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The 1965 GNIS Case Brief states that Wizards Cove is an "beach at [[Wizards Cove]], in the northwest part of Pyramid Lake, about 40 miles north-northeast of Reno; so named because of the weird, primitive beauty of the surrounding area."<ref>"[https://www.newspapers.com/article/nevada-state-journal-nevada-landmarks-of/161377864/ Nevada Landmarks Officially Named]," November 29, 1965, Nevada State Journal, p. 16.</ref>
The 1965 GNIS Case Brief states that Wizards Cove is an "beach at [[Wizards Cove]], in the northwest part of Pyramid Lake, about 40 miles north-northeast of Reno; so named because of the weird, primitive beauty of the surrounding area."<ref>"[https://www.newspapers.com/article/nevada-state-journal-nevada-landmarks-of/161377864/ Nevada Landmarks Officially Named]," November 29, 1965, Nevada State Journal, p. 16.</ref>
Wizards Beach was named for the large dust clouds that appeared regularly in this area.<ref>"[http://hdl.handle.net/11714/3750 The Wizards Beach Men: A Study in Contrasts From Pyramid Lake, Nevada]," Verla M. Jackson, Thesis, UNR,2012.</ref><ref>Dansie, A. J., Davis, J.O. and Stafford, T.W., Jr. 1988. The Wizards Beach recession: Farmdalian (25,500 yr B.P.) vertebrate fossils co-occur with early Holocene artifacts. In, J.A. Willig, C.M. Aikens and J.L. Fagan (eds.), Early human occupation in far western North America: the Clovis-Archaic interface. Nevada State Museum Anthropological
Papers,21:153-200.</ref>


In 1978, the human bones were discovered that have been dated to 9,200 years ago.  This find is known as Wizards Beach Man.<ref>Don Alan Hall, "[http://www.cabrillo.edu/~crsmith/spiritman2.html The Men from Spirit Cave and Wizard's Beach], ([https://web.archive.org/web/20160423084253/http://www.cabrillo.edu/~crsmith/spiritman2.html archive.org)], Mammoth Trumpet 12(2) 1997.</ref><ref>Edgar H. 1997, "[http://www.onlinenevada.org/sites/default/files/Wizards_Edgar_1997.pdf Paleopathology of the Wizards Beach Man (AHUR 2023) and the Spirit Cave Mummy (AHUR 2064)]," ([https://web.archive.org/web/20151017233538/http://onlinenevada.org/sites/default/files/Wizards_Edgar_1997.pdf archive.org)], Nevada Hist Soc Quart 40:57-61.</ref>
In 1978, the human bones were discovered that have been dated to 9,200 years ago.  This find is known as Wizards Beach Man.<ref>Don Alan Hall, "[http://www.cabrillo.edu/~crsmith/spiritman2.html The Men from Spirit Cave and Wizard's Beach], ([https://web.archive.org/web/20160423084253/http://www.cabrillo.edu/~crsmith/spiritman2.html archive.org)], Mammoth Trumpet 12(2) 1997.</ref><ref>Edgar H. 1997, "[http://www.onlinenevada.org/sites/default/files/Wizards_Edgar_1997.pdf Paleopathology of the Wizards Beach Man (AHUR 2023) and the Spirit Cave Mummy (AHUR 2064)]," ([https://web.archive.org/web/20151017233538/http://onlinenevada.org/sites/default/files/Wizards_Edgar_1997.pdf archive.org)], Nevada Hist Soc Quart 40:57-61.</ref>

Latest revision as of 21:27, 22 December 2024

Wizards Beach is on the northwest shore of Pyramid Lake, north of Pyramid.

The 1965 GNIS Case Brief states that Wizards Cove is an "beach at Wizards Cove, in the northwest part of Pyramid Lake, about 40 miles north-northeast of Reno; so named because of the weird, primitive beauty of the surrounding area."[1]

Wizards Beach was named for the large dust clouds that appeared regularly in this area.[2][3]

In 1978, the human bones were discovered that have been dated to 9,200 years ago. This find is known as Wizards Beach Man.[4][5]

References

  1. "Nevada Landmarks Officially Named," November 29, 1965, Nevada State Journal, p. 16.
  2. "The Wizards Beach Men: A Study in Contrasts From Pyramid Lake, Nevada," Verla M. Jackson, Thesis, UNR,2012.
  3. Dansie, A. J., Davis, J.O. and Stafford, T.W., Jr. 1988. The Wizards Beach recession: Farmdalian (25,500 yr B.P.) vertebrate fossils co-occur with early Holocene artifacts. In, J.A. Willig, C.M. Aikens and J.L. Fagan (eds.), Early human occupation in far western North America: the Clovis-Archaic interface. Nevada State Museum Anthropological Papers,21:153-200.
  4. Don Alan Hall, "The Men from Spirit Cave and Wizard's Beach, (archive.org), Mammoth Trumpet 12(2) 1997.
  5. Edgar H. 1997, "Paleopathology of the Wizards Beach Man (AHUR 2023) and the Spirit Cave Mummy (AHUR 2064)," (archive.org), Nevada Hist Soc Quart 40:57-61.

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