The Spanish Diggings were some of the largest prehistoric rock quarries in the world. For over thirteen millennia, prehistoric people came to Spanish Diggings and mined orthoquartzite and chert from the hills and valleys. When the prehistoric people left the rock quarries, they carried the raw material with them and spread their finished artifacts and chipping debris across the countryside for hundreds of miles in every direction.
Figure Three – Looking west and slightly south at the hills and valleys of Spanish Diggings. In the distance is beautiful Laramie Peak. Photograph by Neil A. Waring. |
Reher (1991:272) reported a mapping project that calculated the size of Spanish Diggings at approximately 30,000 square meters using the three primary quarry complexes: Barbour, Dorsey, and Spanish Creek. Another 18,000 square meters and approximately 170 stone circles could be included if the campsite and workshop areas near the Barbour quarries were counted. If eleven other clusters of quarries with less debitage were added to the three primary quarries, an additional 120,000 square meters and 500 stone circles could be counted in the Spanish Diggings complex. Reher added that investigators were still discovering additional mining activity and quarry sites at Spanish Diggings.
Author’s Story Part One: My first memory
of Spanish Diggings came from the mid-1960s. I was attending grade school in eastern
Wyoming, and if memory serves me, I was in the fourth or fifth grade. The school
scheduled an assembly when Jerry and Mae Urbanek were to show us prehistoric artifacts that they found at a place
called Spanish Diggings. That was the first time I ever heard of Spanish
Diggings, and I was pretty excited about the exhibition. When the school
scheduled assemblies I was usually excited for a couple of reasons; assemblies got
me out of the dreaded classroom and most assemblies were somewhat entertaining.
Secondly, that specific lecture intrigued me because the artifact bug bit me
early in life. I had already gone artifact hunting with my family several times
and my mother inherited her father’s artifact collection of spearpoints, arrowheads,
and scrapers. I was completely fascinated with that collection, and I was
hooked on artifacts and prehistory at a very early age.
My family lived in the right place at the right time for artifact collecting. There was not much to do in rural Wyoming in the 1960s and 1970s except hunt and fish and shoot and explore the outdoors. We were fortunate enough to live in a wide open country with large ranches and mostly friendly ranchers. After I found out about the assembly, I rushed home and told my parents. My mother reminded me that Mae Urbanek was a semi-famous Wyoming historian and author who wrote several books on Wyoming history and its early settlers. That fact only added to my enthusiasm.
Figure Four - Clovis platter cache found southeast of Spanish Diggings. The material appears to be Spanish Diggings orthoquartzite. John Bradford Branney Collection. |
Cowboys first discovered the
prehistoric rock quarries and mining pits at Spanish Diggings sometime before
1870. At that time, the locals believed that Spanish conquistadors dug the
mines in their pursuit of precious metals. A rancher-cowboy by the name of Joseph
Stein was often credited with coming up with the name Spanish Diggings sometime around
1882. In 1893, a Cheyenne man named Sidney Bartlett brought more attention to what
he called the “Mexican mine” by writing an article about the quarries for the
San Francisco Examiner. Stein and another rancher named Lauk were so convinced
that there was gold at Spanish Diggings that they hired part-time workers to
prospect for gold there from 1886 to 1891. The two ranchers and their workers never
reported finding any gold or other precious metals at Spanish Diggings.
The news about Spanish Diggings eventually
caught the attention of academic institutions and museums. In 1894, renowned geologist
Wilbur Knight from the University of Wyoming visited the site and documented
nineteen mining operations on the north slope of a mesa. He reported vertical
shafts, horizontal tunnels, trenches, circular pits, mine debris, and large,
crude stone tools. The narrative soon changed from the Spaniards digging for
gold to prehistoric Americans digging for toolstone.
Author’s Story Part Two: The day of the Urbanek show-and-tell did not arrive soon enough for me, but it ended as a huge letdown for this young tyke. At that age, I was not an artifact expert by a long shot, but it seemed to me that Mr. and Mrs. Urbanek showed us a bunch of plain ole rocks that they dubbed prehistoric artifacts. I didn’t know what false advertising was at the time, but that was what I thought of their collection. I expected much more, like my grandfather’s collection with glorious spear points, knives, stone axes, and other cool artifacts. I wonder if I revisited Urbanek’s artifact collection today if I wouldn’t have a different opinion. I imagine their artifacts looked very similar to the artifacts that George Dorsey and associates found in 1891 (figure seven). I learned one thing from the Urbaneks' lecture; I wanted to see Spanish Diggings for myself! That night, I lobbied my parents to take us to Spanish Diggings in the spring.
Figure Five - George Dorsey at Spanish Diggings. |
One of the early scholars to visit Spanish Diggings was George A. Dorsey, the curator of the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago. In 1891, ranchers Stein and Lauk picked Dorsey up at the railroad station in Guernsey, Wyoming, and headed out to Spanish Diggings. In 1900, Dorsey published a short paper on his visit to the prehistoric rock quarries. The following paragraph was Dorsey’s observation after studying one of the many outcrops of orthoquartzite in the Cloverly formation.
“Examining one of the walls of the wash we find a solid stratum, thirty or more feet thick, of flint, or rather of sandstone, which has been worked by silicious waters, thus forming quartzite. This stratum is of variegated color, passing from yellowish brown to violet gray, varied with shades of pink, violet, yellow, purple, etc., the whole stratum thus producing a most beautiful and remarkable color effect.”
-George A. Dorsey (1900:238-239)
Figure Six - Sketch map of Spanish Diggings area by R. F. Gilder (Holmes 1919). |
“The upper two or three feet of rock is very
brittle and does not chip well; indeed, it occurs not as a solid mass, but,
owing to long weathering, in long thin sheets or irregular blocks.
“After the soil had been penetrated, the workmen
encountered the upper unworkable rock through which it was necessary to
excavate to a considerable depth before the denser masses of workable material
and the jasper and chalcedony nodules were encountered. On account of the
broken character of the upper mass of the quartzite bed such excavations were
not necessarily difficult operations. Furthermore, it is possible to believe
that this work could be carried on with tools similar to those which would be
found efficacious in working the exposed stratum down in the valley.”
-George A. Dorsey (1900:240)
Figure Seven - Typical quarry finds from Dorsey's expedition to Spanish Diggings. |
Spanish Diggings is famous for a second type of quartzite called orthoquartzite or silicified sandstone. Orthoquartzite is a clastic sedimentary rock called sandstone which was made almost entirely of quartz sand grains. In orthoquartzite, the quartz sand grains were not deformed like metaquartzite but instead were bound together with silica cement through a geological process called silicification. The prehistoric miners at Spanish Diggings discovered that the high-quality, fine-grained orthoquartzites were near perfect for making tools and projectile points.
Figure Eight - A knife form with a broken tip that I found on one of my earlier visits to Spanish Diggings. The prehistoric individual used orthoquartzite from one of the quarries. |
Author’s Story Part Three: If you
ask a Wyoming native when spring will arrive, he or she might inform you that spring
arrives in June. If you inquire when summer begins, that same Wyoming native might
tell you summers begin sometime in early July and end in August. If you question
what the rest of the year is called, that same Wyoming native will inevitably answer,
“Winter in Wyoming!”
Spring finally arrived in Wyoming
and my family was ready for their pilgrimage to Spanish Diggings. My parents
knew a rancher from our church who owned a big chunk of Spanish Diggings. The
rancher gave us permission to hunt rocks on his property and even mentioned that
we might find some “petrified turtle shells” if we were lucky. He even drew us
a little map of how to get there so that we did not get lost. Even today, Spanish
Diggings is not an easy place to find.
My father drove us to Spanish Diggings in our Chevy station wagon. I remember the roads became progressively worse the closer we came to Spanish Diggings on the map until we were traveling on what was best described as a glorified cow trail. My father stopped smack dab in the middle of a wide ravine filled with sagebrush and rattlesnakes. The ground next to the car was littered with chunks of orthoquartzite and chert cobbles from the mine pits. There was so much refuse on the ground that it made hunting for artifacts nearly impossible. It was literally like looking for a needle in a haystack. We spent the day hiking up and down the hills. We found a few primitive tools and worked pieces but nothing special. Our little adventure was probably not worth the wear and tear on our car. The best finds of the day were five or six fossilized turtle shells. I remember finding those as if it was yesterday. I often wonder what happened to those fossils. I regret not taking better care of them.
Figure Nine - SHADOWS on the TRAIL Pentalogy |
“Nothing whatever was found in the finished state,
and even partially worked specimens were not numerous. The refuse about the
pits is characterized by the large size of the partially shaped rejects.”
-W. H. Holmes (1919:213)
Prehistoric Americans came to the quarries, selected good pieces of raw material, roughed
them out, and took them elsewhere to finish them up as stone tools and
projectile points. Looking back at the grade school assembly, the Urbanek
collection might not have been so bad after all. Rough slabs and barely worked cobbles
of quartzite and chert were probably typical, even back in the early cowboy
days. Perhaps that was the reason why the early cowboys thought Spaniards dug the
mines and not prehistoric Americans; the mine debris on the ground was not indicative of who created it!
These days I find a lot of
artifacts made from orthoquartzite. I suspect the raw material came from Spanish
Diggings but that might not be the right conclusion. Like other popular high
plains raw materials like Knife River or Flattop, Spanish Diggings
orthoquartzite has its own imposters and lookalikes coming from other areas. I
even discovered a prehistoric rock quarry in northeastern Colorado where the
orthoquartzite looks remarkably similar to a few flavors of Spanish Diggings orthoquartzite.
Well, that’s my story. I hope you
enjoyed it. No matter what happens to Spanish Diggings or me in the future, I
will always cherish those early memories of Spanish Diggings!
References Cited
Andrefsky, William Jr. 2005. Lithics
– Macroscopic Approaches to Analysis. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.
Dorsey, George Amos. 1900. An
Aboriginal Quartzite Quarry in Eastern Wyoming. Field Columbian Museum,
Publication 51, Anthropological Series, Volume II, Number 4. Chicago.
Holmes, W. H. 1919. Handbook
of Aboriginal American Antiquities. Part I – Introduction to Lithic Industries.
Smithsonian Institute. Bureau of American Ethnology. Bulletin 60. Washington
D.C.
Reher, Charles A. 1991. Large Scale Lithic Quarries and Regional Transport Systems on the High Plains of Eastern Wyoming – Spanish Diggings Revisited in Raw Material Economies Among Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers edited by Anta Montet-White and Steven Holen. University of Kansas Publications, 19.
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