Since time immemorial, people have resided in and around the area where Dinosaur National Monument is now. Archeological evidence reveals a record of intermittent human occupation, cultural development, and exploration that spans at least 10,000 years. Today, people from all over the world are still drawn to this landscape for many of the same reasons as those who came before. Click on the pictures below to learn about the people who have been here before.
Ancestral Indigenous People
Since time immemorial, people have called this place home. Their time here is remembered by the rocks, the landscape, and their descendants. Domínguez and Escalante Expedition
A stone marker near the monument's entrance sign marks the site of the first known European expedition into the Uintah Basin. Trappers and Traders
Some of the first European visitors to the area that is now called Dinosaur National Monument and the Uinta Basin were trappers and traders. John Wesley Powell
Many of the sites at Dinosaur National Monument now bear names bestowed upon them by John Wesley Powell during his river trips. Pat Lynch
No one really knows when Pat Lynch first arrived in the Dinosaur area, but he settled in a cave just a few miles above Pool Creek. Earl Douglass
The paleontologist, Earl Douglass, found the Carnegie Quarry fossil bed and oversaw excavations there for 15 years in the early 1900s. Galloway-Stone Expedition
The Galloway-Stone expedition travelled the length of the Green River through Dinosaur National Monument to the Grand Canyon. Josie Bassett Morris
Josie Bassett Morris built herself a cabin in 1913 along Cub Creek. There, she homesteaded by herself for 50 of her 90 years. Les Voyageurs sans Trace
The "Voyagers without a Trace" were a group of French adventurers who attempted to run the Green River through the Grand Canyon in 1938. |
Last updated: April 30, 2024