A multi-substrate strontium isotope baseline for the Promontory Caves, Utah: implications for studies of ancient bison migration
Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a framework for evaluating bison mobility in the
eastern Great Basin during the thirteenth-century using strontium (Sr) isotope analysis. The
Promontory Caves, Utah (42BO1 and 42BO2) were occupied for a relatively short period
(A.D.1250-1290) but have a rich record of incredibly well-preserved organic remains including a
high abundance of bison remains indicating that bison were a key prey species. Previous research
indicates a decline in the local bison population which may have triggered a push for ancient
people to navigate the landscape to shift their home (or seasonally-used territory). One possible
site that the Promontory people visited is West Fork Rock Creek (WFRC) (10-Oa-275), Idaho.
There is evidence that WFRC was visited by Promontory people as they were hunting bison in
the late thirteenth-century. [...]