The Upper Watershed Humans have interacted with Sierra Nevada ecosystems for over 10,000 years, and there is
archaeological evidence of Native Americans manipulating their environment in the Sierras for at least 3,000 years.
In the Clavey Watershed there are sites dated from 5,000 years ago and evidence of Me-Wuk culture for at least 800 years. The Central Sierra natives used “…fire, selective seed collection and sewing, transplanting, pruning and coppicing [cutting back to ground level], weeding and tilling, water diverting and ditching, and other adaptive techniques,” which of course affected the environment.
The Central MiWok (also spelled Me-Wuk) people are known to have lived in the Clavey watershed, and bedrock mortars, projectile points, stone chips from tool-making, and evidence of camps and dwellings have been found.
These artifacts are believed to be from campsites that were used seasonally as the peoples moved into the higher elevations for the procurement and processing of food. Leading out of the canyon, toward the west, were more complex sites including villages, with possible ceremonial and dwelling structures and smaller camps where milling may have taken place. Me-Wuk subsistence was based on the plant and animal resources available in the environment.
In the foothill region, the Me-Wuk villages were located below the heavy snow line at elevations from 3,500 to 4,000 feet. The people moved to the higher elevation in smaller groups in the summer and fall, establishing camps convenient to gathering and hunting the plant and animal resources within the higher zone.
On the basis of this information, one can imagine that numbers of Me-Wuk lived during the winter in the more hospitable lower elevations to the west of the Clavey, and then that many would migrate over Duckwall Ridge into and then up the Clavey Watershed to summer camps in the upper Clavey meadows.
At the time the dam was proposed in the twentieth century, Phyllis Harness concurred with the archaeologists’ judgments. “The river’s part of our heritage. It’s a place our people migrated through” (Union Democrat, 28 June 1994). Thus archaeological, anecdotal and other historical evidence suggests human interaction with the Clavey Watershed for many centuries.
In 1852, the Clark-Skidmore Party made the second crossing of the Sierra in this area by non-indigenous people and part of their route came through the Clavey Watershed. Lured by the gold in Columbia, their wagon train came over the Sierra crest through Relief Valley in what is now the Emigrant Wilderness. They then moved south around Dodge Ridge, past Burst Rock through the watershed of Bell Creek (one of the two sources of the Clavey), and finally down to Sonora through the neighboring North Fork Tuolumne basin.
The Lower Tuolumne River
The Yokuts were the primary tribal group found along the
lower TuolumneRiver.In fact, the name Tuolumne is believed to be derived from the Yokut word
tal-ma-lam-ne meaning cluster of
stone wigwams.These early humans hunted, fished and
gathered food along the river.They used
spears and nets to catch fish and traps to capture birds and small
mammals.Abundant tule, a type of
bulrush, was used to make large boats with which to navigate the river, as well
as smaller rafts and baskets.While this
group of native people was known to use fire as a management tool, it had no
significant impact on the river ecosystem at that time.
By the end of the 18th century, Spanish explorers
had arrived in the Central Valley and large ranches were established along the
lower Tuolumne, resulting in extensive clearing of the native riparian
vegetation.When the Gold Rush began
1848 the TuolumneRiver became a steamboat
route until extraction methods such as hydraulic mining gouged out the adjacent
floodplains and released so much sediment into the river that commercial
traffic had to be stopped.By the early
1900s ferries had been replaced by bridges and settlements along the river were
well established.