Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-sjtt6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-04T22:08:42.526Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

History and Process in Village Formation: Context and Contrasts from the Northern Southwest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Catherine M. Cameron
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, 233 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0233 ([email protected])
Andrew I. Duff
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-4910 ([email protected])

Abstract

Two processes characterize the later precontact history (twelfth-fourteenth centuries) of the northern part of the American Southwest: aggregation of people into large towns and depopulation of large regions. These processes have been explained as the result of environmental, economic, and social factors, including drought and warfare. Using a theoretical perspective based on Pauketat’s “historical processualism,” we argue that aggregation and depopulation are partly the result of historical developments surrounding the expansion and collapse of the Chaco regional system. We present our understanding of the Chaco regional system from the perspective of historical processualism; then, historical developments in the northern San Juan and Cibola regions-northern and southern frontiers of the Chaco world-are compared. The northern San Juan"s historically close ties with Chaco Canyon, the post-Chaco regional center at Aztec, and other factors ultimately resulted in the region’s depopulation. In the Cibola region, ties with Chaco were more tenuous and use of Chacoan ideology appears to have been strongest in the post-Chaco era, though no post-Chaco regional center emerged. Instead, large towns developed. Built on novel combinations of independent histories, ritual, and experience with Chaco, large towns enhanced stability. They were encountered by early Spanish explorers and some persist to the present day.

Résumé

Résumé

Dos procesos caracterizan la historia del precontacto tardío (siglos 12-14) de la región norte del Suroeste Americano: la congregación de personas en grandes pueblos y la despoblación de grandes regiones. Estos procesos han sido explicados como el resultado de una gama de factores ambientales, económicos, y sociales, incluidos sequías y guerras. Utilizando una perspectiva teórica basada en el “procesualismo histórico” de Pauketat, nosotros argumentamos que la congregación y despoblación son parcialmente el resultado de desarrollos históricos alrededor de la expansión y colapso del sistema regional Chaco. Presentamos nuestro entendimiento de la naturaleza y operación del sistema regional Chaco dentro de una perspectiva procesualista histórica. Luego son comparados los desarrollos históricos de las regiones norte de San Juan y Cibola, que representan las fronteras norte y sur del mundo Chaco. Las estrechas relaciones históricas entre la región norteña de San Juan y la Barranca del Chaco, el establecimiento del centro regional Azteca post-Chaco, y otros factores resultaron en el abandono de esta región. En la región de Cíbola, las relaciones con Chaco fueron menos cercanas, y el uso de la ideología Chaco parece tener su apogeo en la era post-Chaco. Sin embargo no surgieron centros regionales post-Chaco. En cambio se habilitó un escenario para la creación de grandes pueblos, que incluía novedosos desarrollos basados en una combinación de historia y rituales independientes, y experiencia con Chaco. Los grandes pueblos promovieron la estabilidad, y fueron los tipos de asentamientos encontrados por los primeros exploradores españoles; algunas de estos pueblos persisten hoy en día.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Adams, E. Charles, and Duff, Andrew I. 2004 Settlement Clusters and the Pueblo IV Period. In The Protohistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1275–1600, edited by E. Charles Adams and Andrew I. Duff, pp. 316. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adler, Michael A., Van Pool, Todd L., and Leonard, Robert D. 1996 Ancestral Pueblo Population Aggregation and Abandonment in the North American Southwest. Journal of World Prehistory 1:375438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ahlstrom, Richard V.N., Van West, Carta R., and Dean, Jeffrey S. 1995 Environmental and Chronological Factors in the Mesa-Verde-Northern Rio Grande Migration. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 14:125142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, Larry L. 2006 Architecture of Salmon Pueblo. In Thirty-Five Years of Archaeological Research at Salmon Ruins, New Mexico, edited by Paul F. Reed, pp. 245269. Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson.Google Scholar
Bernardini, Wesley 2005 Hopi Oral Tradition and the Archaeology of Identity. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Blinman, Eric 1989 Potluck in the Protokiva: Ceramics and Ceremonialism in Pueblo I Villages. In The Architecture of Social Integration in Prehistoric Pueblos, edited by William D. Lipe and Michelle Hegmon, pp. 113124. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Occasional Paper, No. 1. Cortez, Colorado.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1977 Outline of a Theory of Practice. Translated by Richard Nice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1990 The Logic of Practice. Translated by Richard Nice. Stanford University Press, Stanford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, Bruce A. 1988 Wallace Ruin Interim Report. Southwestern Lore 54(2):833.Google Scholar
Bradley, Bruce A. 1993 Wallace Ruin: Implications for Outlier Studies. In The Chimney Rock Archaeological Symposium, edited by J. McKim Malville and Gary Matlock, pp. 7275. Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Fort Collins, CO.Google Scholar
Bradley, Bruce A. 1996 Pitchers to Mugs: Chacoan Revival at Sand Canyon Pueblo. Kiva 61:241256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Gary, Windes, Thomas C., and McKenna, Peter J. 2008 Animas Anamnesis: Aztec Ruins or Anasazi Capitol? In Salmon Ruins: Chacoan Outlier and Thirteenth-Century Pueblo in the Middle San Juan Region, edited by Paul F. Reed. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Breternitz, Cory D., and Marshall, Michael P. 1982 Summary of Analytical Results and Review of Miscellaneous Artifacts from Bis sa’ ani Pueblo. In Bis sa’ani Pueblo: A Bonito-Phase Town on the Excavada, Volume 2, Part 1, edited by Cory D. Breternitz, David E. Doyel, and Michael P. Marshall, pp. 433448. Navajo Nation Papers in Anthropology Number 14.Google Scholar
Breternitz, David A., Robinson, Christine K., and Timothy Gross, G. (compilers) 1986 Dolores Archaeological Program: Final Synthetic Report. U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, Engineering and Research Center, Denver.Google Scholar
Cameron, Catherine M. 1995 Migration and the Movement of Southwestern Peoples. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 14:104124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Catherine M. 2002 Sacred Earthen Architecture in the Northern Southwest: the Bluff Great House Berm. American Antiquity 67:677695.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Catherine M. 2005 Exploring Archaeological Cultures in the Northern Southwest: What Were Chaco and Mesa Verde? Kiva 70:227254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Catherine M. 2008 Chaco and Post-Chaco in the Northern San Juan Region: Excavations at the Bluff Great House. The University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Clark, John E., and Blake, Michael 1994 The Power of Prestige: Competitive Generosity and the Emergence of Rank Societies in Lowland Mesoamerica. In Factional Competition and Political Development in the New World, edited by Elizabeth Brumfiel and John Fox, pp. 1730. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cordell, Linda S. 1997 Archaeology of the Southwest, Second Edition. Academic Press Inc., New York.Google Scholar
Cordell, Linda S., Doyel, David E., and Kintigh, Keith W. 1994 Processes of Aggregation in the Prehistoric Southwest. In Themes in Southwest Prehistory, edited by George J. Gumerman, pp. 109134. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Cordell, Linda S., Van West, Carla R., Dean, Jeffrey S., and Muenchrath, Deborah A. 2007 Mesa Verde Settlement History and Relocation: Climate Change, Social Networks, and Ancestral Pueblo Migration. Kiva 72(4):379405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Danson, Edward B. 1957 An Archaeological Survey of West Central New Mexico and East Central Arizona. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Vol. XLIV, No.1. The Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Dean, Jeffrey S. 1992 Environmental Factors in the Evolution of the Chacoan Sociopolitical System. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chacoan System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp. 3543. Anthropological Papers No. 5. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Dean, Jeffrey S., and Van West, Carla R. 2002 Environment-Behavior Relationships in Southwestern Colorado. In Seeking the Center Place: Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region, edited by Mark D. Varien and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 8199. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Doyel, David E., and Debowski, Sharon S. (editors) 1980 Prehistory in DeadValley, East-Central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Report. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series No. 144. Arizona State Museum, Tucson.Google Scholar
Doyel, David E., Breternitz, Cory D., and Marshall, Michael P. 1984 Chacoan Community Structure: Bis sa’ani Pueblo and the Chaco Halo. In Recent Research on Chaco’Prehistory, edited by W. James Judge and John D. Schelberg, pp. 3754. Reports of the Chaco Center, No. 8. National Parks Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 1994 The Scope of Post-Chacoan Community Organization in the Lower Zuni River Region. In Exploring Social, Political, and Economic Organization in the Zuni Region, edited by Todd Howell and Tammy Stone, pp. 2545. Anthropological Research Papers, No. 46. Arizona State University, Tempe.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 2000 Scale, Interaction and Regional Analysis in Late Pueblo Prehistory. In The Archaeology of Regional Interaction: Religion, Warfare and Exchange Across the American Southwest and Beyond, edited by Michelle Hegmon. pp. 7198. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 2002 Western Pueblo Identities: Regional Interaction, Migration, and Transformation. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 2004 Settlement Clustering and Village Interaction in the Upper Little Colorado Region. In The Protohistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1275–1600, edited by E. Charles Adams and Andrew I. Duff, pp. 7585. University of Arizona Press. Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 2005 On the Fringe: Community Dynamics at Cox Ranch Pueblo. In Proceedings of the thirteenth Mogollon Archaeology Conference (2004), edited by Lonnie Ludeman, pp. 303319. New Mexico State University, Las Cruces.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I. 2006 Participation, Place, and the Social Construction of Great House Communities. Paper presented at the tenth Biennial Southwest Symposium, Las Cruces, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I., and Lekson, Stephen H. 2006 Notes from The South. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh-Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen H. Lekson, pp. 315337. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I., and Schachner, Gregson 2007 Becoming Central, Organizational Transformations in the Emergence of Zuni. In Hinterlands and Regional Dynamics in the Ancient Southwest, edited by Alan P. Sullivan and James M. Bayman, pp. 185200. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Duff, Andrew I., and Wilshusen, Richard H. 2000 Prehistoric Population Dynamics in the Northern San Juan Region, A.D. 950–1300. Kiva 66:167190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eddy, Frank W. 1977 Archaeological Investigations at Chimney Rock Mesa: 1970–1972. Memoirs of the Colorado Archaeological Society, No. 1. Colorado Archaeological Society, Boulder.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Thomas F. (editor) 1994 Archaeological Data Recovery Excavations at the Sanders Great House and Six Other Sites Along US Highway 191, South of Sanders, Apache County, Arizona. Zuni Archaeological Program Report. No 471, Research Series No. 9. Zuni Cultural Resource Enterprise, Zuni.Google Scholar
Fowler, Andrew P., and Stein, John R. 1992 The Anasazi Great House in Space, Time, and Paradigm. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp. 101122. Anthropological Papers No. 5, Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Fowler, Andrew P., Stein, John R., and Anyon, Roger (editors) 1987 An Archaeological Reconnaissance of West-Central New Mexico, The Anasazi Monuments Project. Report submitted to State of New Mexico, Office of Cultural Affairs, Historic Preservation Division, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Giddens, Anthony 1979 Central Problems in Social Theory. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giddens, Anthony 1984 The Constitution of Society. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Glowacki, Donna M. 2006 The Social Landscape of Depopulation: The Northern San Juan, A.D. 115–1300. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Arizona State University, Tempe.Google Scholar
Haas, Jonathan, and Creamer, Winifred 1993 Stress and Warfare Among the Kayenta Anasazi of the Thirteenth Century A.D. In Fieldiana: Anthropology, n.s., no.21, Publication 1450. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago Google Scholar
Herr, Sarah 2001 Beyond Chaco: Great Kiva Communitites on the Mogollon Rim Frontier. Anthropological Papers no. 66. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Hill, J. Brett, Clark, Jeffrey J., Doelle, William H., and Lyons, Patrick D. 2004 Prehistoric Demography in the Southwest: Migration, Coalescence, and Hohokam Population Decline. American Antiquity 69:689716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntley, Deborah L., and Kintigh, Keith W. 2004 Archaeological Patterning and Organizational Scale of Late Prehistoric Settlement Clusters in the Zuni Region of New Mexico. In The Protohistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1275–1600, edited by E. Charles Adams and Andrew I. Duff, pp. 6274. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurst, Winston B. 1992 Previous Archaeological Research and Regional Prehistory. In Cultural Resource Inventory and Evaluative Testing Along SR-262, Utah-Colorado State Line to Montezuma Creek, Navajo Nation Lands, San Juan County, Utah, Prepared by M.C. Bond, W. E. Davis, W. B. Hurst, and D. A. Westfall, pp. 1174. Utah Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration, Utah Division.Google Scholar
Hurst, Winston B. 2000 Chaco Outlier of Backwoods Pretender? A provincial Great House at Edge of Cedars Ruin, Utah. In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by John Kantner and Nancy M. Mahoney, pp. 6378. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, Number 64, The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurst, Winston B., Cameron, Catherine M., Levine, Marc, Ward, Christine G., and White, Devin A.. 2004 Comb Wash: A Pueblo III great house community. Paper presented to the 2004 Pecos Conference, Bluff, Utah.Google Scholar
Judge, James W. 1989 Chaco Canyon-San Juan Basin. In Dynamics of Southwest Prehistory, edited by Linda S. Cordell and George J. Gumerman, pp. 209261. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Judge, James W., Gillespie, William B., Lekson, Stephen H., and Toll, Henry W. 1981 Tenth Century Developments in Chaco Canyon. In Collected Papers in Honor of Erik Kellerman Reed, edited by Albert H. Schroeder, pp. 6598. Papers of the Archaeology Society of New Mexico, No. 6. Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Kantner, John 1996 Political Competition among the Chaco Anasazi of the American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 15:41105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantner, John 2003 Rethinking Chaco as a System. Kiva 69:20728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantner, John 2005 Sipapu—The Chaco World Great House Database. Electronic document, http://sipapu.gsu.edu/html/chacoworld.html, accessed February 15, 2006.Google Scholar
Kantner, John (guest editor) 2003 The Chaco World. Kiva 69(2).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantner, John, Bower, Nathan, Ladwig, Jeffrey, Perlitz, Jacob, Hata, Steve, and Greve, Darren 2000 Interaction among Great House Communities, an Elemental Analysis of Cibolan Ceramics. In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by J. Kantner and N. M. Mahoney, pp. 130146. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 64, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantner, John W., and Kintigh, Keith W. 2006 The Chaco World. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen H. Lekson, pp. 15388. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Kantner, John, and Mahoney, Nancy M. (editors) 2000 GreatHouse Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 64, Tucson.Google Scholar
Kidder, Alfred Vincent 1924 An Introduction to Southwestern Archaeology. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W. 1985 Settlement, Subsistence, and Society in Late Zuni Prehistory. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona No. 44. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W. 1994 Chaco, Communal Architecture, and Cibolan Aggregation. In The American Southwestern Community: Models and Methods for the Study of Prehistoric Social Organization, edited by W.H. Wills and Robert D. Leonard, pp. 131140. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W. 1996 The Cibola Region in the Post-Chaco Era. In The Prehistoric Pueblo World A.D. 1150–1350, edited by M.A. Adler, pp. 131144. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W. 2003 Coming to Terms with the Chaco World. Kiva 69:93117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W. 2007 Late Prehistoric and Protohistoric Settlement Systems in the Zuni Area. In Zuni Origins: Anthropolological Perspectives on Multiple Scales, edited by David Gregory and David Wilcox. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, in press.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W., Glowacki, Donna M., and Huntley, Deborah L. 2004 Long-Term Settlement History and the Emergence of Towns in the Zuni Area. American Antiquity 69:432456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kintigh, Keith W., Howell, Todd L., and Duff, Andrew I. 1996 Post-Chacoan Social Integration at the Hinkson Site, New Mexico. Kiva 61:25174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kohler, Timothy A., David Johnson, C., Varien, Mark D., Ortman, Scott G., Reynolds, Robert, Kobti, Ziad, Cowan, Jason, Kolm, Kenneth, Smith, Schaun, and Yap, Lorene 2007 Settlement Ecodynamics in the Prehispanic Central MesaVerde Region. In The Model-Based Archaeology of Socionatural Systems, edited by Timothy A. Kohler and Sander van der Leeuw, pp. 61104. School for Advanced Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Kohler, Timothy A., and Turner, Kathryn K. 2006 Raiding for Women in the Pre-Hispanic Northern Pueblo Southwest? A Pilot Examination. Current Anthropology 47:10351045.Google Scholar
Kohler, Timothy A., and Van West, Carla R. 1996 The Calculus of Self-interest in the Development of Cooperation: Sociopolitical Development and Risk Among the Northern Anasazi. In Evolving Complexity and Environmental Risk in the Prehistoric Southwest, edited by Joseph A. Tainter and Bonnie B. Tainter, pp. 169196. Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Kroeber, Alfred L. 1916 Zuñi Potsherds. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 18(1):137.Google Scholar
Kuckelman, Kristin A., Lightfoot, Ricky. R., and Martin, Debra L. 2000 Changing Patterns of Violence in the Northern San Juan Region. Kiva 66:14767.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeBlanc, Steven A. 1999 Prehistoric Warfare in the American Southwest. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 1986 Great Pueblo Architecture of Chaco Canyon. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 1991 Settlement Patterns and the Chacoan Regional System. In Chaco and Hohokam, edited by Patricia L. Crown and W. James Judge, pp. 3155. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 1999 Chaco Meridian. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, California.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 2000 Great! In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by John Kantner and Nancy Mahoney, pp. 157164. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 64, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 2002 War in the Southwest, War in the World. American Antiquity 67:607624.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 2005 Complexity. In Southwest Archaeology in the Twentieth Century, edited by Linda S. Cordell and Don D. Fowler, pp. 157173. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 2006 Chaco Matters: An Introduction. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen Lekson, pp. 344. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. (editor) 2006 The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H., and Cameron, Catherine M. 1995 The Abandonment of Chaco Canyon, The Mesa Verde Migrations, and the Reorganization of the Pueblo World. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 14:184202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lightfoot, Kent G. 2001 Traditions as Cultural Production: Implications for Contemporary Archaeological Research. In The Archaeology of Traditions: Agency and History Before and After Columbus, edited by Timothy R. Pauketat, pp. 237252. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D. 1970 Anasazi Communities in the Red Rock Plateau, Southeastern Utah. In Reconstructing Prehistoric Pueblo Societies, edited by William A. Longacre, pp. 84139. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D. 1995 The Depopulation of the Northern San Juan: Conditions in the Turbulent 1200s. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 14:143169 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipe, William D. 2002 Social Power in the Central Mesa Verde Region, A.D. 1150–1290. In Seeking the Center Place: Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region, edited by Mark D. Varien and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 203232. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D. 2006 Notes from the North. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen H. Lekson, pp. 261313. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D., and Ortman, Scott G. 2000 Spatial Patterning in Northern San Juan Villages, A.D. 1050–1300. Kiva 66:91122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipe, William D., and Varien, Mark D. 1999a Pueblo II (A.D. 900–1150). In Colorado Prehistory: A Context For The Southern Colorado River Basin, edited by William D. Lipe, Mark D. Varien, and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 242289. Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D., and Varien, Mark D. 1999b Pueblo III (A.D. 1150–1300). In Colorado Prehistory: A Context For The Southern Colorado River Basin, edited by William D. Lipe, Mark D. Varien, and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 290352. Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D., Varien, Mark D., and Wilshusen, Richard H. (editors) 1999 Colorado Prehistory: A Context for the Southern Colorado River Basin. Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Longacre, William A. 1966 Changing Patterns of Social Integration: A Prehistoric Example from the American Southwest. American Anthropologist 68:94102 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGimsey, Charles R. III 1980 Mariana Mesa: Seven Prehistoric Settlements in West-Central New Mexico. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, No. 72. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
McKenna, Peter J., and Wolcott Toll, H. 1992 Regional Patterns of Great House Development among the Totah Anasazi, New Mexico. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp. 133143. Anthropological Papers No. 5, Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Mahoney, Nancy M. 2000 Redefining the Scale of Chacoan Communities. In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Land-scape, edited by John Kantner and Nancy M. Mahoney, pp. 1927. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, Number 64, The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahoney, Nancy M., Adler, Michael A., and Kendrick, James W. 2000 The Changing Scale and Configuration of Mesa Verde Communities. Kiva 66:6790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahoney, Nancy M., and Kantner, John 2000 Chacoan Archaeology and Great House Communities. In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by John Kantner and Nancny M. Mahoney, pp 115. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 64, Tucson.Google Scholar
Mahoney, Nancy M., Duff, Andrew I., and Kintigh, Keith W. 1995 The Role of Chacoan Outliers in Local Organization. Paper presented at the 60th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Martin, Debra L. 1997 Violence Against Women in the La Plata River Valley (A.D. 1000–1300). In Troubled Times: Violence and Warfare in the Past, edited by Debra Martin and David Frayer, pp. 4575. Gordon and Breach, Australia.Google Scholar
Martin, Paul S. 1936 Lowry Ruin in Southwestern Colorado. Anthropological Series No. 23(1). Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mills, Barbara J. 1999 Ceramics and the Social Contexts of Food Consumption in the Northern Southwest. In Pottery and People: A Dynamic Interaction, edited by James M. Skibo and Gary M. Feinman, pp. 99114. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Mills, Barbara J. 2002 Recent Research on Chaco: Changing Views on Economy, Ritual, and Society. Journal of Archaeological Research 10:65117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, Earl H. 1939 Archaeological Studies in the La Plata District: Southwestern Colorado and Northwestern New Mexico. Publications 519. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Nelson, Margaret C. 2000 Abandonment: Conceptualization, Representation, and Social Change. In Social Theory in Archaeology, edited by Michael B. Schiffer, pp. 5262. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Nordenskiöld, G. 1979 [1893] The Cliff Dwellers of the Mesa Verde, Southwestern Colorado. Reprinted by The Rio Grande Press, Glorieta, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Ortman, Scott G., and Bradley, Bruce A. 2002 Sand Canyon Pueblo: The Container in the Center. In Seeking the Center Place: A rchaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region, edited by Mark D. Varien and Richard H. Wilshusen. The University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R. 2000 The Tragedy of the Com moners. In Agency in Archaeology, edited by Marcia-Anne Dobres and John E. Robb, pp. 113129. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R. 2001a Practice and History in Archaeology: an Emerging Paradigm. Anthropological Theory 1:7398.Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R. 2001b A New Tradition in Archaeology. In The Archaeology of Traditions: Agency and History Before and After Columbus, edited by Timothy R. Pauketat, pp. 116. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R. 2003 Materiality and the Immaterial in Historical-Processual Archaeology. In Essential Tensions in Archaeological Method and Theory, edited by Todd L. VanPool and Christine S. VanPool, pp. 4153. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R., and Alt, Susan M. 2003 Mounds, Memory, and Contested Mississippian History. In Archaeologies of Memory, edited by Ruth M. Van Dyke and Susan E. Alcock, pp. 151179. Blackwell, Maiden, Massachusetts.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plog, Fred 1989 The Sinagua and Their Relations. In Dynamics of Southwest Prehistory, edited by L.S. Cordell and G.J. Gumerman, pp. 263291. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
Plog, Stephen, and Solometo, Julie 1997 The Never-Changing and the Ever-Changing: the Evolution of Western Pueblo Ritual. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 7(2):161182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, James M. 1997 Communal Ritual and Faunal Remains: An Example from the Dolores Anasazi. Journal of Field Archaeology 24:353364.Google Scholar
Potter, James M. 2002 Community, Metaphor, and Gender: Technological changes Across the Pueblo III to Pueblo IV Transition in the El Morro Valley, New Mexico. In Traditions, Transitions, and Technologies: Themes in Southwestern Archaeology, edited by Sarah H. Schlanger, pp. 332349. University Press of Colorado.Google Scholar
Prudden, T. Mitchell 1903 The Prehistoric Ruins of the San Juan Watershed of Utah, Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. American Anthropologist 5:224288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prudden, T. Mitchell 1914 The Circular Kiva of Small Ruins in the San Juan Watershed. American Anthropologist n.s., 16:3358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prudden, T. Mitchell 1918 A Further Study of Prehistoric Small House ruins in the San Juan Watershed. American Anthropologist Association Memoirs 5(1).Google Scholar
Reed, Paul F. 2002 Salmon Ruins: From Cynthia Irwin-Williams’s Vision to a Central Place in the Totah. Archaeology Southwest 16(2):79.Google Scholar
Reed, Paul F. 2006a Chronology of Salmon Pueblo. In Thirty-Five Years of Archaeological Research at Salmon Ruins, New Mexico, edited by Paul Reed, pp. 287296. Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson.Google Scholar
Reed, Paul F. 2006b Salmon Pueblo: Chacoan Outlier and Thirteenth-Century Middle San Juan Community Center. Archaeology Southwest 20(3): 15.Google Scholar
Reed, Paul F. (editor) 2006 Thirty-Five Years of Archaeological Research at Salmon Ruins, New Mexico. Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson.Google Scholar
Reed, Paul F. 2008 Salmon Ruins: Chacoan Outlier and Thirteenth-Century Pueblo in the Middle San Juan Region. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Roberts, Frank H. H. 1931 The Ruins at Kiatuthlanna, Eastern Arizona. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 100. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Roberts, Frank H. H. 1932 Village of the Great Kivas on the Zuni Reservation, New Mexico. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 111. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Roberts, Frank H. H. 1939 Archaeological Remains in the Whitewater District, Eastern Arizona. Part I. House Types. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin, 121. Government Printing Office, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
Robinson, Hugh L. 2005 Feasting, Exterior Bowl Design, and Public Space in the Northern San Juan, A.D. 1240–1300. Unpublished Master’s Thesis, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Roney, John R. 1992 Prehistoric Roads and Regional Integration in the Chacoan System. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp. 123132. Anthropological Papers, No. 5, Maxwell Museum of Anthropology University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Roney, John R. 1996 The Pueblo III Period in the Eastern San Juan Basin. In The Prehistoric Pueblo World A.D. 1150–1350, edited by Michael A. Adler, pp. 145169. University of Arizona Press, Tucson Google Scholar
Ryan, Susan C. 2004 Albert Porter Pueblo (Site 5MT123), Montezuma County, Colorado, Annual Report, 2004 Field Season. Electronic Document, http://www.crowcanyon.org/ResearchReports/Albert-Porter/Porter2004season/Text_Tables/Text_2004.htm, accessed December 14, 2006.Google Scholar
Schachner, Gregson 2001 Ritual Control and Transformation in Middle-Range Societies: An Example from the American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20:168194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schachner, Gregson, and Kintigh, Keith W. 2004 Community Formation and Migration in the thirteenth Century El Morro Valley, New Mexico. Poster presented at the 6ninth Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal.Google Scholar
Schlanger, Sarah H., and Wilshusen, Richard H. 1993 Local Abandonments and Regional Conditions in the North American Southwest. In Abandonment of Settlements and Regions, edited by Catherine M. Cameron and S. A. Tomka, pp. 8598. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sebastian, Lynne 1992a The Chaco Anasazi: Sociopolitical Evolution in the Prehistoric Southwest. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sebastian, Lynne 1992b Chaco Canyon and the Anasazi Southwest: Changing View of Sociopolitical Organization. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp.2334. Anthropological Papers No. 5, Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque Google Scholar
Sebastian, Lynne 2006 The Chaco Synthesis. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen Lekson, pp. 393422. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Shennan, Stephen 1993 After Social Evolution: A New Archaeological Agenda. In Archaeological Theory: Who Sets the Agenda?, edited by. N. Yoffee andA. Sherratt, pp. 5359. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spier, Leslie 1917 An Outline for a Chronology of Zuni Ruins. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 18(3):207331.Google Scholar
Stein, John R. 1987a An Archaeological Reconnaissance in the Vicinity of Aztec Ruins National Monument, New Mexico. Division of Anthropology, Branch of Cultural Resources Management, Southwest Cultural Resources Center, National Park Services, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Stein, John R. 1987b Architecture and Landscape. In An Archaeological Reconnaissance of West-Central New Mexico, The Anasazi Monuments Project, edited by Andrew P. Fowler, John R. Stein and Roger Anyon, pp. 71103. Report submitted to State of New Mexico, Office of Cultural Affairs, Historic Preservation Division, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Stein, John R., and Fowler, Andrew P. 1996 Looking Beyond Chaco in the San Juan Basin and Its Peripheries. In The Prehistoric Pueblo World A.D. 1100–1300, edited by Michael Adler, pp. 114130. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Stein, John R., and Lekson, Stephen H. 1992 Anasazi Ritual Landscapes. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by D. Doyel, pp. 87100. Anthropological Papers No. 5. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Stein, John R., and McKenna, Peter J. 1988 An Archaeological Reconnaissance of a Late Bonito Phase Occupation Near Aztec Ruins National Monument, New Mexico. Division of Anthropology, Branch of Cultural Resources Management, Southwester Cultural Resources Center, National Park Service, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Marc G. 1982 Toward an Understanding of Site Abandonment Behavior: Evidence from Historic Mining Camps in the Southwest Yukon. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 1:237265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, Tammy T. 1994 The Process of Aggregation in the Zuni Region:Reasons and Implications. In Exploring Social, Political, and Economic Organization in the Zuni Region, edited by Todd L. Howell and Tammy Stone, pp. 923. Anthropological Research Papers No. 46. Arizona State University, Tempe.Google Scholar
Stone, Tammy T. 1999 The Chaos of Collapse: Disintegration and Reintegration of Inter-regional Systems. Antiquity 73:110118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tainter, Joseph A. 1988 The Collapse of Complex Societies. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Till, Jonathan 2001 Chacoan Roads and Road-Associated Sites in the Lower San Juan Region: Assessing the Role of Chacoan Influences in the Northwestern Periphery. Master’s Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Toll, H. Wolcott 1991 Material Distributions and Exchange in the Chaco System. In Chaco and Hohokam, edited by Patricia Crown and W. James Judge, pp. 77107. School of American Research, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Toll, H. Wolcott 2001 Making and Breaking Pots in the Chaco World. American Antiquity 66:5678.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toll, H. Wolcott 2006 Organization of Production. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen H. Lekson, pp. 117152. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Turner, Christy G. II, and Turner, Jacqueline A. 1999 Man Corn: Cannibalism and Violence in the Prehistoric American Southwest. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Upham, Steadman 1982 Polities and Power: An Economic and Political History of the Western Pueblo. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Van Dyke, Ruth M. 1997 The Andrews Great House Community: A Ceramic Chronometric Perspective. Kiva 63:137154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Dyke, Ruth M. 2000 Chacoan Ritual Landscapes: The View from the Red Mesa Valley. In Great House Communities Across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by John Kantner and Nancy M. Mahoney, pp. 91100. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Dyke, Ruth M. 2002 The Chacoan Great Kiva in Outlier Communities: Investigating Integrative Spaces Across the San Juan Basin. Kiva 67:231247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Dyke, Ruth M. 2003 Bounding Chaco: Great House Architectural Variability across Time and Space. Kiva 69(2): 117140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Dyke, Ruth M. 2004 Memory, Meaning, and Masonry: The Late Bonito Chacoan Landscape. American Antiquity 69:413431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Keuren, Scott 2004 Crafting Feasts in the Prehispanic Southwest. In Identity, Feasting, and the Archaeology of the Greater Southwest, edited by Barbara J. Mills, pp. 193209. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Van West, Carla R. 1994 Modeling Prehistoric Agricultural Productivity in Southwestern Colorado: A GIS Approach. Reports of Investigations, no. 67. Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman, and Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado.Google Scholar
Van West, Carla R. 1996 The Heuristic Value of Estimates of Prehistoric Agricultural Production: A Case Study from Southwestern Colorado. In Interpreting Southwestern Diversity: Underlying Principles and Overarching Patterns, edited by Paul R. Fish and J. Jefferson Reid, pp. 133145. Anthropological Research Papers, no. 48. Arizona State University, Tempe.Google Scholar
Varien, Mark D. 1999 Sedentism and Mobility in a Social Landscape. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Varien, Mark D., Lipe, William D., Adler, Michael A., Thompson, Ian M., and Bradley, Bruce A. 1996 Southwest Colorado and Southeast Utah Settlement Patterns: A.D. 1100 to 1300. In The Prehistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1150–1350, edited by Michael Adler, pp. 86113. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Varien, Mark D., Ortman, Scott G., Kohler, Timothy A., Glowacki, Donna M., and David Johnson, C. 2007 Historical Ecology in the Mesa Verde Region: Results from the Village Ecodynamics Project. American Antiquity 72:273299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vivan, Gordon, and Reiter, Paul 1960 The Great Kivas of Chaco Canyon and Their Relationships. School of American Research, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. Gwinn 1983 Identifying and Interpreting Chacoan Roads: An Historical Perspective. In Chaco Roads Project, Phase I, edited by Chris Kincaid, pp. 3.13.18. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. Gwinn 1990 The Chacoan Prehistory of the San Juan Basin. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. Gwinn 1997a Chacoan Roads: Morphology. Kiva 63:734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vivian, R. Gwinn 1997b Chacoan Roads: Function. Kiva 63:3568.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vivian, R. Gwinn 2005 Chaco Phenomenon on the Southern Periphery. In Archaeological Data Recovery in the New Mexico Transportation Corridor and First Five-year Permit Area, Fence Lake Coal Mine Project, Catron County, New Mexico. Volume 4:Synthetic Studies and Summary, edited by Edgar Huber and Carta R. Van West, pp. 40.140.34. Technical Series 84, Statistical Research, Inc., Tucson.Google Scholar
Wills, W. H., and Windes, Thomas C. 1989 Evidence for Population Aggregation and Dispersal during the Basketmaker III Period in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. American Antiquity 54:347368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H. 1986 The Relationship between Abandonment Mode and Ritual Use in Pueblo I Anasazi Protokivas. Journal of Field Archaeology 13:245254.Google Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H. 1995 Conclusion, Management Suggestions, and Directions for Future Research. In The Cedar Hill Special Treatment Project: Late Pueblo I, Early Navajo, and Historic Occupations in Northwestern New Mexico, compiled by Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 117120. La Plata Archaeological Consultants, Research Papers 1. Dolores, Colorado.Google Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H. 1999 Pueblo I (A.D. 750–900). In Colorado Prehistory: A Context For The Southern Colorado River Basin, edited by William D. Lipe, Mark D. Varien, and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 196241. Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H. 2002 Estimating Population in the Central Mesa Verde Region. In Seeking the Center Place, edited by Mark D. Varien and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 101120. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H., and Blinman, Eric 1992 Pueblo I Village Formation: A Reevaluation of Sites Recorded by Earl Morris on the Ute Mountain Tribal Lands. Kiva 57:252269 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H., and Ortman, Scott G. 1999 Rethinking the Pueblo I Period I the San Juan Drainage: Aggregation, Migration, and Cultural Diversity. Kiva 64:369399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilshusen, Richard H., and Van Dyke, Ruth M. 2006 Chaco’s Beginnings. In The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh Century Pueblo Regional Center, edited by Stephen H. Lekson, pp. 211259. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Windes, Thomas C. 2004 The Rise of Early Chacoan Great Houses. In In Search of Chaco, New Approaches to an Archaeological Enigma, edited by David G. Noble, pp. 1421. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Windes, Tomas C., and Bacha, Eileen 2006 Differential Structural WoodUse at Salmon Ruins. In Thirty-Five Years of Archaeological Research at Salmon Ruins, New Mexico, edited by Paul F. Reed, pp. 245269. Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson.Google Scholar
Windes, Thomas C., and Ford, Dabney 1992 The Nature of the Early Bonito Phase. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by David E. Doyel, pp. 7586. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Anthropological Papers, No. 5. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Windes, Thomas C., and McKenna, Peter J. 2001 Going Against the Grain: Wood Production in Chacoan Society. American Antiquity 66:119140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar