Ice Age Hunters - Denali National Park
Posted by: Lat34North
N 63° 43.560 W 149° 24.977
6V E 380679 N 7068738
Ice age hunters flowed the Caribou trails through Denali. Located at a rest stop along the Park Road in the Denali Nation Park. See parks web site for access information.
Waymark Code: WMJ2ZC
Location: Alaska, United States
Date Posted: 09/14/2013
Views: 15
Ice Age Hunters
The Deadliest Predators
High above River valleys, it overlooks like this, Denali’s first human visitors watch for mammoth, giant bison, in Caribou. Ridge tops made the best game launching platforms; herds tend to follow sheltered stream corridors.
Hunters had to be expert, deadly; the climate was too harsh for year-round edible plants. Caribou for made the warmest clothing. It’s microscopically hollow hairs are a natural insulator.
While they waited the Hunters made knives and repaired and sharpened weapons - archaeologist have discovered spear points, chipped blades, in stone cutting holders. The evidence is scant but datable: 10,000 years ago these nomadic hunters - descendants of people who crossed the Bering land bridge – followed Caribou trails through Denali.
More Information:
NPS - Denali National Park
Wikipedia - Ice age
Wikipedia - Beringia (Bering land bridge)
Wikipedia - Caribou
Marker Name: Ice Age Hunters
Marker Type: Roadside
Addtional Information: From Wikipedia: Beringia
"Beringia is a loosely defined region surrounding the Bering Strait, the Chukchi Sea, and the Bering Sea. It includes parts of Chukotka and Kamchatka in Russia as well as Alaska in the United States. In historical contexts it also includes the Bering land bridge, an ancient land bridge roughly 1,000 miles (1,600 km) wide (north to south) at its greatest extent, which connected Asia with North America at various times during the Pleistocene ice ages."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bering_land_bridge
Date Dedicated / Placed: Not listed
Marker Number: Not listed
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Visit Instructions: Preferred would be to post a photo of you OR your GPS at the marker location. Also if you know of any additional links not already mentioned about this bit of Alaska history please include that in your log.
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