Ancient history vs. Vegas development

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Sandy Croteau
ON CAMERA: Helen Mortensen, of the Archaeo-Nevada Society, is being filmed in 
the Upper Las Vegas Wash for TV spots, including one for Scenic Nevada, an 
environmental nonprofit. Though city officials have backed a plan to protect a 
quarter of the wash, she and other activists are campaigning to conserve the 
entire stretch.
Protecting fossils from burgeoning neighborhoods may be a mammoth undertaking, 
but activists are trying to take a stand.
By Ashley Powers, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer 
December 29, 2007 
LAS VEGAS -- Local real estate agent Sandy Croteau made a somewhat surprising 
pitch as she traipsed through a vacant, gravel-filled wash: She wants to spare 
the expanse from home developers.

Trying to halt this city's growth may be a Sisyphean task, but Croteau, 60, is 
counting on help from some sun-worn mammoth bones. About 10,000 bison, camel 
and mammoth fossils have been unearthed in recent years in a nearly 13,000-acre 
ribbon of the Upper Las Vegas Wash just south of Desert National Wildlife 
Refuge. And with builders champing to get at the property, the federal Bureau 
of Land Management must figure out how much of the land to preserve.


 
Early residents
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Map



Acknowledging the fossils' archeological import, Las Vegas officials have 
backed a plan that would shield about one quarter of the wash from development. 
But, they argue, conserving the entire area would thwart growth north of the 
city, where there is still room for homes and water and sewer lines.

With streets nearby already lined with bulldozers or adjacent subdivisions, 
Croteau and other activists have gathered hundreds of signatures in support of 
protecting the entire stretch.

"The first time I saw this, it changed my life," said Croteau, her shadow 
darkening mammoth bones still in the dirt. "Do we really need a Quickstop here?"

The grass-roots campaign comes at a time when Las Vegas and its suburbs -- like 
a number of booming areas across the West -- are creeping into desert once 
dismissed as the boonies. Sin City's population has doubled since 1990, and 
North Las Vegas' has quadrupled. Though the housing market has slowed in recent 
months, officials still expect that much of the region's remaining land will be 
developed.

"It's a race to set aside these valuable places before homes are built," said 
Kathleen Springer, senior curator for geological sciences at the San Bernardino 
County Museum, whose scientists have been unearthing the fossils.

The Upper Las Vegas Wash is a bleak swath dotted with the rare Las Vegas 
bearpoppy, an occasional discarded sofa and crushed beer bottles -- a spot used 
mostly by dirt bikers, ATV riders and paintballers.

A few years ago, when power lines were due to be installed in the area, 
scientists from the museum performed a preliminary survey and walked out with 
thousands of bones -- some thought to be nearly 100,000 years old.

When the BLM asked the scientists to return in 2003,they discovered more than 
400 potential fossil sites and excavated a dozen of them, Springer said. 
Scientists are convinced that the wash is packed with bones that could aid 
their understanding of climate change and how behemoth animals subsisted during 
the Ice Age. "It almost gives me goose bumps," Springer said.

Las Vegas City Councilman Steve Ross, whose district includes the wash, said he 
would make sure identified fossil sites are guarded. "But am I dedicated to 
blocking off the whole desert?" he said. "Absolutely not."

The BLM is considering a range of options and is expected to announce a 
decision next year, said Gayle Marrs-Smith, who oversees the agency process.

Meanwhile, Croteau and other members of Protectors of Tule Springs -- as the 
wash is known locally -- are lobbying for it to become a national conservation 
area.

Helen Mortensen of the Archaeo-Nevada Society went out with Croteau one recent 
day to survey the wash, which is as wide as a football field and brims with 
water when it rains.

It may look scrubby, Mortensen said, but "this could explain early man's 
interaction with Ice Age animals. We don't know. There's so much we don't know."

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