Magic Mountain site explained

Magic Mountain Site
Nearest City:Golden
Added:1980
Refnum:80000904

The Magic Mountain site is an Archaic and Woodland village site in Jefferson County, Colorado dating from 4999 BC to 1000 AD. The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

The site was named for the property owner Magic Mountain Amusement Park in the late 1950s. One hundred years before, the area was the Apex mining district, served by a small stagecoach stop.[1]

Geography

Magic Mountain site, in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in the Denver Basin, is located by Apex Creek. The ecosystem is a transitional mountain-plains zone.[2] It is located at: 39°42'50"N 105°12'42"W

History

Within the Denver Basin, prehistoric time periods are traditionally identified as: Paleo-Indian, Archaic and Ceramic,[3] or Woodland periods.[4] The Denver basin is a geological definition of a portion of the Colorado Piedmont, from Colorado Springs, Colorado, to Wyoming. The Palmer Divide, with elevations from 6,000 to 7,500, is a subsection of that area that separates the South Platte River watershed from that of the Arkansas River.[5] It runs perpendicular to the Rocky Mountains and divides the Denver metropolitan area from the southern Pikes Peak area.[6]

Archaic periods

People of the Archaic period were hunters of smaller game, such as deer, antelope and rabbits, and gatherers of wild plants. The people moved seasonally to hunting and gathering sites. Late in the Archaic period, about 200-500 A.D., corn was introduced into the diet and pottery-making became an occupation for storing and carrying food.[7]

Colorado High Plains Woodland period

The groups of people during this period became much more diverse, were more likely to settle in a location or a couple of locations, cultivate, domesticate animals, make pottery and baskets, and perform ceremonial rituals.[8]

Archaeology

Artifacts

Lithic tools and projectile points were found at the site that helped to redefine past assumptions about the area Archaic and Woodland cultures.[2] Corner notched projectile points found at the site were named Apex points and were similar to New Mexican En Medio and San José projectile points.[9]

The archaeological evidence was obtained from six layers, classified into zones A-F.[2]

Post-Pleistocene PeriodEstimate Time PeriodCultural traditions
Early Archaic4050-3050 BCZone F. Mount Albion complex.
Early Archaic3050-2050 BCZone E. Magic Mountain complex.
Middle Archaic1550 - 810 BCZone D. Apex complex.
Late Archaic810 BC - AD 100Zone C. Front Range phase.
Colorado Plains Woodland culture.AD 100 - 1000Zone B. South Platte phase.
Colorado Plains Woodland culture.AD 100 - 1000Zone A. South Platte phase.

There are some Fremont artifacts found in Zone A, judged to be attained through trading. A small cemetery led to the discovery of the archaeological remains on the site, but much of it had been looted before the excavation.[10]

Excavations

Date! scope="col"
NameComments
1956Regional studies.
1959–1960Cynthia Irwin-Williams, Peabody Museum of Harvard UniversityThree burials were found. Her findings were published in a book with her brother, Henry J. Irwin in 1966.
1994 & 1996Centennial Archaeology LLC
2017-2018Paleocultural Research Group and Denver Museum of Nature and Science

Collection

The collection of 2,500 artifacts from the Magic Mountain archaeological site were moved to the Denver Museum of Nature and Science in 2001.[11]

Historical significance

The site is distinctive for its significant collection of Early, Middle and Late Archaic artifacts, burial sites and multi-cultural history.[2]

See also

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Golden Pioneer Museum.
  2. Gibbon, Ames, p. 488.
  3. Nelson, p. 65.
  4. Nelson, p. 7.
  5. Nelson, pp. 7, 21, 33.
  6. Nelson, Laubach.
  7. Kipfer, 341.
  8. Waldman, 14.
  9. Justice, pp. 137-210.
  10. Irwin, Excavation of Magic Mountain.
  11. Colwell, Nash, Holen.