Kids Make Exciting Discovery on Antelope Island

Kids Make Exciting Discovery on Antelope Island


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John Hollenhorst Reporting When school kids go on a scientific field trip, you don't ordinarily expect them to make a significant discovery. But that seems to have happened.

It was a discovery important enough to get a professional archaeologist literally dancing, on Antelope Island in the Great Salt Lake.

Where buffalo roam today, people roamed hundreds of years ago.

Kids Make Exciting Discovery on Antelope Island

In the shade of a temporary dome, grade school kids are working hard to uncover evidence of the ancients.

Minoka Shirai/ Escalante Elementary School: "I like the digging and finding the bones and everything. Then I can learn where it's from and everything."

To no one's surprise, the kids in this summer archaeology program have found remnants of the Fremont culture. They lived a few hundred years ago, and many of their encampments have been found.

But the big surprise was when one of the kids found a stone weapon-point last week. Archaeologist Ron Rood says it's apparently from the much older Archaic period, thousands of years ago.

Ron Rood/ Assistant State Archaeologist: "The Archaic, they... those sites are rare."

The discovery caused a ripple of excitement.

Kids Make Exciting Discovery on Antelope Island

Abram Sorensen/ 8th Grade: "Ron was doing his little dance for us. He does this funny little dance when he finds something."

Ron Rood: "I was very excited, yeah."

This lush vegetation and the wildlife it attracted is probably the reason ancient peoples came here. It's the same reason modern day ranchers put in a pipe. There's a spring here.

Learning about such things, hands-on, is what the summer program is all about. Here the kids found a piece of a butchered animal.

Alannah Erskine/ 5th grader: "We're not exactly sure where it came from or what animal it's from. But we know it's a bone."

Ron Rood: "These kids are all making a great contribution to understanding the archaeology of Utah."

And making discoveries, even on the less exciting days.

Only two other Archaic sites have ever been found on Antelope Island.

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