Title: Archaeology of North America
1Archaeology of North America
- The Archaic Southwest
- and Lower Pecos
2The SouthwestIntroduction
- Includes most of New Mexico and Arizona, southern
Utah and Colorado, southeastern California and
part of northwest Mexico - This region has dramatic environmental contrasts
- Deserts to forested mountain ranges
- Low to moderate rainfall
- This variation is important to its past
- Agriculture distinguishes this area from all
others in NA
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5The SouthwestIntroduction
- The southwest is often defined culturally in two
ways - By agriculture, farming artifacts, pottery,
multi-room villages with public architecture - By the absence of formal social stratification,
large cities, writing and monumental architecture
as seen at Mesoamerican sites - They survived as agriculturists in this very
harsh environment by staying flexible - Southwest societies were in a constant state of
change
6The SouthwestSouthwestern Peoples
- There four major cultural traditions that can be
traced back - Yuman-speaking people
- Oodham
- Pueblo Indians
- Apache and Navajo people
7The SouthwestSouthwestern Peoples
- Yuman speaking people
- Lived along the Colorado River Valley and the
nearby uplands and in Baja California - Practiced floodplain agriculture and also hunting
and gathering - Were skilled warriors and traders
- Oodham
- Lived in s. Arizona and n. parts of New Mexico in
the deserts, rugged uplands and river valleys - Uto-Aztecan speakers
- All lived in rancherias small hamlets with
separate family dwellings
8The SouthwestSouthwestern Peoples
- Pueblo Indians
- Lived in Arizona and New Mexico
- Spoke diverse languages but shared a common
culture - Hopi, Zuni, Acoma and other language groups
- Agriculturalists that also hunt and gather
- Live in villages made of adobe and stone that are
often joined - All pueblos have a ceremonial room a Kiva
- Apache and Navajo people
- Athabaskan speakers, likely form Canada in the
16th century
9The SouthwestThe Environment
- The Southwest lies in several physiological
zones - Rugged mountains to the south and west
- Large basins between the mountains
- The lowest of which is just 30 m above sea level
and the highest in the Colorado Plateau at 1500 m - There are several mesas, steep sided canyons, and
vast gorges - Volcanic deposits yielding obsidian
- In the east are the Rockies and the watershed
that provides water for much of the region
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18The SouthwestThe Environment
- Climate is arid to semiarid in general, but is
highly localized making it difficult to discuss
climate change though time - In much of the western part the rainfall comes
twice a year - Winter storms from the Pacific bring rain and
even snow between December and March - In July and August there are short intense
thunderstorms - On average the south desert areas receives less
than 20 cm of rain per year
19The SouthwestThe Environment
- In the east most of the precipitation comes in
July and August in Gulf thunderstorms - The gulf stream has a dramatic effect on the
amount and distribution of precipitation, leading
to unpredictable cycles of rainfall and droughts - In other words, relying on rainfall alone is
dangerous - For agriculture, they used seeps and springs on
the Colorado Plateau, and irrigated along the
banks of the Rio Grande
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21The SouthwestThe Plants
- The vegetation in the southern deserts is brush
- As one moves northward it becomes mixed grasses,
shrubs, open pine, pinon pine, and juniper
forests - On the Colorado Plateau it is arid grasslands,
with wide spread sage brush and open
juniper-pinon woodland
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25The SouthwestThe Plants
- There are many edible plants in the region
- Agave the leaves and centers are roasted and
stored - Sotol, Yukka, cactus fruits, mesquite and cholla
- Wild onions and potatoes can be roasted and
boiled - Many seasonal fruits (hackberry and juniper)
- Nuts and seeds ground and mixed with cornmeal
- In times of low precipitation many of these
plants lie dormant and thus they cannot be
harvested forcing people to gather these
resources over large distances
26Agave plant
27Yucca plant
28Sotol Plant
Cholla Plant
29The SouthwestThe Animals
- The animals in the region survive off the plants
and thus too must be flexible - Most are omnivorous
- These animals include
- deer, big-horn sheep, pronghorns,
- Other animals include
- Jack rabbits, cottontails, gophers, prairie dogs,
voles, birds, waterfowl (along the rivers), and
dogs - Some groups even domesticated the turkey
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31The SouthwestAgriculture
- The most important resource for these people
during the past 2000 years was domesticated maize
- Agriculture requires that
- There are enough growing days
- precipitation
- good temperatures
- The high temperatures of the deserts and low of
the plateau mean different growing lengths, as
does the aridity of the region
32The SouthwestAgriculture
- Due to the constant variability of much of the
southwest (so much so that from one part of a
canyon to the other the yield would be different)
the farmers had to develop ways to ensure some
success - This rested on the careful use of the scarce
water sources and involved carefully placing the
gardens where they could capitalize on this
resource
33The SouthwestBasic Framework for SW Archaeology
- The Pecos Pueblo site on the Rio Grand in New
Mexico was the main site for developing a
chronology for the southwest - Alfred Kidder developed this Pecos chronology for
the site, occupied before 1540 to 1838, and is
still used more or less today - The Pecos classification is based on
architecture, pottery, stools and to some extent
skeletal characteristics
34The SouthwestBasic Framework for SW Archaeology
- There are 8 cultural stages
- Basketmaker I a pre-agricultural stage. This is
now called Archaic - Basketmaker II (Basketmaker) farmers and using
spear-throwers - Basketmaker III (Post Basketmaker) pottery, pit
and slab houses - Then 5 Pueblo stages (I V) connected to the
rise of Pueblo culture to historic times
35The SouthwestBasic Framework for SW Archaeology
- The problem with this chronology is that Kidder
defined it as a cultural evolution - In reality it is much more complex, with great
diversity not only in the periods but between the
regions within the southwest - Now the southwest is put into a broad cultural
framework - Paleo-Indian 13 000 BP 6500 BC
- Southwestern Archaic 6500 BC AD 200
- Then four major cultural traditions subdivided
into chronological phases
36The SouthwestBasic Framework for SW Archaeology
- Anasazi (?1 AD present)
- Early ancestors
- In the northern southwest
- Main sites include Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde
- Hohokam (C. AD 400 1500)
- Those who have gone
- The southern desert regions of the southwest
- Rectangular, single unit dwellings, low platform
mounds, ball courts, cremations, irrigation
systems and pebble and anvil decorated pottery - Trading with Mesoamerica
37The SouthwestBasic Framework for SW Archaeology
- Mongollon (?250 BC AD 1450)
- Early Spanish Colonial governor of New Mexico
- Located in the mountains in southeastern Arizona
and southwestern New Mexico - Noted for the plain and corrugated brown or red
ceramics found over a large area - Pithouses
- Patayan (AD 875 present)
- Old People
- West of the Hohokam region and north to the Grand
Canyon - Not yet well defined
38The SouthwestThe Paleo-Indians 10 500 6500 BC
- Well documented Clovis and Folsom sites
- The bones of extinct animals are found at several
sites - Mammoth and bison kill sites are seen
- Blackwater Draw
- Bison dominated in the east and plants in the
west - Population was small and dispersed
- By the end of this period the population had
began to develop more diverse subsistence
strategies connected to the local resources.
39The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Around the Mid Holocene when climate began to
warm (the Altithermal) the vegetation changed
into what it is today - Forests were replaced with desert scrub and
grasslands - The beginning of the Archaic is marked with dried
weather in several places - The Altithermal is followed by fluctuations in
the aridity of the region
40The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Diversification of their resources was vital
- They relied heavily on plant foods and smaller
animals - The population was on the move in search of
resources, meaning that the sites are transitory
settlements, occupied for only short periods of
time - For this reason the archaeological record is very
incomplete - Only in the odd cave yields a more complete
preserved record
41The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- During this period the people lived and made use
of a variety of environments depending on the
conditions - This is seen in the archaeological record as a
multidimensional mosaic of hunter and gather
societies with great local and short term
variation - Mano and metates appear in this period throughout
the southwest attesting the processing of seeds
42The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Some scholars have tried to use the projectile
points to distinguish the local traditions
through time - The complexity makes this very difficult
- Hafting techniques are also looked at
- The fact that many Archaic sites have not been
securely dated adds to the problem - In general, from Paleo-Indian into the Early
Archaic, projectile points styles are similar
over large areas
43The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- By the Middle Archaic there is a diversity of
point styles used over small areas, likely
connected to the local resources and perhaps the
stone itself - Some argue that this may also be linked with some
population growth and the limiting of territories
as a result, with less mobility - At this same time trade became much more
important
44The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Despite the complexity and problems for this
period, Cynthia Irwin-Williams identified four
interacting Archaic traditions - San-Dieguito-Pinto Tradition (6500 BC AD 200)
- Oshara Tradition (c. 5500 BC c. AD 600)
- Cochise Tradition (? 5000 c. 200 BC)
- Chihuahua (? 6000 BC AD 250)
- For now these traditions are provisional at best
45The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- San-Dieguto-Pinto (Western) Tradition
- This is the western most tradition
- It evolves from the Paleo-Indian groups
- It is identified based on the Pinto Basin points
with straight stems and concave bases - Oshara (Northern) Tradition
- May also have Paleo-Indian roots
- Has several phases, each with its own projectiles
- Link with long-term cultural development for the
local Archaic cultures into the Pueblo-Anasazi
culture
46Pinto Basin Points
47The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Cochise (Southern) Tradition
- Several phases within this tradition, the latter
of which are better known - Tool kit has a variety of projectile points and
many seed processing artifacts - Many of the projectile points are large, with
corner or side notches and straight or convex
bases - Population growth is noted by c. 1500 BC
- By this time they were also cultivating maize and
other crops
48The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Cochise (Southern) Tradition
- Groups are exploiting a wide range of regions
- Possibly living in more permanent settlements
- Seen by the large oval pithouses (0.5 m below the
ground) that would have required effort to build - The later Mongollon tradition may have developed
out of this tradition - Chihuahua (Southeastern) Tradition
- Poorly defined, but likely includes local
adaptations that evolved over long periods of
time
49The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- A Population Movement and Climate Model
- Claudia and Michael Berry note that there are
several gaps during the Archaic period seen with
C14 dates. Technically if there is gradual change
in this region over time these gaps should not be
there. - They believe the population fluctuations are
relate to climate changes in the region. - They divide the Archaic into 3 main periods
- Periods I, II and III
50The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Period I (8000 3000 BC)
- This is a period of fluctuating warm-wet and
cold-dry climates - Very little is known archaeologically
- The sparse population likely concentrated around
clusters of food resources, but intermittently - The Pinto point is connected with this period
(the earliest Archaic point in the east)
51The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Period II (3000 1000 BC)
- This period began with increased rainfall
- Population increased as a result, and peaked
- New points appear, including the Gypsum and other
contracting stemmed points - These points have strong connections to the
Tehuacan Valley and elsewhere in Mexico - This may be a time when groups are moving up from
Mexico because of deteriorating climate there and
increased rainfall in the southwest
52The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- Period III (1000 BC AD 500)
- Climate becomes drier now
- Agriculture (maize crops) takes hold
- This is connected with the San Pedro stage of the
Cochise culture - Just before AD 500 there is another jump in sites
when the agriculturists become sedentary
cultivators
53The SouthwestSouthwestern Archaic (c. 6500 BC
AD 200)
- This model is more sophisticated in that it
combines the climate data with the archaeology - It also notes that different things are happening
in different areas, where and when productivity
varies - It is also different in the sense that it is not
only of gradual change but rather of population
movements which is more likely the case - These movements would be in response of climate
changing and with it the local resources - The Archaic people also would have developed
conservative strategies
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55The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- In the Lower Pecos Valley and extreme
southwestern Texas is a semi-arid to sub-humid
brushland dominated by thorny brush - There are coastal marshes along the Gulf that are
protected by barrier islands - This area is but part of the greater arid
southwest region of NA
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59The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- Pollen data tells us that in the Early Holocene
this area had a pinon pine and juniper woodland
cover that changed to grassland and cactus
vegetation in the Mid Holocene - Then at the time of European settlement it became
even more arid into a thorny brush land - These changes forced the hunting and gathering
population to adapt
60The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- The Lower Pecos Canyonlands lie around the Pecos
and Devils rivers, and the Rio Grande to the
southwest - The canyonlands are famous for their dry caves
and pictographs - Bonfire Shelter is the southern most and earliest
known bison jump in the Americas - The cliff was 37 m high
- About 40 Bison antiquus date between 10 000 and
8000 BC were killed - Then 8000 years later Archaic hunters stampeded
three herds over the cliff totaling about 800
bison
61The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- The dry caves in the region yield a great deal of
information - Twined, plaited and coiled baskets, sandals, mats
and bags made out of plant fibers - They wove partitions to separate areas of the
caves - Bags, blankets, robes and pouches were made of
deer, bison and rabbits - Digging sticks and curved boomerang-like sticks
for killing rabbits were found, as were atlatls - Freshwater shells made into spoons and scoops,
bone and antler pins and weaving tools are also
common
62The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- The superb preservation allows for the
understanding of a long cultural sequence
beginning 11 000 BC to the present - The sequence begins with the Bonfire cave
occupation and into the early Archaic Bonfire
phase between 10 000 and 7 000 BC - The Pecos Archaic is then divided into Early,
Middle and Late Periods from 7000 BC historic
times
63The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- In central Texas there is a long occupation from
Clovis to historic times, with a sequence of dart
points through the Archaic - The Archaic sequence is well documented at Baker
Cave (from 7000 BC AD 1400) above a tributary of
the Devils river - Interestingly, specialized cooking earth ovens
are seen in this area and by the Middle Archaic
they are in regular use for plant cooking - Thousands of burned rock middens are found
throughout central Texas
64The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- The canyonlands are best known for the rock art
- Pictographs and petroglyphs are both found
- The earliest art is of abstract human figures in
various mineral colours - Some animals (deer, fish, zoomorphs), human forms
and Shamans (with their paraphernalia) are
painted almost life-size - This is called Pecos River Style
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70The SouthwestThe South and East c. 11 000 BC -
Pres
- Other paintings show group activities, like deer
roundups, processions (with some with
headdresses), bison or deer being driven into
net-like barrier or to jumps - Later arts show bows and arrows, and historic art
has crosses, horses, cattle and active hostility
to Spaniards
71The SouthwestHistorical Peoples of the Region
- In central and southern Texas the 11 000 years of
continuous occupation is traced back - Ethnohistoric studies of historic groups suggest
that their ancestors were displaced by Spaniards
from the south and the Plains Apache and Comanche
from the north and west - At that time there were perhaps dozens of small
hunting and gathering groups living in the area