94b. Archeological Mitigation of the Federal Lands
Highway Program Plan to Rehabilitate Tour Road, Route 10, Little
Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, Montana
Douglas D. Scott
Archival and archeological research was conducted in support of
the planned rebuilding of Route 10, the tour road, from Last Stand
Hill to the Reno–Benteen defense site parking lot at Little
Bighorn Battle-field National Monument. Archival research in the
National Archives and at the park provided back-ground information
on the nature and extent of road construction by the U. S. Army
in the mid-1930s that now constitutes the tour road right-of-way.
Close-order metal detecting in a corridor 20 meters to either
side of the tour road alignment and at Calhoun Hill Loop recovered
over 300 artifacts associated with the Battle of the Little Bighorn
in 1876. The distribution and density of artifacts recovered during
the metal detecting validated the mid-1980s sampling effort, finding
the predicted solider and Indian warrior positions posited in
the earlier investiga-tions.
The number of artifacts recovered was also within the predicted
range based on the earlier investiga-tions. No new or unanticipated
soldier or Indian warrior positions were identified, nor were
any new fire-arms types identified. A number of additional individual
guns were identified using comparative firearm identification
techniques. The planned road reconstruction will not affect any
marble marker locations, thus no additional mitigative excavations
are required. Based on current plans for the road rehabilitation
the close-order metal detecting has mitigated the effect of the
road construction along the right-of-way. A multi-instrument geophysical
survey was conducted around the Reno–Benteen parking lot
to ensure that no buried riflepits or other battle features will
be impacted by reconstruction efforts in that area. Once the current
asphalt overlay is removed, it is recommended that metal detecting
of the original base be con-ducted prior to reconstruction in
order to ensure there are no buried deposits in the roadbed.