Museum. Accessed 11/06/12.
  • Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and Osmólska, Halszka (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd, Berkeley: University of California Press. 861 pp. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.