Trail Creek Caves

From Underfoot

Q7832721




The Trail Creek Caves are a group of twelve caves found within the Bering Land Bridge National Preserve on the Seward Peninsula of the U.S. state of Alaska. This is a significant archeological site due to the discovery of several artifacts of ancient hunters. These included stone tools and bone fragments dated to 8,500 years or earlier. The caves were discovered in 1928 by Taylor Moto and Alfred Karmun, locals from Deering, Alaska. Geologist David Hopkins tested the site in 1948. This location was first excavated in from 1949-1950 by Danish archeologist Helge Larsen. The caves are located along Trail Creek 65°47′28″N 163°24′58″W near its mouth at Cottonwood Creek in the Northwest Arctic Borough.

Wikidata
cave, archaeological site, 

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Location: 65.7911, -163.416, KML, Cluster Map, Maps,
1 places

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  • Trail Creek Caves
    group of caves in the U.S. state of Alaska
Aerial view of the Trail Creek CavesAerial view of the Trail Creek Caves
A view from the interior of Trail Creek Cave 2A view from the interior of Trail Creek Cave 2
Artifacts from Helge Larsen’s 1949-1950 excavations at the Trail Creek CavesArtifacts from Helge Larsen’s 1949-1950 excavations at the Trail Creek Caves
    TypeSubtypeDateDescriptionNotesSource
    sitecaveTrail Creek Cavesarchaeological site, caveWikidata
    commonsimageAerial view of the Trail Creek Caves Commons
    commonsimageA view from the interior of Trail Creek Cave 2 Commons
    commonsimageArtifacts from Helge Larsen’s 1949-1950 excavations at the Trail Creek Caves Commons