Blackrock Springs Site


The Blackrock Springs Site is an archaeological site in Shenandoah National Park, in Augusta County, Virginia, United States.
The site was discovered during the early 1970s as part of a comprehensive survey of the national park. It is one of fifteen sites that the survey found along Paine Run, a group that also includes the Paine Run Rockshelter and the unnamed 44-AU-154. Located near the stream's source at Blackrock Springs, the site measures approximately, although the survey concluded that it was only about deep. It was occupied during an exceptionally long period of time, beginning before 7000 BC and continuing until after 1000 BC; among the earliest artifacts found at Blackrock Springs is a St. Albans-related projectile point, and the most intensive uses appear to date from the middle to late Archaic period. This chronological distribution, together with the uneven physical distribution of artifacts and the nature of the artifacts found, led investigators to conclude that millennia of tribesmen in the Shenandoah Valley and the Piedmont used the site as a base camp for occasional hunting and gathering on the mountainside.
The Blackrock Springs Site's archaeological value is so significant that it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in December 1985, together with the Paine Run shelter and site 44-AU-154.