UNLV banner
Department of
Anthropology & Ethnic Studies
 Department Home Page
 Programs:
   Anthropology
   Undergraduate Programs
   Graduate Programs
      Grad Students
      Grad Degrees
      Grad Student Resources
 About Us:
   Contact Information
   Faculty
   Staff
 Resources:
   Archaeological Field Schools
      Summer 2007
   Anthropological Collections
   Special Programs and Facilities
   Anthropology Society
   Undergraduate Class Schedules
   Graduate Class Schedules
 Ethnic Studies:
   Afro-American Studies
 Interdisciplinary Programs:
   Asian Studies
   Latin American Studies
   Linguistic Studies
On the Shores of Pleistocene Lake Mojave, Zzyzx, California:
In the spring of 2006, archaeology professors Claude Warren (retired) and Barbara Roth led an archaeological field class on Zzyzx excavations the shores of  Pleistocene Lake Mojave in Zzyzx, California. They excavated on lake terraces on the west end of Soda Lake, which is currently a dry lakebed, but once was connected with Silver Lake to form a large Pleistocene lake.

Test excavations were done on several possible beach terraces and in front of a small rockshelter, which had been excavated in the 1980s by archaeologists from California State University, Fullerton. The field class first learned the basics of archaeological fieldwork on campus at UNLV and then spent every other Friday and Saturday working in the field. CSU, Fullerton runs a Desert Studies Center at Zzyzx where researchers and students can stay.

The center has an interesting history, as it was once a resort billed as an “oasis” in the Mojave Desert, complete with swimming pool and mud baths. The goal of the excavations was to determine if buried, intact Pleistocene deposits were present on the shore line associated with the earliest occupation of the Mojave Desert. Elizabeth Campbell (well-known Mojave Desert Archaeologist) had discovered evidence of early occupation on high beach lines in other portions existed along this portion of Soda Lake. We also hoped to find some additional evidence related to the occupation of the rockshelter that might indicate how prehistoric hunter-gatherers responded to changing environments as the climate became warmer and dryer and the lake receded during the Holocene.

Although we did not find Pleistocene deposits, we did find lithic materials indicating that hunter-gatherers repeatedly used this area for many years. We are currently completing the analysis and final report on our work, and hope to incorporate information from the excavations conducted by CSU Fullerton at the site, which were never published.