Head-Smashed-in Buffalo Jump is the site in Canada where prehistoric native Americans hunted buffaloes. The animals were chased over the precipice where they fell to their death, and their carcasses were later brought back to camp. The site still holds vast quantities of ancient buffalo skeletons dating back as much as 6000 years.
Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump is located in the prairie, about 18 km northwest of Fort Macleod, in the province of Alberta. It was inscribed as a World Heritage Site during the 5th session of the World Heritage Committee which met in Sydney, Australia, on 26-30 October, 1981.
The practise of herding buffaloes to their death has been carried out by the native people for 5,500 years. At Head-Smashed-In, this was carried out by the Blackfoot tribe. The beasts were driven from the grazing ground at Porcupine Hill, over a distance of 3 kilometers, to a cliff that is 300 meters long, and 10 meters in height from the valley below. The site was known in the Blackfoot language as Estipah-skikikini-kots.
Today visitors to Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump can visit the Interpretive Center, which is built into the sandstone cliff. The five-level centre provides an indepth interpretation to the ecology, mythology, lifestyle and technology of the Blackfoot tribe. While there, visit also the Fort Museum of the North West Mounted Police.
World Heritage Site Inscription Details
Location: N 49 44 58 W 113 37 26 in the Province of Alberta, Canada
Inscription Year: 1981
Type of Site: Cultural Inscription Criteria: VI
You have to get in by car. The main town is Fort Macleod in southern Alberta. Your approach is through Highway 3 from the southwest and northeast, or Highway 2 from the northwest and southeast.
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This website celebrating the World Heritage Sites is a hobby website that is not in any way connected to UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) and is not associated in any way with it. Any mention of UNESCO on this website is intended to describe the inscription and recognition of the World Heritage Sites by the institution, and does not in any way imply that UNESCO endorse the description and information provided.