Museum of Anthropology

The Marmes Rockshelter Site

Introduction and Overview

overview air photo

An aerial view of the Marmes Rockshelter excavations (lower right) and the surrounding area to the south and west.

 

The now flooded Marmes Rockshelter site (45FR50) is located in Franklin County, Washington, on the west side of the Palouse River Canyon. The site consists of a shallow, south-facing rockshelter, 12 meters wide and 8 meters deep, the slope directly outside the rockshelter, and the floodplain area in front. Excavations at Marmes Rockshelter were initiated during archaeological reconnaissance and salvage work associated with the anticipated flooding of the Palouse River Canyon following construction of Lower Monumental Dam on the Snake River by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).

 

Marmes before excavations

Marmes Rockshelter prior to 1968-1969 excavations.

 

Excavations were by conducted by Washington State University from 1962 through 1964 with Richard Daugherty as Principal Investigator.

Additional excavations were conducted by Washington State University from May 1968 through February of 1969 with Roald Fryxell as the Principal Investigator.

Marmes Rockshelter is important in the history of Columbia Plateau archaeology for several reasons.

Next Page: Discovery and Excavations 1962-1965

 

Excavations 1968

 

Curation Projects 1994 through 2005

 

Site Interpretations

 

References

 

Hicks (2004) Appendices

 

Photoarchives

 

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Museum of Anthropology , PO Box 644910, Washington State University, Pullman WA 99164-4910, 509-335-3441, Contact Us