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Fremont Culture - Capitol Reef National Park (U. S. National Park Service) Fremont and Ancestral Puebloan people began to incorporate farming into their hunter-gatherer lifestyles approximately 2,000 years ago Petroglyph panels throughout the park depict ancient art and stories of these people who lived in the area from approximately 300-1300 Common Era (CE)
Capitol Reef National Park - NPS History Long Ago, the Hisatsinom To the Paiute Tribe, they are known as the Wee Noonts, the Peo le Who Lived the Old Ways They inhabited the Capitol Reef area from about 300 to 1300 C E (Common Era), with their most prosperous time from 600 to 1200 C E Archeologists named them the Fremont Culture for the Fremont River canyon where they were first d
Capitol Reef Petroglyphs [Guides History] | Visit Utah Fremont and Ancestral Puebloan people lived here between 600-1300 A D , and their markings tell what appears to be their the stories, hunting patterns, crop cycles, and mythologies of their lives
Petroglyphs near Fruita in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah, United . . . Long before visitors laced up hiking boots and hit the trails at Capitol Reef, the Fremont and Ancestral Puebloan peoples called this place home Between 300 and 1300 CE, they lived in pit houses and natural rock shelters, weaving farming into their hunter-gatherer lifestyle
Capitol Reef National Park: Petroglyphs - astheyare. org For roughly one thousand years, from 300 to 1300 CE, the Hisatsinom people lived across what is now Utah They left behind distinctive pottery and a distinctive style of rork art Archaeologists call them the Fremont, named after the river that cuts through Capitol Reef National Park
The Indigenous History of Capitol Reef National Park The Ancestral Puebloans, also known as the Anasazi, lived in the Capitol Reef region from approximately 300 to 1300 AD They were known for their impressive stone masonry skills, as evidenced by the cliff dwellings and granaries they built into the canyon walls