600-year-old artefact found in Hells Canyon

A hiker stumbled upon a really old piece of Idaho history in Hells Canyon.  Now, archaeologists know just how old it is.  It dates back centuries. 


"We know that people have lived in Idaho for at least 130 centuries," said State Archaeologist Dr. Ken Reid. 

And those people left evidence of their lives.  Their artwork in the form of petroglyphs and pictographs decorates the rocks and cliffs in Hells Canyon.  Their house pits sit in neighborhoods along the banks of the Snake River. 

Hells Canyon is beautiful. It's also rich in history. 

"There's an intact outdoor museum really of Idaho's past that survives," said Dr. Reid. 

A hiker found part of that surviving past under a rock pile under a rock ledge made by a huge boulder. 

"It was a perfect place to get some shade on a hot hike down the Snake River Trail," Reid said. 

In March of 2008, the hiker found a cache of Nez Perce textiles made of cedar bark.  Idaho State Archaeologist Dr. Ken Reid and a team of researchers excavated the site.  Reid believes the materials would have been woven into a mat or basket.  His theory is that a Nez Perce woman placed the bundle under the stones for safekeeping. 

"Presumably the woman who did it expected to come back and retrieve it at some point in the future," Reid said. "And for whatever reason, did not."