Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park

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Image:Dwwos1.jpg Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park is located about 200 kilometres southeast of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada or 44 kilometres east of the community of Milk River, and sits adjacent to the Milk River itself. It is one of the largest areas of protected prairie in the Alberta park system, and serves as both a nature preserve and protection for a large number of Blackfoot Indian rock carvings and paintings. It has been nominated by Parks Canada and the Government of Canada as a World Heritage Site.

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Writing-on-Stone Park contains the greatest concentration of rock art on the North American Great Plains. There are over 50 petroglyph sites and thousands of works. The park also showcases a North West Mounted Police outpost reconstructed on its original site.

Nature

The park comprises 17.80 square kilometres (4400 acres) of coulee and prairie habitat, and boasts a diverse varity of birds and animals.

Bird species include ring-necked pheasant, grey partridge, prairie falcon, great horned owl, short-eared owl, kestrel, and cliff swallow.

The prairie surrounding the park is a habitat for pronghorn antelope, and other species inhabiting the park include mule deer, northern pocket gophers, skunks, raccoons, yellow-bellied marmots, and the reclusive cougar. Tiger salamanders, boreal chorus and leopard frogs, and plains spadefoot toads represent the amphibians, and both garter snakes and prairie rattlesnakes can be found sleeping in cool areas.

The coulee environment is optimal for tree species such as balsam poplar and narrow leaf cottonwood. Peach leaf willow and plains cottonwood are also found here. A large number of shrubs grow here, including chokecherry, juniper, saskatoon, sandbar willow, and two varieties of wild rose. Some of the most northern species of cactus, including Opuntia (prickly pear) and Pediocactus (pincushion) are found in the park as well.

Prehistory

The location where the park now sits was, 85 million years ago, the coastal shelf of a large inland sea. Sand deposited in the Late Cretaceous Period compacted over time and became sandstone. With the melting of the ice sheets at the end of the last Ice Age, torrents of water eroded the sandstone to produce the hoodoos and cliffs that are part of the park today.

History

There is evidence that the Milk River Valley was inhabited by the Siksika, people of the Blackfoot nation, as long ago as 3000 years. The shelter of the coulees and the abundance of game and berries made the area which is now the park an excellent location for these nomadic people to stop on their seasonal migrations. The towering cliffs and hoodoos had a powerful impact on the visitors, who believed these were the homes of powerful spirits, and the petroglyphs and pictographs tell not only of the lives and journeys of those who created them, but also of the spirits they found here. While the greatest use of the area was made by those in transit, there is some evidence, including tipi rings and a medicine wheel, that there was some permanent settlement here.

Image:Dwwos3.jpg Beginning in about 1730 AD, large numbers of horses, metal goods, and guns began to appear on the Western plains. This signified not only a change in the native lifestyle, but a change in the content of the rock art. Pictures of hunters on horseback, and warriors without body shields began to be created.

The park was created in 1957 and was designated an archaeological preserve in 1977. In 1981, a portion of the park was named a Provincial Historic Resource to protect the rock art from increasing impact from vandalism and graffiti. The most sensitive areas are now set aside in areas designated for guided tours only.

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