Historical Marker · No. 147
People of the Humboldt
Churchill County · Nevada
Long before wagons, this was Numa country—Northern Paiute people who lived off the marshes where the Humboldt River drowns in its sink. Caves carved by Lake Lahontan's vanished waves held their nets, duck decoys woven from tule, dried fish, and basketry, some of it thousands of years old. Lovelock Cave to the northeast carries a Paiute tradition of two bands warring, the Ground Squirrel Eaters against the Tule Eaters. The same Trinity rest area that remembers the emigrants stands on ground people knew for ten thousand years.
What the plaque says
Nevada lies within the Great Basin where rivers drain into lakebeds and sinks, never reaching an ocean. The broad valley around this location contains two of these terminal lake basins or "sinks" one for the Humboldt River arising in northeastern Nevada and the other for the Carson River flowing from the Sierra Nevada to the southwest. Near the end of the ice age, much of this region was beneath the waters of Lake Lahontan. As Lahontan's water receded, two lake basins formed, separated by a massive gravel bar to the north. Archaeologists have concluded that over the last 12,000 years, Native Americans occupied the region, prospering when the valley supported extensive wetlands. From about 9800 years ago. Native Americans utilized Leonard Rock Shelter, a National Historic Landmark, and other caves carved from the bedrock by Lake Lahontan's waves. Remnants of stored tools and food recovered from the caves include nets, fishhooks, dried fish, water bird remains, duck decoys, and basketry made from willows or tule. Lovelock Cave, above Humboldt Lake to the northeast, is a legendary battle site where tradition maintains two bands of Numa (Northern Paiutes), the Koop Ticutta (Ground Squirrel Eaters) and the Sai Ticutta (Tule Eaters) warred against one another. When European American explorers entered the area in the 1830s, the area was dominated by vast wetlands that still supported Numa (Northern Paiute) villages.
Where it stands
39.94065, -118.74950 · Directions
More markers nearby
- Forty Mile Desert — steps away
- Pershing County — 22 mi