Native Americans s in Red Rock Canyon '', a common plant consumed by early
Native Americans The first humans were attracted to the Red Rock area due to its resources of water, plant, and animal life that could not be easily found in the surrounding desert. Hunters and gatherers such as the historical Southern Paiute and the much older Archaic, or Desert Culture Native Americans, have successively occupied this area. As many as six different
Native American cultures may have been present at Red Rock over the millennia. The following chronology is an approximation, from the present to ancient pre-history: •
Southern Paiute: 900 to modern times •
Patayan Culture: 900 to early historic times in the 1800s • Ancestral Puebloan: 1 AD to 1150 •
Pinto/Gypsum: (Archaic) 3500 BC to 1 AD •
San Dieguito: 7000 to 5500 BC •
Paleo-Indians (Tule Springs): 11,000 to 8000 BC Numerous
petroglyphs, as well as pottery fragments, remain today throughout the area. In addition, several roasting pits used by the early Native Americans at Red Rock provide further evidence of human activity in the past.
Modern history In the early 20th century, around the time the first European Americans settled in nearby Las Vegas, the
Excelsior Company operated a small
sandstone quarry near the northern area of the scenic loop. It proved to be uneconomical and was shut down. Evidence of the quarry's existence includes some of the huge sandstone blocks that have been left behind. The Red Rocks have been a film location for such movies as
Roy Rogers and his horse Trigger in
Bells of San Angelo (1947) and was a location for
The Stalking Moon with
Gregory Peck in 1968. In 1967, the
Bureau of Land Management designated as the Red Rock Recreation Lands. In 1973, the U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee on Federal Conservation Areas held a special hearing in the Foley Federal Office Building in downtown Las Vegas to review a legislative resolution sponsored by Nevada's lone Congressman,
David Towell (R-NV) to establish the Red Rock Conservation Area by transferring Federal land to the State of Nevada. Testimony in favor of the bill was given by the
Sierra Club and a high school student and environmental activist, Dennis Causey. The subcommittee unanimously approved the resolution, sending it to the full Committee on the Interior and subsequently to the full House, followed by favorable action by the U S. Senate and approval by President
George H. W. Bush. Further legislation in 1990 changed the status of the Red Rock Recreation Lands to a National Conservation Area, a status that also provides funds to maintain and protect it. The Federal area was adjacent to the Red Rock State Park.
The Howard Hughes Corporation, developer of
Summerlin, has transferred land adjacent to the protected area, to provide a buffer between the development and the conservation area. Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area is adjacent to the
Spring Mountains National Recreation Area on the west side. ==Biology==