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Ancient Peoples of the Southwest 10,000BC to 1500AD
Arizona History Lecture #1 Heidi J. Osselaer
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The American Southwest
Aztlan Pimeria Alta El Norte The American Southwest University of Texas Library
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Mapsof.net
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Colorado Plateau Mogollon Rim Geology.com Sonoran Desert
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Jane St. Clair
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Panoramio.com
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Moonchalice.com
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Ayash Basu photo
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Corbisimages.com
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Chaco Culture National Historical Park
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Bering Strait Migration
Approximately 10,000 BC Sscnet.ucla.edu
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Paleo-Indians Clovis or Folsom tools made of stone, bone, or wood
Baskets Highly mobile Traded extensively Petroglyphs Lithiccastinglab.com
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Cabrillo.edu
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Bartlett Historical Society
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Atlatl University of Minnesota
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Maize arrives from Mesoamerica around 2000 BC
Food Museum
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Corn, beans, and squash also known as the “Three Sisters”
Nativepeoplephotographer.typepad.com
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Corbisimages.com
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Paleo-Indian 7000 BC and 200 AD Temperatures rise, less rainfall in Southwest Maize (corn) imported from Mesoamerica (Mexico) Hunter diet supplemented with corn, squash, and beans More sedentary life than the Clovis or Folsom people Farming requires cooperation and a system of rules and authority Pottery is more abundant Metates and manos used to grind corn Bows and arrows Lived in pit houses Users.sticc.edu
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Metates and manos Mexicolore.co.uk
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Doctorozepisodes.com
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Bartletthistory.org
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Earthen pit house Mediacanada.com
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Earthen pit house interior
Human Habitat Project
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Plastered pit house Mesa Verde National Park
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beans (lysine)+squash+corn= protein
Westirondequoit.org
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Arizona Leisure
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Wnn.thefurtrapper.com
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Puebloan People Includes Hohokam, Mogollon, and Anasazi
“Pueblo” is Spanish word for “town dweller” More sedentary than Cochise People, but still continued to hunt and gather native plants Lived in permanent villages in buildings made of clay, wood, and plaster Employed dry-farming techniques to grow corn, beans, and squash Worked communally in fields to ensure all members of society were fed Pottery is used in trade Flickr.com; Smithsonian Museum of Natural History
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Hohokam ASU Arts Works
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Hohokam Lived in the Salt River Valley
Hohokam means “those who have gone” or “all used up” Built pueblo homes and used dry-farm irrigation techniques City of Phoenix
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Snaketown around AD1000 Snaketown about 1100AD Snaketown site today
Desertmuseum.org
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Answers.com
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Recreation of a pit house at the Pueblo Grande Museum
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Pueblo Grande was built AD500
City of Phoenix
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Pueblo Grande Museum Pueblo Grande Museum
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Excavation of a Hohokam pit house
US Dept. of the Interior
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Excavation site at Pueblo Grande
Pueblo Grande Museum
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Ruins at Casa Grande First prehistoric and cultural site preserved by the US government, 1892 Eartharchitecture.org
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Ancient ballcourt at Pueblo Grande
Pueblo Grande Museum
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Hohokam ballcourt City of Phoenix
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Artist concept of Pueblo Grande platform mound
Arizona Leisure
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Snaketown pottery Antiquehelper.com
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Hohokam red on bluff pottery
Rarepottery.info
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Caliche sediment Ing.pan.pl
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Excavated Hohokam canal
Desertmuseum.org
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Hohokam canal system Navaching.com
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Canal irrigation of corn
City of Phoenix
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QT Luong/terragalleria.com
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Salt River Project canal
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Wnn.thefurtrapper.com
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Mogollon Rim Land Use History of North America-NAU
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Camparizona.com
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Mogollon Lived on the Mogollon Rim
Cooler, wetter climate than the Salt River Valley Location required less irrigation, able to gather and hunt more Named for a Spanish governor of Mexico Famous for their pottery Best Western Payson Inn; Smithsonian Museum
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Gotsaga.com
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Chandlerarizonausa.blogspot.com
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Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
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Mogollon pottery brownware Mimbres
Texas Beyond History; Flickriver.com
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Mogollon Mimbres pottery
Flickriver.com
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Smithsonian Museum
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En.wikipedia.org
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Flickr.com
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Anasazi Four Corners region
Anasazi means “the ancient ones” or “ancestors of our enemies” Closely related to the Mogollon First settled at Black Mesa 850AD 10 to 15 inches of precipitation and snowfall a year Adam Schallau; Cline Library, Northern Arizona University
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Anasazi ruins at Black Mesa
Cline Library, Northern Arizona University
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Utah State History
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Utah State History
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Desertusa.com
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Canyon de Chelly ruins QT Luong/terragalleria.com
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Chaco Canyon USA Today
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Doorways at Chaco Canyon
Panoramio.com
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Pueblo Bonito Colorado.edu
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Architectural plan of Pueblo Bonito
Pueblo Bonito National Monument
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Jqjacobs.net
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Adam Schallau
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Chaco Canyon roads Arthistory.sbc.edu
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Anasazi roads Southwestpilgrimage07.com
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Kiva ruins Chaco Canyon
Flickr.com
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Chetro Ketl Great Kiva Commons.wikimedia.org
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Foodmuseum.com
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Anasazi AD Native American Art Gallery
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Pictograph shows 1054 supernova
Flickr.com
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Clayhound.us
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Salado Named derived from Rio Salado, Spanish for Salt River
Lived in the Tonto Basin AD Travel.webshots.com
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Besh-Ba-Gowah Historical Gila County
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Salado dwelling AD Arizona Office of Tourism
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Salado pottery polychrome
Arizona State University; University of Arizona
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Sinagua= sin (without) agua (water)
Grinnell University, Anthropology Dept.
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Sunset Crater Erupts AD1064-1067 Sinagua move south temporarily
Arizona-leisure.com; Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
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Desert USA
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Sinaguan pottery Cather.unl.edu
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Montezuma Castle National Park Service
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National Park Service
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National Park Service
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Montezuma Well Americansouthwest.net
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National Park Service
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Clayhound.us
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Patayan Culture Upland Yuman Lived around Grand Canyon
Relied on hunting primarily Descendents include: Yavapai, Hualapai, and Havasupai River/Delta Yuman Lived in western Sonoran desert Hunted, but also agriculture Descendents include: Quechen/Yuman Highly mobile
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Patayan intaglios “incised designs”
Philip Coppens
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Phillip Coppens
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Common Features of Southwest People
Primarily sedentary Practiced dry-farming techniques and hunted Made pottery Traded extensively Lived initially in pit houses but then transitioned to pueblo structures Fairly peaceful Corbis images
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Health Issues Hard work and accidents lead to arthritis
Corn-intensive diet deprives body of sufficient calcium, leading to osteoporosis Anemia and malnutrition common Average age 25 to 27 Only 5 to 15% live to age 50 83% of children under 10 are anemic Ancientstandard.com
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Enamel hypoplasia indicates malnutrition
Proteinpower.com
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Drought begins AD1090 Crop failures lead to famine
Few trees to supply food and homes for animals Leads to population decrease Life.com
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AD Increased violence Great migration Ushistoryimages.com
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Apache (Athapaskan) tribes appear
Summer rains vanish Apache (Athapaskan) tribes appear Adaptation to a new environment begins Ansel Adams
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Questions for Consideration
How did the people of the prehistoric Southwest adapt to a changing climate? Give specific examples. List common cultural traits shared by the major groups of people living in the Southwest prior to contact with Europeans.
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