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Murray Springs is located in southern Arizona near the San Pedro River and once served as a Clovis  hunting camp approximately 9000 years BCE. The site is unique for the massive quantity of large megafauna processing and extensive tool making. Archaeologists identified five buried animal kills and processing locations and a Clovis camp location.

In 1966, archaeologists Dr. C. Vance Haynes and Dr. Peter Mehringer of the University of Arizona discovered the site while extending the mapping of the area of the Lehner Mammoth Kill Site. The doctors located two concentrations of mammoth bones that day. They were convinced the area was a Clovis site based on the bones and because Murray Springs shared the same geologic characteristics as the Lehrner site. Funding by the National Science Foundation and the National Geographic Society enabled excavations from 1967 to 1971. Some of the significant artifacts found during the excavations included hearths, a bone tool, projectile points, lithic tools, and debitage. The five buried animal kills and processing locations contained bones of mammoth, buffaloes, horses, camels, canids and rodents. A worker found a single pot sherd on the surface of the site that was associated to use approximately 1300 to 1450 CE. The archaeologists noted peoples have used the spring over an extended period. The San Pedro River Valley is rich in discovered Clovis culture sites. Within a 50-mile radius are nearly a dozen Clovis sites including the Lehrner Mammoth Kill Site, the [[Naco-Mammoth Kill Site|Naco Mammoth Kill Site, the Escapule Clovis Site and the Leikem Clovis Site. The Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management oversees Murray Springs and in 2012, the U.S. Government declared the site a National Historic Landmark. The site has a parking area and an interpretive trail.