| Abstract: | This site in the northern Sierra Nevada contains about 369 circular basins carved in fresh, glaciated granodioritic bedrock, with 325 basins crowded together in an area of 2,700 m2 on the main terrace. These terrace basins have a median average diameter of 125 cm (80 percent between 100 and 160 cm) and a median depth of 75-80 cm. They show a strong congruity to similar granitic basins in the southern Sierra Nevada apparently of Native American origin that are generally shallower.
The basins are not of natural origin, as indicated by uniformity in size and nonoverlapping character of the basins; their common arrangement in lineaments; details of the shape of the basins; features in common with granite basins in the Southern Sierra Nevada; and, most compelling, the clustering of all the basins adjacent to (within 20 m of) two saline streams fed from a nearby salt spring. Native Americans apparently excavated them for the purpose of collecting saline water to evaporate and make salt for their use, and also as an animal attractant and a trade commodity.
The flow of the salty streams delivers about 2.9 metric tons of salt per summer season to the basin area, and evaporation rates and the holding capacity of the basins indicate that about 2.5 tons of salt could be produced per season. This correspondence shows that the Indians made enough basins to exploit the resource. The site is the most impressive prehistoric saltworks yet discovered in North America and represents a unique departure from traditional hunter-gatherer activities to that of manufacturing.
The actual grinding of so many basins in granite could not have been done without the labor of a concentrated population. It is believed that the work was accomplished over a long time by many people and with the use of fire to help disaggregate the bedrock. |
| Genre: | USGS Numbered Series |
| ProdID: | 97971 |
| Citation Author: | Moore, James G.; Diggles, Michael F. |
| Citation Contributing Office: | Volcano Hazards Program |
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| Citation Language: | ENGLISH |
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| Citation Online Only Flag: | Y |
| Citation Phsyical Description: | Report: iv, 21 p. |
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| Citation Publisher: | U.S. Geological Survey |
| Citation Series: | Scientific Investigations Report |
| Citation Series Code: | SIR |
| Citation Series Number: | 2009-5225 |
| Citation Search Results Text: | Hand-Hewn Granite Basins at Native American Saltworks, Sierra Nevada, California; 2009; SIR; 2009-5225; Moore, James G.; Diggles, Michael F. |
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| Citation Year: | 2009 |
| Type: | citation/reference |
| Text: | Hand-Hewn Granite Basins at Native American Saltworks, Sierra Nevada, California; 2009; SIR; 2009-5225; Moore, James G.; Diggles, Michael F. |
| URL (THUMBNAIL): | http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/thumbnails/sir_2009_5225.jpg |
| URL (INDEX PAGE): | http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2009/5225/ |
| Date Other: | Sat, 7 Nov 2009 00:00 -0600 |
| Publisher: | U.S. Geological Survey |