Marker Title (required): A Home of Early Man
 Marker Number (If official State Marker from NV SHPO website above, otherwise leave blank): 147
 Marker Text (required): Nevada lies within the Great Basin where rivers drain internally and fail to reach an ocean. The broad valley around this location contains two of these terminal lake basins or “sinks,” one for the Humboldt River arising in northeastern Nevada and the other for the Carson River flowing from the Sierra Nevada to the southwest. Near the end of the Ice Age much of this region was beneath the waters of Lake Lahontan. As Lahontan's water receded, two lake basins formed, separated by a massive, Lake Lahontan gravel bar to the north. Over the last 12,000 years, Native Americans occupied the region, prospering when the valley supported extensive wetlands.
From about 9800 years ago, Native Americans utilized Leonard Rockshelter, a National Historic Landmark, and other caves carved from the bedrock by Lake Lahontan's waves. Artifacts recovered from the caves represent stored tools and food including the following: nets, fishhooks, dried fish, water bird remains, duck decoys, and basketry made from willows or tule. Lovelock Cave, above Humboldt Lake to the northeast, is a legendary battle site where tradition maintains Northern Paiutes exterminated the Saiduka, a band of red-haired giant cannibals. When Euroamerican explorers entered the area in 1833, the area was dominated by vast wetlands that supported Northern Paiute villages.
 County (required): Churchill
 Marker Type (required): Full Size (with blue painted mesh)
 Other Marker Type (optional): None
 Is Marker Damaged? (required): No
 Other Damage Type (optional): None
 URL - Website (optional): [Web Link]

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