Martz Rock Shelters
The Martz Rock Shelters was an archaeological site located near Myersdale, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, US, on the farm of Harry Martz. The Somerset County Archaeological Survey began its excavations on June 14, 1938, and was completed six days later. The site was located about 30 miles from Metropolitan Pittsburgh. The site was discovered around 1938 during the Works Projects Administration excavation project, necessary for the construction of state highway 219. It was located at a hill overlooking the Casselman River from which a shale ledge protruded about two hundred and fifty feet above the river. The opening of the caves faced south. The site was destroyed during the construction of the highway.
Artifacts found at the site included:
Chert and quartz are not naturally found in Somerset County.
Findings
The deposition was found to be thirty-six inches in depth. Local knowledge of the site attributes the occupation to Native Americans. The excavation confirmed that the site was occupied as early as other sites located in eastern parts of Pennsylvania. The site indicates that the settlement was occupied by a subsistence based group. Characteristics of subsistence settlements were dependence on maize, villages that were located above the river floodplain and the use of underground storage.
- Archaic period in North America
- Archaeological sites on the National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania
- Demolished buildings and structures in Pennsylvania
- History of Pennsylvania
- Museums in Washington County, Pennsylvania
- National Historic Landmarks in Pennsylvania
- Archaeological museums in Pennsylvania
- Native American museums in Pennsylvania
- Rock shelters in the United States
- Paleo-Indian archaeological sites in the United States
- Pennsylvania state historical marker significations
- National Register of Historic Places in Washington County, Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania stubs