451 results on '"Ancestral Pueblo"'
Search Results
2. A Summary of 25 Years of Research on Water Supplies of the Ancestral Pueblo People.
- Author
-
Wright, Kenneth R.
- Subjects
ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture ,WATER harvesting ,WATER storage ,WATER supply ,CLIMATE research - Abstract
Six ancestral Pueblo community water supply sources were investigated by a team of engineers, scientists, archeologists, and other specialists affiliated with Wright Water Engineers, Inc. (WWE), and the Wright Paleohydrological Institute (WPI) from 1996 to 2021. The team members applied their various technical backgrounds and research methods to gain more insight into the water available to the ancestral Pueblo people living in the Four Corners area of the United States between 750 and 1280 CE, and how these indigenous people managed the water. Using lab analyses, field research, surveys, and analyses of sediment layers, the WWE/WPI team determined that four mounded areas discovered at Mesa Verde National Park had been ancestral Pueblo reservoirs. Through climate research, lab analyses, and investigations at these and two other sites, the team learned that water in this region was limited, and the community had to work diligently to harvest this water and maintain access to it. In the case of the four reservoirs studied, for example, the runoff used as water supply carried a high volume of sediment that required the water storage basins to be frequently dredged to maintain adequate capacity. These and other examples indicate that the ancestral Pueblo people were resourceful, hardworking, and organized water harvesters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Tasks, Knowledge, and Practice: Long-Distance Resource Acquisition at Goat Spring Pueblo (LA285), Central New Mexico.
- Author
-
Eckert, Suzanne L., Huntley, Deborah L., Habicht-Mauche, Judith A., and Ferguson, Jeffrey R.
- Subjects
- *
GLAZES , *OBSIDIAN , *RAW materials , *MATERIAL culture , *ARCHAEOMETRY , *POTTERY - Abstract
We examine provenance data collected from three types of geological resources recovered at Goat Spring Pueblo in central New Mexico. Our goal is to move beyond simply documenting patterns in compositional data; rather, we develop a narrative that explores how people's knowledge and preferences resulted in culturally and materially determined choices as revealed in those patterns. Our analyses provide evidence that residents of Goat Spring Pueblo did not rely primarily on local geological sources for the creation of their glaze paints or obsidian tools. They did, however, utilize a locally available blue-green mineral for creation of their ornaments. We argue that village artisans structured their use of raw materials at least in part according to multiple craft-specific and community-centered ethnomineralogies that likely constituted the sources of these materials as historically or cosmologically meaningful places through their persistent use. Consequently, the surviving material culture at Goat Spring Pueblo reflects day-to-day beliefs, practices, and social relationships that connected this village to a broader mosaic of interconnected Ancestral Pueblo taskscapes and knowledgescapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Climate and community in Central Mesa Verde.
- Author
-
Field, Sean and Glowacki, Donna M.
- Subjects
FOOD shortages ,PALEOCLIMATOLOGY ,SOCIAL context ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
Periods of acute climate stress – the convergence of low subsistence yields due to poor climate conditions and ineffective buffering strategies due to climate variability – critically reduces peoples' ability to subsist and mitigate food shortages, thereby creating conditions that could result in profound social change. Here, paleoclimate reconstructions are used to identify periods of acute stress at three large Ancestral Pueblo villages in the US Southwest. These periods are examined in relation to occupation histories at each village showing that in certain instances, acute climate stress played a primary role in people's decisions to leave communities. However, not all of the communities reacted to stress in the same way indicating that distinct patterns of climate and social context played an important role in influencing how acute climate stress was experienced by different groups. Results from this study highlight the importance of community‐specific histories when considering the impact of climate stress on past people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The White Ware Pottery from Tijeras Pueblo (LA 581): Learning Frameworks and Communities of Practice and Identity
- Author
-
Habicht-Mauche, Judith A
- Subjects
Archaeology ,Historical Studies ,History ,Heritage and Archaeology ,Ancestral Pueblo ,Pueblo IV period ,middle Rio Grande ,Tijeras Pueblo ,pottery ,typology ,learning networks ,communities of practice - Published
- 2022
6. Volcanic climate forcing, extreme cold and the Neolithic Transition in the northern US Southwest
- Author
-
Sinensky, RJ, Schachner, Gregson, Wilshusen, Richard H, and Damiata, Brian N
- Subjects
Climate Action ,American Southwest ,Formative ,Basketmaker ,Ancestral Pueblo ,volcanic climate forcing ,dendrochronology ,Linguistics ,Archaeology - Abstract
The impacts on global climate of the AD 536 and 541 volcanic eruptions are well attested in palaeoclimatic datasets and in Eurasian historical records. Their effects on farmers in the arid uplands of western North America, however, remain poorly understood. The authors investigate whether extreme cold caused by these eruptions influenced the scale, scope and timing of the Neolithic Transition in the northern US Southwest. Archaeological tree-ring and radiocarbon dates, along with settlement survey data, suggest that extreme cooling generated the physical and social space that enabled early farmers to transition from kin-focused socio-economic strategies to increasingly complex and widely shared forms of social organisation that served as foundational elements of burgeoning Ancestral Pueblo societies.
- Published
- 2022
7. Combining Paleohydrology and Least-Cost Analyses to Assess the Vulnerabilities of Ancestral Pueblo Communities to Water Insecurity in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico.
- Author
-
Aiuvalasit, Michael J. and Jorgeson, Ian A.
- Subjects
- *
DROUGHTS , *PALEOHYDROLOGY , *FOURTEENTH century , *COST analysis , *WATER security , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL cultures - Abstract
We developed a new approach to identify vulnerabilities to water insecurity across entire archaeological culture areas by combining a paleohydrological model of the sensitivites of hydrological systems to droughts with least-cost analyses of the costs to acquire domestic water. Using a custom Python script integrated into ArcGIS Pro software, we calculated the pairwise one-way cost in time for walking between 225 water sources and 5,446 Ancestral Pueblo cultural sites across the Jemez and Pajarito Plateaus of the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico. This allowed us to identify whether periodic hydrological droughts occurring between AD 1100 and 1700 increased water acquisition costs across these regions.We found that hydrological droughts increased travel times in both regions to durations exceeding modern standards for water insecurity. Beginning in the fourteenth century, greater underlying hydrogeological sensitivities to droughts and the decline of a dual-residence pattern caused by population losses made the remaining aggregated communities of the Pajarito Plateau much more vulnerable to water insecurity than those on the Jemez Plateau. This would have upended long-standing relationships between communities and water on the Pajarito Plateau during a time when socioeconomic integration across the northern Rio Grande Valley pulled people toward valley bottoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Fuelwood Collection and Women's Work in Ancestral Puebloan Societies on the Colorado Plateau.
- Author
-
Osborn, Alan J.
- Subjects
- *
SEXUAL division of labor , *FUELWOOD , *BASKET making , *COOKING - Abstract
Anthropologists have recently paid greater attention to gender and the division of labor in subsistence societies around the world. These studies have included Ancestral Puebloan societies in the United States Southwest, particularly on the Colorado Plateau. Based on ethnographic literature, women in this region have been responsible traditionally for a wide range of domestic activities, including child-rearing, farming, food preparation, cooking, pottery making, basket weaving, and collecting and transporting firewood and water. The present study presents a predictive model for prehistoric cooking energy systems on the Colorado Plateau. This model examines the causal links between environmental variables and fuelwood demand, acquisition, and use. These causal relationships have been delineated in contemporary cross-cultural research as well as studies of high-altitude cooking. Fuelwood collection, transport, and use form the core of women's workload. This preliminary study serves to predict women's annual workload based on the relationship between the number of fuelwood collecting trips and the elevation of Ancestral Puebloan settlements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Stratigraphic evidence for culturally variable Indigenous fire regimes in ponderosa pine forests of the Mogollon Rim area, east-central Arizona.
- Author
-
Roos, Christopher I., Laluk, Nicholas C., Reitze, William, and Davis, Owen K.
- Subjects
- *
CHARCOAL , *PONDEROSA pine , *ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture , *POLLEN , *WILD plants , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *WESTERN diet - Abstract
The impact of Indigenous populations on historical fire regimes has been controversial and beset by mismatches in the geographic scale of paleofire reconstructions and the scale of land-use behaviors. It is often assumed that anthropogenic burning is linearly related to population density and not different cultural practices. Here we take an off-site geoarchaeology strategy to reconstruct variability in historical fire regimes (<1000 years ago) at geographic scales that match the archaeological, ethnohistorical, and oral tradition evidence for variability in the intensity of Indigenous land use by two different cultural groups (Ancestral Pueblo and Western Apache). We use multiple, independent proxies from three localities in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forests in east-Central Arizona to reconstruct fire regime variability during four phases of cultural use of different intensities. Elevated charcoal with domesticate pollen (Zea spp.) but otherwise unchanged forest pollen assemblages characterized intensive land use by Ancestral Pueblo people during an early phase, suggesting fire use to support agricultural activities. By contrast, a phase of intensive pre-reservation Western Apache land use corresponded to little change in charcoal, but had elevated ash-derived phosphorus and elevated grass and ruderal pollen suggestive of enhanced burning in fine fuels to promote economically important wild plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Lidar-Derived Road Profiles: A Case Study Using Chaco Roads from the US Southwest.
- Author
-
Field, Sean
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL elevation models - Abstract
Despite considerable developments in the archaeological application of lidar for detecting roads, less attention has been given to studying road morphology using lidar. As a result, archaeologists are well equipped to locate but not thoroughly study roads via lidar data. Here, a method that visualizes and statistically compares road profiles using elevation values extracted from lidar-derived digital elevation models is presented and illustrated through a case study on Chaco roads, located in the US Southwest. This method is used to establish the common form of ground-truthed Chaco roads and to measure how frequently this form is across non-ground-truthed roads. This method is an addition to the growing suite of tools for documenting and comparing roads using remotely sensed data, and it can be particularly useful in threatened landscapes where ground truthing is becoming less possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Potter Gestures and Work Direction in Southwest Ceramics with Exposed Coiling and Corrugation.
- Author
-
Woodhead, Genevieve
- Subjects
- *
CERAMICS , *GESTURE , *MANUFACTURING processes , *POTTERY , *POTTERS , *POTSHERDS - Abstract
Corrugated vessels are ubiquitous throughout the US Southwest, and yet their research potential is often overlooked. This paper quantifies how much uniformity or variability goes into the process of manufacturing these objects. The paper focuses on the fundamental, early-stage technological choice of coiling direction. Does coiling direction determine other attributes visible on ceramic vessel bodies, specifically indentation angle? To answer this question, I closely examine whole and majority-intact ceramic vessels. The sample comprises 255 vessels with exposed coiling or corrugation. The goals of the study are twofold: 1) to resolve whether indentation angles on corrugated sherds are a good proxy for coiling direction, and 2) to define the distributional patterns of coiling direction across the Ancestral Pueblo and Mogollon regions of the Southwest. Results indicate 1) indentation angle is associated with coiling direction, but perhaps not closely enough to make indentation angle a wholly reliable proxy for coiling direction; and 2) coiling direction is nearly uniformly counterclockwise with clinal variation at the southern and northern bounds of the US Southwest and a temporal trend toward clockwise coiling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Qualia in late precolonial Pueblo rock art: An exploration of conventionalized sensorial experience in Rio Grande Style petroglyphs.
- Author
-
Mattson, Hannah
- Subjects
- *
ROCK art (Archaeology) , *PETROGLYPHS , *FOURTEENTH century , *SOCIAL institutions , *SOCIAL values - Abstract
Although the application of semiotics to the archaeological study of rock art is not new, Peircean perspectives are still uncommon, and those implementing the concepts of qualisigns and qualia are only rarely employed. Yet, an approach centered on sensuous properties can serve as a valuable complement to other materiality- and landscape-based frameworks popular in contemporary rock art research. Using Ancestral Pueblo rock art from the Middle and Northern Rio Grande region of the U.S. Southwest as an example, I offer an archaeological narrative of how social values may be attached to conventionalized qualia rooted in sensorial experiences. Specifically, I examine how diverse media—rock art, shields, objects of adornment, and feathers—were connected through luminosity and security, culturally conceptualized qualitative properties that became formalized and enregistered in the context of new social institutions and modes of group conduct appearing during the 14th century CE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Life at Mesa Verde: An Analysis of Health and Trauma from Wetherill Mesa, Mesa Verde National Park.
- Author
-
Edmonds, Emily R. and Martin, Debra L.
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL parks & reserves , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *HEALTH status indicators , *LIVING conditions , *DATA analysis , *FORCED migration , *ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture - Abstract
Many Mesa Verde cliff dwellings were occupied during the thirteenth century in the final decades before the Four Corners region was depopulated. Deposits in such cliff dwellings offer unique opportunities to research motivations for migration and to understand living conditions in these unusual locations. In compliance with NAGPRA, bioarchaeological data were collected from Wetherill Mesa burials in 1995; this study is the first systematic analysis of these data. Skeletal health indicators demonstrate increased physiological stress for residents of Pueblo III cliff dwellings. Worsening health related to resource availability and distribution, aggregation, and unsanitary living conditions might have influenced migration from the region. Skeletal fracture data indicate decreased trauma during the Pueblo III, contrasted with the possibility of culturally mediated violence or violent attack at Long House. This pattern of violence was likely a response to insecurity during the late thirteenth century and ultimately might have provided another motivation for migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Basketry Shields of the Prehispanic Southwest.
- Author
-
Jolie, Edward A.
- Subjects
- *
BASKET making , *MURAL art , *ROCK paintings , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *IMAGE intensifiers , *PETROGLYPHS - Abstract
Indigenous American shield-making traditions are best known among the peoples of the Plains and Southwest cultural provinces, where shields were used in martial and ceremonial contexts. In these regions, shields are frequently represented in images cross-cutting a range of visual media including rock and mural paintings, and pictographs and petroglyphs, some of which exhibit considerable antiquity. Actual shields, however, are almost unknown archaeologically. This article presents new data resulting from an analysis of five coiled basketry shields recovered from archaeological sites in the northern Southwest. Digital image enhancement clarifies the nature of early shield decoration, while evidence for use in combat contributes to knowledge of shield evolution and function. Improved dating suggests the possibility that basketry shields predate the proliferation of shield imagery in the AD 1200s. These observations help reorient discussion of shield form, function, and iconography within the context of wider cultural developments during the AD 1200s and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Early Agriculture and Indigenous Foodways in the US Southwest and Mesoamerica: Cuisine and Social Change in Mobile Farming Societies
- Author
-
Sinensky, R. J.
- Subjects
Archaeology ,Plant sciences ,Native American studies ,Ancestral Pueblo ,early agriculture ,Early Formative ,foodways ,Mesoamerica ,paleoethnobotany - Abstract
The development and spread of agricultural economies fundamentally changed the scale and scope of organizational forms evident in diverse human societies worldwide. In the past, many researchers adopted simple causal models to understand relationships among domesticated plants, population pressure, mobility, the formation of population aggregates, and burgeoning inequality. Early agricultural societies across the Americas, however, were culturally and economically diverse. The papers that compose this dissertation contribute to an ongoing re-evaluation of foodways, mobility, sociopolitical change, and village formation in early agricultural societies across the Americas and the world more broadly. Drawing on theoretical frameworks and models developed in anthropology, and the social and ecological sciences, each chapter presents theoretically rich, data-driven interpretations of themes central to the transformation of early farming societies–mobility, foodways, sociopolitical change, factors influencing the formation and trajectories of early population aggregates, and the resilience of early food production systems. Site-specific analyses of paleoethnobotanical data, food processing tools, and agricultural soils provide a foundation to explore the foodways and mobility strategies of 1700-1300 BC villagers in Mesoamerica, and 1250-750 BC farmers in the Sonoran Desert. The development and widespread adoption of a shared cuisine at Paso de la Amada, one the earliest sedentary villages and ceremonial centers in Mesoamerica, helped forge collective identities amongst households with diverse histories and mobility practices. Millennial-scale reconstructions of precipitation and temperature from tree-ring chronologies, and regional demographic reconstructions informed by settlement, dendrochronological, and radiocarbon data provide insight into the timing and tempo of social change when diverse Ancestral Pueblo communities across the Colorado Plateau of the northern US Southwest adopted a shared set of social, political, culinary, and landscape practices that provided a foundation for early villages and the rise of regional systems. Comparing and contrasting factors involved in the formation of first-wave and second-wave population aggregates within specific regions of the northern US Southwest highlights that early farming societies were diverse and dynamic. In the aggregate, the papers in this dissertation underscore that the development and spread of novel food production strategies and sociopolitical arrangements in early agricultural societies was not mechanistic or strictly economic–the foodways and culinary choices of early farmers were deeply intertwined with the identities of individuals and communities more broadly.
- Published
- 2023
16. Base cation evidence for enhanced water infiltration in Ancestral Pueblo gravel mulch fields, Northern New Mexico, USA.
- Subjects
- *
SOIL infiltration , *GRAVEL , *MULCHING , *PARTICLE size distribution , *SOIL particles , *DEPTH profiling - Abstract
In the Northern Rio Grande region of New Mexico, USA, Ancestral Pueblo villages experienced rapid demographic and economic growth in the late 14th and 15th centuries A.D. Recent research has proposed that this growth was underwritten by cotton production for exchange. Gravel mulch was an important component of cotton agriculture, but its function and soil legacies are not well understood. Since water management was likely a critical feature of gravel mulch, this study examines soil variables affected by changes to water supply. Gravel mulch analyzed in this study was found to have a substantial impact on the surface soil particle size distribution, but other aspects of soil quality were unaffected. The depth profiles of base cation ratios in mulched and unmodified locations suggest that gravel mulch continues to enhance water infiltration. Based on the timing of cotton development and inferred infiltration depths associated with gravel mulch soils, gravel mulch technology is well suited to the monsoonal precipitation regime of the region and the phenology of cotton. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Remaking the Mazeway : skeletal and archaeological evidence for a variant Ancestral Pueblo mortuary rite at Wallace Ruin (USA)
- Author
-
Bradley, Cynthia Smith, Iriarte, Jose, and Outram, Alan
- Subjects
973.1 ,bioarchaeology ,Wallace Ruin ,great house ,Ancestral Pueblo ,Chaco Phenomenon ,Pueblo Bonito ,American Southwest ,mortuary variation - Abstract
This thesis presents the results of a multi-disciplinary investigation of a variant Ancestral Pueblo mortuary rite at Wallace Ruin, southwest Colorado (USA). This multi-storey building is one of four Lakeview Group great houses connected to the Pueblo II regional system centred at Pueblo Bonito of Chaco Canyon some 100 km to the south. From c. AD 1060-1150, Wallace Ruin functioned as a ritual-economic centre with a small residential component. Then, habitation of this great house, the Lakeview Group and all domiciles within 10 kilometres ceased. However, three or more decades later at least six rooms were used as a non-residential, Pueblo III mortuary facility for a minimum of 32 individuals. This utilisation was in marked contrast to the enduring Ancestral Pueblo practice of residential burial, usually in the extramural midden. The interrogation of several hypotheses regarding this anomaly entails a bioarchaeological approach that integrates skeletal evidence with spatial analyses regarding diachronic mortuary location choices at Wallace Ruin. Taphonomic methods that segregate bone displacements during corpse decomposition in a filled versus a void space provide accurate determinations of the depositional versus discovered mortuary microenvironments. The diachronic analysis of data from roughly 200 San Juan Region sites reveals additional ways in which Wallace’s Pueblo III mortuary program departs from longstanding communities of practice, whether great house or domicile. Chief among these are the use of a surface room floor and the postural arrangement of supine bodies with knees upright. These results, in combination with material culture evidence, form the basis of this thesis: The Pueblo III mortuary program at Wallace Ruin is a variant rite that entails a Mesa Verde Region reformulation of a Pueblo Bonito house society. The sanctioned retrieval of objects of memory offers a plausible explanation for intentional intrusions into two mortuary contexts. Beyond addressing questions concerning Wallace Ruin, a major contribution of this study includes advancement of the house society model as an interpretive scheme for evaluating Mesa Verde Region socio-ritual dynamics. This research also demonstrates the effectiveness of anthropologie de terrain (Duday, 2006) to retrospectively determine the original status of Ancestral Pueblo mortuary microenvironments. The refinement developed for this study, in which Range of Motion criteria are used to detect large-scale movements of lower limbs during corpse decomposition, is suitable for bioarchaeological analyses the world over.
- Published
- 2017
18. History of the Ownership and Management of Tijeras Pueblo.
- Author
-
Kulisheck, Jeremy and Benedict, Cynthia Buttery
- Subjects
- *
FOURTEENTH century , *NATIVE Americans , *PROTECTION of cultural property , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture - Abstract
Across seventy years of research, the site of Tijeras Pueblo has become an important place for understanding the transformations that impacted Rio Grande Pueblo society during the fourteenth century A.D. During that time, the course of research at the pueblo has been guided in part by its changing ownership and management of the site. While the first investigations were conducted while the site was privately owned federal acquisition of the pueblo facilitated the major excavations that took place there in the late 1960s and 1970s. As federal objectives for research evolved with new legislation, the involvement of Native Americans resulted in a major shift in how the last excavations in 2000 were conducted. While sustained interest in Tijeras Pueblo has been driven by its role in addressing major questions about the course of Pueblo history, its ownership and management have shaped, and continue to shape, how we know this important place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Tijeras Pueblo at the Crossroads: A Review of Previous Research and Site Significance.
- Author
-
Arazi-Coambs, Sandra
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *ROAD interchanges & intersections , *COMMUNITIES , *CULTURAL education , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *HISTORICAL archaeology , *TOMBS - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the Tijeras Pueblo archaeological site. Highlighting Tijeras Pueblo as a community located at a cultural, geographical, and temporal crossroad, the paper attempts to place Tijeras Pueblo within a broader academic and social context. The excavation history of the site will be discussed, along with previous research, and past and modern significance. In its current context, Tijeras Pueblo has become of center of archaeological and cultural education and a place where knowledge is both created and disseminated. Occupying a very public space in the community, the site and its collections have become teaching tools for a new generation of professional and avocational archaeologists and for the greater Albuquerque community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Tijeras Pueblo Jewelry Project.
- Author
-
Schuyler, Lucy C. and Phillips, David A.
- Subjects
- *
JEWELRY , *POTTERY , *DECORATION & ornament , *VOLUNTEERS , *BEADS , *VOLUNTEER service - Abstract
Beads and other personal ornaments were recovered during excavations at Tijeras Pueblo (LA 581). In 2008, a volunteer project was begun (1) to identify potential jewelry artifacts from the site, and their contexts; (2) to develop criteria for classifying artifacts as jewelry; and (3) to make these data accessible to future researchers. Comparisons with other sites show that Pueblo IV jewelry consists mostly of beads and pendants, with a few unusual pieces at each site. The variety of ornament materials, styles, and designs in the Tijeras Pueblo assemblage suggests the flow of objects, ideas, and practices across the Southwest and Northern Mexico. A comparison of the contexts in which jewelry artifacts were recovered at Tijeras Pueblo and Pottery Mound (LA 416) indicates possible differences in jewelry use. This project highlights how volunteers with specific interests and expertise can significantly enhance the research value of legacy collections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Identifying Common Pool Resources in the Archaeological Record: A Case Study of Water Commons from the North American Southwest
- Author
-
Aiuvalasit, Michael J., Bates, Daniel G., Series Editor, Lozny, Ludomir R., Series Editor, and McGovern, Thomas H., editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Community Landscapes, Identity, and Practice: Ancestral Pueblos of the Lion Mountain Area, Central New Mexico, USA.
- Author
-
Eckert, Suzanne L. and Huntley, Deborah L.
- Subjects
- *
LANDSCAPE archaeology , *GROUP identity , *LANDSCAPES , *COLLECTIVE memory , *BUILT environment , *PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Landscape archaeology has been widely used as a framework for understanding the myriad ways in which people lived in their natural and built environments. In this study, we use systematic survey data in conjunction with ceramic chronology building to explore how residents of the Lion Mountain area in Central New Mexico created and sustained community landscapes over time as memories and stories became linked with specific places. We combine practice theory with the concept of social memory to show that these residents used their community landscape to both maintain and transform community identity over multiple generations. To strengthen our argument, we use a dual temporal approach, considering our data both by "looking back" and "looking forward" in time relative to the residents living on the landscape. Ultimately, we argue that residents of the Lion Mountain Community lived and died within a community landscape of their making. This community landscape, which was maintained and transformed through collective memory, included significant landmarks and entailed participation in specific networks, helping to reinforce community identity over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mother, Laborer, Captive, and Leader: Reassessing the Various Roles that Females Held Among the Ancestral Pueblo in the American Southwest
- Author
-
Harrod, Ryan, Stone, Pamela K., Martin, Debra L., Series editor, and Stone, Pamela K., editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. An ethical crisis in ancient DNA research: Insights from the Chaco Canyon controversy as a case study.
- Author
-
Cortez, Amanda Daniela, Bolnick, Deborah A., Nicholas, George, Bardill, Jessica, and Colwell, Chip
- Subjects
- *
FOSSIL DNA , *RESEARCH ethics , *CANYONS , *DNA sequencing , *SCIENTIFIC method , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *INDIGENOUS rights - Abstract
In recent years, the field of paleogenomics has grown into an exciting and rapidly advancing area of scientific inquiry. However, scientific work in this field has far outpaced the discipline's dialogue about research ethics. In particular, Indigenous peoples have argued that the paleogenomics revolution has produced a "vampire science" that perpetuates biocolonialist traditions of extracting Indigenous bodies and heritage without the consent of, or benefits to, the communities who are most affected by this research. In this article, we explore these ethical issues through the case study of a project that sequenced the ancient DNA (aDNA) of nine Ancestral Puebloan people from Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. By providing a "thick description" of this controversy, we are able to analyze its metanarratives, periodization, path dependency, and historical contingencies. We conclude that the paleogenomics revolution needs to include an ethical revolution that remakes the field's values, relationships, forms of accountability, and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Culture, Corn, and Complexity
- Author
-
Harrod, Ryan P., Martin, Debra L., Series editor, and Harrod, Ryan P.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Quantifying Impairment and Disability in Bioarchaeological Assemblages
- Author
-
Stodder, Ann L.W., Martin, Debra L., Series editor, Byrnes, Jennifer F., editor, and Muller, Jennifer L., editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cared for or Outcasts: A Case for Continuous Care in the Precontact U.S. Southwest
- Author
-
Willett, Alyssa Y., Harrod, Ryan P., Martin, Debra L., Series editor, Tilley, Lorna, editor, and Schrenk, Alecia A., editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Resource risk and stability in the zooarchaeological record: the case of Pueblo fishing in the Middle Rio Grande, New Mexico.
- Author
-
Dombrosky, Jonathan, Besser, Alexi C., Elliott Smith, Emma A., Conrad, Cyler, Barceló, Laura Pagès, and Newsome, Seth D.
- Abstract
Disarticulated fish remains are frequently recovered from late preHispanic and early historic archaeological sites in the Middle Rio Grande basin of central New Mexico, but they are rare during earlier time periods. Increased aquatic habitat quality brought on by wetter climatic conditions may have impacted Ancestral Pueblo foraging goals related to risk minimization, leading to an uptick in fish exploitation. Wetter stream conditions can increase the number of different energy channels that help support fish populations and increase ecological stability, which makes fish less risky to pursue for human foragers. Here, we illustrate how to identify stable ecological communities in the archaeological record using stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values of fish bones recovered from archaeological sites in the Middle Rio Grande. We find that energy derived from terrestrial C4 plants—a stabilizing “slow” allochthonous energy source—was important for the Middle Rio Grande aquatic food web during the late preHispanic/early historic period. This result suggests that fish populations were supported by a broader resource base and were thus more stable and less risky to pursue for Ancestral Pueblo people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Tracing the Circulation of Iconographic-style Red Ware in East-central Arizona.
- Author
-
Van Keuren, Scott and Ferguson, Jeffrey R.
- Subjects
- *
LAMINARIA digitata , *POTTERY , *CERAMICS , *NUCLEAR activation analysis - Abstract
The appearance of Fourmile Polychrome in the AD 1320s signaled a shift in the decorative layout, use, and perhaps even value of red-slipped pottery in east-central Arizona. Bowls were often painted with iconographic-style designs that diverged from the geometric imagery of earlier White Mountain Red Ware. The type was circulated through the region and even copied in some localities. The provenance of Fourmile Polychrome has remained a mystery due to the lack of research at late Silver Creek villages. We integrate results of neutron activation analysis (NAA) with a large corpus of existing NAA data to shed light on the production and circulation of this iconographic-style pottery. The results illuminate the social networks of ceramic circulation in the Silver Creek drainage and surrounding areas during the fourteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Battle Lines of the North American Southwest: An Inquiry Into Prehispanic and Post-Contact Pueblo Tactics of War.
- Author
-
Hernandez, Christopher
- Subjects
- *
WAR , *ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture , *MILITARY science , *MANUSCRIPTS - Abstract
This paper examines multiple lines of evidence to argue Ancestral Pueblo peoples engaged in pitched battle and thereby challenges the common view that warfare in the North American Southwest primarily took the form of raiding. Although various tactics likely coexisted in the martial repertoire of Prehispanic peoples, I highlight that raiding has generally been overemphasized by Southwestern archaeologists. After critically reflecting on how scholars interpret tactics, the bulk of this manuscript is devoted to examining evidence of battle among Prehispanic and post-Contact Pueblo peoples. I argue the earliest solid evidence of battle tactics dates to around AD 1300 and possibly as early as AD 1200. I develop a case for a shift in tactics tied to changes in weaponry along with groups aggregating for protection and the resulting spatial needs of large communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ancestral Pueblo
- Author
-
Kipfer, Barbara Ann
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Burning the Corn: Subsistence and Destruction in Ancestral Pueblo Conflict
- Author
-
Snead, James E., VanDerwarker, Amber M., editor, and Wilson, Gregory D., editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cycles of Subsistence Stress, Warfare, and Population Movement in the Northern San Juan
- Author
-
Kuckelman, Kristin A., VanDerwarker, Amber M., editor, and Wilson, Gregory D., editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A Least Cost Analysis: Correlative Modeling of the Chaco Regional Road System
- Author
-
Sean Field, Carrie Heitman, and Heather Richards-Rissetto
- Subjects
Least cost analysis ,Chaco ,Roads ,GIS ,cost distance ,Ancestral Pueblo ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
During the ninth through twelfth centuries A.D., Ancestral Pueblo people constructed long, straight roads that interconnected the Chaco regional system across the San Juan Basin of northwestern New Mexico. The intent and use of these features has eluded archaeological consensus, although recent research has reiterated the occurrence of long distance timber importation to Chaco Canyon. To enhance our interpretation of these features we offer a large-scale least cost analysis wherein optimal pathways that are modeled to simulate timber importation are compared to the actual road locations. A series of least cost paths were produced through different energy allocation algorithms, at different spatial scales, and with various origin and destination inputs. Our results reveal a strong correlation between actual road locations and modeled pathways. Therefore, we suggest that certain Chaco roads may have been specifically designed to facilitate the importation of timbers and that roads, once constructed, were the optimal pathway for the import of these resources.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Pinworm research in the Southwest USA: five decades of methodological and theoretical development and the epidemiological approach.
- Author
-
Camacho, Morgana and Reinhard, Karl J.
- Abstract
Pinworms infected Ancestral Pueblo populations since early periods of occupation on the Colorado Plateau. The high prevalence of pinworm found in these populations was correlated with the habitation style developments through time. However, in previous studies, Turkey Pen Cave, an early occupation site, and Salmon Ruins, a late occupation site, exhibited prevalences that were anomalously low, suggesting that these sites were outliers. Alternatively, it is possible that the previous quantification method was not successful in detecting the real prevalence and eggs per gram, which led to inexact interpretations. The aims of this study were to verify if previous pinworm prevalences for Turkey Pen Cave and Salmon Ruins were underestimated. In addition, new analyses were added to the data set. Two latrines from Aztec Ruins, a Pueblo III occupation never studied before, were sampled and studied. We applied the pathoecology concept and descriptive/comparative parasitological statistical parameters. Human coprolites were weighed and rehydrated along with introduced exotic Lycopodium tablets and screened through 250-μm mesh. Parasite eggs and Lycopodium spores were quantified and eggs per gram were estimated for each sample. Parasitological statistical parameters were calculated at Quantitative Parasitology 3.0 software. Pinworm was the only parasite recovered in all sites. The prevalences observed in early and late occupation sites refute previous correlation with habitation style. This study indicates that the previously estimated prevalences were underestimated, which interfered in the accurate interpretation on Ancestral Pueblo pinworm infection. This study reveals a new paleoparasitological panorama of pinworm infection in Ancestral Pueblo populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi, 30 Years Later.
- Author
-
Allison, James R.
- Subjects
- *
CERAMICS design , *HISTORY of pottery , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *ACADEMIC dissertations - Abstract
At the 1988 SAA annual meeting in Phoenix, Margaret Lyneis presented a paper with the title Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi. In that paper, she presented evidence that much of the pottery found on archaeological sites in the Moapa Valley of southeastern Nevada was in fact produced 70–100 km to the east. This pottery was made from distinctive raw materials found near the north rim of the western Grand Canyon. That 1988 SAA paper inspired much subsequent research, including my doctoral dissertation, which examined ceramic distributions across the western part of the Virgin region. In this paper, I update and expand on my earlier study. This analysis adds detail to Lyneis's original arguments, but demonstrates that she was largely correct. From about AD. 1050–1125, small-scale Virgin region settlements were linked by intensive ceramic exchange networks that crossed long distances and rugged terrain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Farmers who forage: interpreting paleofecal evidence of wild resource use by early corn farmers in the North American Southwest.
- Author
-
Battillo, Jenna
- Subjects
- *
FARMERS , *CORN farming , *NUTRITION , *ECOLOGICAL niche - Abstract
This paper describes and interprets the results of multiple analyses conducted on human paleofeces from Turkey Pen Ruin, an early Ancestral Pueblo farming site in Cedar Mesa, Utah. Analyses of pollen and macroscopic contents were performed on 44 specimens; DNA testing for several faunal and botanical dietary constituents was also conducted on select samples (n = 20) using targeted PCR analysis. These data were used to assess what foods supplemented the predominant dietary staple—maize (Zea mays). Resources were evaluated based on caloric efficiency and nutritional value to gain insight into what motivated these late Basketmaker II period (ca. AD 1-400) farmers to continuously rely so heavily on corn, in lieu of incorporating a higher proportion of foraged resources into their diet. This project confirms a very high level of maize reliance (likely around 80% of the diet) as established by earlier studies. However, these results also show common inclusion of wild resources that are much less calorically efficient than the type of maize farming practiced here, including weedy plants commonly associated with agricultural fields. This suggests early farmers on Cedar Mesa were pushed by low environmental productivity to rely on farming, and to include low-ranked wild resources to calorically and nutritionally augment their maize-based diet. These findings also indicate that farmers were harvesting much more than corn from their fields, and that the productivity of the anthropogenic ecological niche created by farming activities may have influenced supplemental foraging choices, as well as the degree of labor dedicated to fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Cultural Landscapes of Canyon de Chelly through Time: The Archaeological Past
- Author
-
Christie, Jessica Joyce, author
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Subjugated in the San Juan Basin: Identifying Captives in the American Southwest.
- Author
-
Harrod, Ryan P.
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *SLAVERY , *PALEODEMOGRAPHY , *ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture , *ENVIRONMENTAL engineering , *CAPTIVITY , *ETHNICITY - Abstract
For over two decades archaeologists and bioarchaeologists have identified evidence to suggest that there was a system of captivity and subjugation in the American Southwest before the arrival of Europeans. However, to understand the practice of taking captives in the region, we must attempt to determine why people are subjugated and who is at risk of being enslaved. The focus of this paper is to understand the signs of captivity in the archaeological and bioarchaeological record, and parse out possible motivations for why slavery or raiding for captives was practiced among the Ancestral Pueblo. Using evidence from oral traditions and historical texts of the Spanish colonizers, archaeological evidence of environmental stress, changes in paleodemography at sites, and data obtained from human skeletal remains, this paper explores the likelihood that the practice of captive-taking was present among the Ancestral Pueblo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Volcanic climate forcing, extreme cold and the Neolithic Transition in the northern US Southwest
- Author
-
R. J. Sinensky, Brian N. Damiata, Gregson Schachner, and Richard H. Wilshusen
- Subjects
Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Basketmaker ,General Arts and Humanities ,dendrochronology ,Linguistics ,American Southwest ,Radiative forcing ,Climate Action ,Archaeology ,Volcano ,Climatology ,Formative ,Ancestral Pueblo ,volcanic climate forcing ,Extreme Cold ,Geology - Abstract
The impacts on global climate of the AD 536 and 541 volcanic eruptions are well attested in palaeoclimatic datasets and in Eurasian historical records. Their effects on farmers in the arid uplands of western North America, however, remain poorly understood. The authors investigate whether extreme cold caused by these eruptions influenced the scale, scope and timing of the Neolithic Transition in the northern US Southwest. Archaeological tree-ring and radiocarbon dates, along with settlement survey data, suggest that extreme cooling generated the physical and social space that enabled early farmers to transition from kin-focused socio-economic strategies to increasingly complex and widely shared forms of social organisation that served as foundational elements of burgeoning Ancestral Pueblo societies.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Dog Life and Death in an Ancestral Pueblo Landscape
- Author
-
Monagle, Victoria, author and Jones, Emily Lena, author
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Source & Sourceability: Towards a probabilistic framework for dendroprovenance based on hypothesis testing and Bayesian inference.
- Author
-
Drake, B. Lee
- Abstract
Long-distance procurement of timber was necessary for the construction of Ancestral Pueblo Great Houses in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. A number of higher-altitude tree sources were available within 30–70 km, though some isolated trees may have been acquired more locally. Highly regional tree ring variations enable matching some construction timbers to their source. Here, a method is developed which 1) develops a rejection criteria for ruling out sources for a tree ring sequence, 2) quantifies the relative spatial representation of a given source sequence, and 3) applies Bayes theorem to calculate posterior probabilities of source attribution. The application of this method in part supports past sourcing work, but indicates that the majority (59–64%) of timbers cannot be ascribed with even low confidence to the most common high-altitude sources. This analysis supports a model of diverse tree acquisition from a number of different sources, though with high uncertainty for a majority of timbers used in the present study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Connected and Isolated: A Discussion About Gallina Archaeology with no Resolutions.
- Author
-
Borck, Lewis
- Subjects
- *
ANCESTRAL Pueblo culture , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *PUEBLO peoples (North American peoples) -- Antiquities - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Reconstructing Ancestral Pueblo food webs in the southwestern United States.
- Author
-
Crabtree, Stefani A., Vaughn, Lydia J.S., and Crabtree, Nathan T.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD chains , *ECOSYSTEMS , *BIOTIC communities , *PREDATION , *POPULATION density - Abstract
Analyzing how humans interacted with (and within) their greater ecosystems facilitates a more nuanced understanding of past lifeways. In this aim, we use food web modeling to reconstruct the biotic environment of Ancestral Pueblo people living in the central Mesa Verde region between A.D. 750 and A.D. 1300. This framework enables an investigation into the effects of species introductions and removals by linking humans to the species they consumed. We combine a diachronic examination of multiple archaeological assemblages with a database of every modern non-invasive species and their feeding links in a 4,600 square kilometer area of southwestern Colorado. Although human omnivory provided some flexibility, high population density likely curtailed the ability to prey switch. Ultimately, these factors combined to decrease the resilience of Ancestral Pueblo people to environmental changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Road That Went Up a Hill.
- Author
-
Till, Jonathan D.
- Subjects
- *
ROADS , *METAPHYSICAL cosmology , *PUEBLO architecture ,BLUFF Great House Site (Bluff, Utah) - Abstract
This article describes several roads with apparent associations with the Bluff Great House site (42Sa22674) in southeastern Utah. These descriptions underscore the similarity of these features with other such features in the northern Southwest, including roads and road-related features in the San Juan Basin of northwestern New Mexico. The differing configurations and contexts of the Bluff Great House roads suggest opportunities to explore community organization and identity, Puebloan cosmology, and emergence narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Interpreting a Multiple Burial in an Early Ancestral Pueblo Village
- Author
-
Stodder, Ann L. W., author
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Using Cross-Media Approaches to Understand an Invisible Industry: How Cotton Production Influenced Pottery Designs and Kiva Murals in Cedar Mesa.
- Author
-
Crabtree, Stefani A. and Bellorado, Benjamin A.
- Subjects
- *
POTTERY , *TEXTILE products , *COTTON textiles , *COTTON growing , *ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper we present evidence through a cross-media and contextual comparison approach that cotton textile production had major economic and ideological importance to Ancestral Pueblo peoples living in the greater Cedar Mesa area during the Woodenshoe and Redhouse Phases (A.D. 1165–1270). First, we present the current data available for direct evidence of cotton textile production from archaeological contexts. Then, we use a cross-media approach to look for evidence of cotton textile production in the media of pottery and kiva mural design motifs. Given the extensive nature of cotton textile production at several sites in the area and the pervasive cotton-textile-based designs on pottery and in kiva murals in the area, we argue that the greater Cedar Mesa area was an important gateway for cotton technologies and imagery between the Kayenta and Mesa Verde areas that afforded the peoples greater access and control over cotton textile production and distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Effects of Environmental Change on Ancestral Pueblo Fishing in the Middle Rio Grande
- Author
-
Debenport, Erin, Emily Lena Jones, Frances M. Hayashida, Patricia L. Crown, Seth D. Newsome, Dombrosky, Jonathan W, Dr., Debenport, Erin, Emily Lena Jones, Frances M. Hayashida, Patricia L. Crown, Seth D. Newsome, and Dombrosky, Jonathan W, Dr.
- Subjects
- Ancestral Pueblo
- Abstract
It has long been assumed that fishes were unimportant in the diet of past Pueblo people in the U.S. Southwest. Yet, small numbers of fish remains are consistently recovered from Late pre-Hispanic/Early Historic archaeological sites in the Middle Rio Grande of New Mexico. The end of drought conditions may have impacted food choice and fishing decisions during this time. I use behavioral ecology to understand how fishing could have been an optimal food-getting strategy for Ancestral Pueblo farmers. Stable isotope analysis offers a way to account for environmental change. I provide a refined 13C Suess correction model to support the analysis of past fishing. The presence of aquatic ecological stability in the protohistoric Middle Rio Grande is revealed using stable isotope analysis and the refined 13C Suess correction model. Fish body size estimations provide a way to evaluate whether environmental conditions impacted the health of fishes and Ancestral Pueblo food choice. Stable isotope analysis and body size estimation suggest Ancestral Pueblo fishing strategies were associated with energy maximizing and risk reducing foraging behavior linked with environmental change. This mix of foraging goals could be significant in the development of fishing behavior throughout human history, and the analysis of Ancestral Pueblo fishing charts a course to change the human/fish narrative across the globe.
- Published
- 2021
49. The pueblo decomposition model: A method for quantifying architectural rubble to estimate population size.
- Author
-
Duwe, Samuel, Eiselt, B. Sunday, Darling, J. Andrew, Willis, Mark D., and Walker, Chester
- Subjects
- *
EXCAVATION (Civil engineering) , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages , *RUBBLE , *POPULATION , *CONSTRUCTION materials - Abstract
While most archaeological measures of population rely on material proxies uncovered through excavation (rooms, hearths, etc.), we identify a technique to estimate population at unexcavated sites (the majority of the archaeological record). Our case study focuses on ancestral Tewa Pueblo villages in northern New Mexico. Uninhabited aerial vehicle (UAV) and instrument mapping enables us to quantify the volume of adobe architectural rubble and to construct a decomposition model that estimates numbers of rooms and roofed over space. The resulting metric is applied at ten Pueblo villages in the region to ‘rebuild’ architecture, and calculate maximum architectural capacity and the maximum extent of population size. While our focus is on population histories for large Classic period (A.D. 1350–1598) pueblos in the American Southwest, the model and method may be applied to a variety of archaeological contexts worldwide and is not limited to building material, site size, or construction technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Mickey Mouse kachina and other “Double Objects”: Hybridity in the material culture of colonial encounters.
- Author
-
Liebmann, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
MICKEY Mouse (Fictional character) , *CULTURAL fusion , *AMALGAMATION , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *EUROCENTRISM , *IMPERIALISM - Abstract
Hybridity is a term used by anthropologists to characterize the amalgamation of influences from two (or more) different cultural groups. Hybridity has captivated archaeology in recent years, especially archaeologists investigating colonialism in Native American contexts. At the same time, a growing chorus of critics has begun to question anthropology’s devotion to hybridity and hybrid objects. These critics take issue with the term’s alleged Eurocentrism, implications of cultural purity, and evolutionary etymology. In this article, I address these critiques and advocate a more circumscribed use of hybridity in archaeology. I caution against the abandonment of the term entirely, because the archaeological identification of hybridity provides insights into both present-day (etic) and past (emic) perspectives on cultural amalgamation. Hybridity reveals the biases of contemporary researchers regarding the societies we study, as well as highlighting the ways in which power structures centered and marginalized colonial subjects in the past. To illustrate these points, I draw on case studies involving the Hopi Mickey Mouse kachina, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Indigenous-colonial whips from the American Plains and southeast Australia, and seventeenth-century Pueblo ceramics from the American Southwest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.