“…However, a few sites and locales have yielded sometimes vast numbers of objects associated with various ethnographically and historically attested games. Some of the larger examples include Pueblo Bonito, New Mexico, associated with the Navaho myth of the Great Gambler (Weiner, 2018); Wilson Butte Cave, Idaho, and villages in the Parowan Valley, Utah, where scores of tabular, two-sided bone dice have been found (Bryan, 2006;Hall, 2009); the Lake Midden site, Saskatchewan, and the Ice Glider site, South Dakota, where polished bison rib darts used in a Plains variant of the snow snake game number in the hundreds (Majewski, 1986;Walde, 2003); and the Promontory Caves, Utah, where excellent preservation conditions have allowed the recovery of cane, wood, and other perishable gaming pieces that could number in the thousands (Hallson, 2017;Yanicki & Ives, 2017). In other cases, singular objects or monumental features that are found in many different places, like chunkey stones and ball courts, attest to the wide distribution of their associated games.…”