American Indian Rock Art in Minnesota MPS explained

American Indian Rock Art in Minnesota MPS is a Multiple Property Submission (MPS) of the eligibility of many rock art properties for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.[1] The listing is to protect and preserve Native American petroglyphs, pictographs and petroform rock art sites in the present day U.S. state of Minnesota.

Historic places

The Submission states:"The properties are grouped under a single historic context, Rock Art of Minnesota, ca. 10,000 BC to 1700 AD, whichsubsumes all defined rock art types and sites constructed or otherwise developed state-wide by Minnesota's originalinhabitants. Three property types are recognized, petroglyphs, pictographs and petroforms; the rationale for defining threeproperty types derives from the observation that the distribution of each is rather limited to specific areas of the state, withpetroglyphs found almost exclusively in the southern part of the state, pictographs limited to the northeast, and petroformsrecognized only in southwesternmost Minnesota. Moreover, available analysis suggests that these three types initiallyappeared at very different times and, further, even a cursory assessment indicates that the property types are characterizedby a divergence of style and content."[1]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=64500276}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: American Indian Rock Art in Minnesota MPS]. 2010-12-22.