American Archaeology | Fall 2009 | Vol. 13 No. 3

Page 48

new acquisition

Landowner Donates Ancient Paleo-Indian Site

Researchers excavate the MacHaffie site in 1951 under the direction of Richard G. Forbis. The crew uncovered a Scottsbluff occupation.

T

he MacHaffie site has yielded evidence of Paleo-Indian occupation dating back to the Folsom period more than 12,000 years ago. It contains a Scottsbluff component dating to approximately 10,000 years ago, and it was also used off and on by Middle and Late Archaic huntergatherers dating from 7,000 to about 2,000 years ago. MacHaffie became the Conservancy’s first preserve in Montana last June, when Pamela Bompart, who has owned the site since 1975, donated it to the Conservancy. MacHaffie is located a few miles south of Helena in the Prickly Pear Valley, at an elevation of about 4,200 feet. An amateur mineralogist found the site in the 1940s and mentioned it to Edmund MacHaffie, the owner and editor of the newspaper the Helena Independent, and from whom the site derived its name. MacHaffie’s wife later found a Folsom point there that had

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been exposed by erosion. Archaeologists working with the River Basin Survey (RBS) visited the MacHaffie site in 1947 and recognized its scientific potential.The RBS program was organized in 1946 in response to concerns that post World War II public works programs, especially the construction of dams and reservoirs, might threaten cultural resources. The program, a collaboration between the National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution, and the Bureau of American Ethnology, located and performed salvage archaeology on sites in major river basins in the U.S. between 1946 and 1969. In 1949, Carling I. Malouf was engaged by the RBS to conduct an archaeological survey at MacHaffie in advance of the development of Canyon Ferry Reservoir. Malouf, an archaeologist at Montana State University, Missoula, explored the site in the autumn

of 1950. Later, Richard G. Forbis, an anthropology graduate student at Montana State, was encouraged by Malouf to investigate MacHaffie for his doctoral dissertation research project. In April of 1951, Forbis obtained permission from then property owner, James Bompart, Pamela’s father, to conduct excavations. In the summer of that year, Forbis and his small crew uncovered the artifactrich Scottsbluff layer. Forbis’ discoveries were trumpeted by newspaper articles and word of mouth, and the publicity attracted hundreds of looters who ravaged the Middle and Late Archaic cultural deposits and threatened the integrity of the underlying Paleo-Indian strata in some areas. Pamela, then a young girl, witnessed the Forbis’ excavations, recalling the great white canvas wall tent and the crew members talking excitedly about artifacts spread out on a blanket illuminated by a kerosene lamp. Those memories inspired her to acquire the site and protect it from looters and development. She worked with the State Historic Preservation Office to list the MacHaffie site in the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. A second doctoral dissertation focusing on the Forbis’ collection—a ground-breaking analysis of the Scottsbluff artifacts—was completed in 1973 by Ruthann Knudson, a graduate student at Washington State University. In 1989, with Pamela’s permission, I began an investigation of the MacHaffie site as part of a broader study of Paleo-Indian sites in Montana. My research was supported by Montana State University and the Kokopelli Archaeological Research Fund.

fall • 2009

paleo-mountain archaeological research

The MacHaffie site is the Conservancy’s first Montana preserve.


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