Title: Notes 325
1- Notes 3/25
- Essays back end of class
- Quiz Thursday 3/27
- No items today
- What about those boxes?
2Today
The End of Prehistory!!
World Systems Begin!!
3Spanish and MexicanSW Environmental History
- Historical Documents Methods
- Spanish Explorers Climate
- Huge cultural Technological differences
- Spanish History and Institutions
- Crown and Church
- Mexican Period (very brief)
4Historical Methods Examples
- Inscriptions El Morro NM
- Diaries, including indirect observations
- First robin of spring etc.
- Governmental records (census)
- Church Records (birth/death/marriage)
- Private estate records (taxes)
- Land survey records/scarred trees
5Historical Methods Eyewitness Accounts
- Temporal proximity?
- Spatial proximity?
- Expert or amateur?
- Changes in recorders?
- Scaled data or opinions?
- 28F. vs. Very cold
6Historical Documents Can They Be Trusted?
- Purpose of document?
- Biased recorder?
- Extreme events
- Budget motives
- Was the witness willing to tell the truth?
- Independent corroboration KEY
7Worlds Collide Columbian Consequences
- Columbus1492,1493, 1498, 1502
Cortez1521--Mexico
Pizarro1532--Peru
http//www.enchantedlearning.com/explorers/
8Spanish Explorers/Colonizers of the Southwest
- Alvar Nunez de Cabeza de Vaca
Francisco Vázquez de Coronado
don Diego de Vargas
9Spanish Explorers of the Southwest
- Francisco Vázquez de Coronado
- Search for 7 Cities of Cibola
- 1540-1542
- 300 Spaniards
- 700 Indian Auxiliaries
- 1000s of head of Livestock
- An INVASION
10to Pecos
Zuni
- Coronados
- Route in AZ?
- Maps lost
- Documents vague
- Names ambiguous
- Despoblado ???
- Disease???
- Native guides may have been lost
- No longer familiar with AZ Highlands?
Tucson
Culiacan
11Coronado and Climate ChamaRed, JemezBlack
121598 Don Juan de Oñate
- Lead 500 colonists from Mexico to New Mexico
- Livestock, supplies
- Traveled through Rio Grande Pueblo country
- First Spanish settlement in the American
Southwest, near Santa Fe. - Fighting between the Spanish and Native
Americans--- Acoma
13Onate and ClimateChamaRed, JemezBlack
14Revolt and Reconquestencomienda
tributerepartimientopaid forced labor
- 1680 Pueblo Revolt
- Puebloans organized and revolted against Spanish
settlements - Pope-- Pecos
- Spaniards retreated to El Paso
- 1692 Reconquest
- don Diego de Vargas
15Conflict and Climate
16Yalus Question?
- Intelligence?
- Racist
- Technological ability?
- Proximate
- Cold vs. warm climate?
- Exceptions exist
17- Continental Axes Differ
- Easier to share ideas plants across longitude
- Latitudinal sharing hindered by climate,
environmental barriers
18- Domestication dates
- Early in Eurasia
- Late in the Americas
- Little independent domestication in SW
19- Mammalian Domestication
- Few candidates in the Americas (Llama, Alpaca)
- In the SW turkey and dog only
20- Infectious Disease
- Eurasians evolved with it, Americans didnt
- Germs could invade prior to the people
- Devastating 95 Mortality?
21Modern Homework Disease
Influenza Pandemic 1918
- Killed 20 M world wide
- Infected 25 of pop
- Killed 600,000 US
Most deaths Sept-Nov
22According to Diamond
- Environmental determinism
- Grand-scale geography key
- Eurasians had environmental advantages
- Domesticated plants and animals early
- Shared ideas easily
- Developed metallurgy and writing
- Co-evolved with infectious diseases
- Dominated Americans at first contact
23Environmental Determinism (ED) vs.
Environmentalism
- ED Environment sole determinant
- Equatorial cultures unproductive hot
- Temperate cultures productive cooler
- Racist, now discredited
- Environmentalism
- Environmental exerts influence, but not sole
determinant - Culture plays a major role
24More Spanish Explorers of the Southwest
- Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino
- 1692-1711
- Reached Tucson
- Jesuit
- Technology
- Livestock
- Agriculture
What did he see?
25Spanish Presidios
- Military Forts
- Protection
- Indian Raiding
- Livestock (cattle, horses) abundant
- Farming nearby
- Tucson, Tubac, El Paso
- Ended in 1821.
26Spanish Missions
- San Xavier del Bac (White Dove of the Desert)
- Kino 1692
- 1770s rebuilt by Franciscans
- Just SW of Tucson
- Still active church
- Still active farming
- Tumacácori.
http//www.smrc-missiontours.com/
27European ? Native American Exchange
- Cattle, Horses
- Sheep, Goats, Pigs
- Citrus, Figs
- Metal tools
- Guns
- Distilled Alcohol
- Epidemic Diseases
- Writing
28Native American ? European Exchange
- Corn
- Beans
- Squash
- Turkey
- Chili Pepper
- Tomatillo
- Sunflower
- Walnut
- Acorn
- Mesquite Bean
- Agave
- Pine Nut
- Amaranth
- Chocolate
291800s Historical Dates
- Mexican Independence 1821
- Mexican-American War 1846
- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1848
- Gadsden Purchase 1854
30Mexican Independence, 1821
- Several large stock grants in AZ, 1820s
- Abandoned 1830s and 1840s
- Apache raiding
31Spanish-Mexican SW
- Historical observations of people and
environments - Not without limitations
- Introduction of new environmental facets
- Domesticated animals
- Wheat
- Diseases
- Beginning of grazing in SW