Details for Discovery Site of the Plainview Point

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5189001228

Data

Marker Number 1228
Atlas Number 5189001228
Marker Title Discovery Site of the Plainview Point
Index Entry Plainview Point, Discovery Site of the
Address
City Plainview
County Hale
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 249785
UTM Northing 3785873
Subject Codes archeology; geology
Marker Year 1973
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 5th Street and Joliet Street, City Park, Plainview
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The first of this distinctive type of early man dart point was found by 15-year-old Val Keene Whitacre in 1941, in a caliche quarry on Running Water Draw. In 1944, quarry workers uncovered a fossil bone deposit, which was noted by scientists surveying the geology of the Plains. The next year a team of archeologists from the University of Texas, including Dr. E. H. Sellards and Dr. Alex D. Krieger, excavated the site and found 26 man-made artifacts, including several of the points, in association with the remains of about 100 extinct bison (Bison Taylori), about twice the size of modern species. The long flint point was then named for this site. The bone bed probably resulted from the primitive hunting method of stampeding bison over a cliff, and butchering of the dead and crippled animals for food. The cliff eroded away and covered the bones with 12 to 14 feet of silt. When exposed, the bone bed was 62 feet long, up to 10 feet wide, and 1.5 feet thick. Radiocarbon dating indicates that this site is 8,000 to 9,000 years old. The Plainview point is found most commonly in the Great Plains region of North America, but has been located also in Alaska and Mexico. 1973
ATLAS_NUM=5189001228

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