, 2022-12-29 10:00:00,
Editor’s Note: This story is part of “River in Peril,” a four-part series produced by reporters and photographers for The Montana Standard, and cameramen for Helena Independent Record.
For thousands of years, indigenous peoples hunted, gathered, mined stone, and traded in and around the river valley that became known as the Great Hole.
Signs of their passage live on in teepee rings, stone projectile points, and other “lithic scatters,” including stone flakes.
Separate tribes of Native Americans who came to be identified as Salish, Shoshone, Nez Perce, and Blackfeet traveled through…
,
To read the original article from news.google.com, Click here
Editor’s Note: This story is part of “River in Peril,” a four-part series produced by reporters and photographers for The Montana Standard, and cameramen for Helena Independent Record.
For thousands of years, indigenous peoples hunted, gathered, mined stone, and traded in and around the river valley that became known as the Great Hole.
Signs of their passage live on in teepee rings, stone projectile points, and other “lithic scatters,” including stone flakes.
Separate tribes of Native Americans who came to be identified as Salish, Shoshone, Nez Perce, and Blackfeet traveled through…
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, 2022-12-29 10:00:00,
Editor’s Note: This story is part of “River in Peril,” a four-part series produced by reporters and photographers for The Montana Standard, and cameramen for Helena Independent Record.
For thousands of years, indigenous peoples hunted, gathered, mined stone, and traded in and around the river valley that became known as the Great Hole.
Signs of their passage live on in teepee rings, stone projectile points, and other “lithic scatters,” including stone flakes.
Separate tribes of Native Americans who came to be identified as Salish, Shoshone, Nez Perce, and Blackfeet traveled through…
,
To read the original article from news.google.com, Click here