Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-20T15:54:43.425Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prehistoric Reservoirs and Water Basins in the Mesa Verde Region: Intensification of Water Collection Strategies during the Great Pueblo Period

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Richard H. Wilshusen
Affiliation:
La Plata Archaeological Consultants, 26851 C.R. P, Dolores, CO 81323 and Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, 23390 C.R.K, Cortez, CO 81321
Melissa J. Churchill
Affiliation:
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, 23390 C.R.K, Cortez, CO 81321
James M. Potter
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-2402

Abstract

More than 20 examples of probable prehistoric water basins with minimum storage capacities of 10,000–25,000 gallons of water are known in the Mesa Verde region of the American Southwest. The temporal placement of these artificially constructed basins, their exact uses, and their importance as public architecture have been poorly understood. We summarize the general literature on these features, give a detailed account of the excavation results of a dam and basin that we tested and dated, and then synthesize all available data from the gray literature on prehistoric water basins in our area. We argue that water basins and reservoirs in the northern Southwest typically stored domestic water for particular communities and that the first evidence of these public features is probably associated with Chaco-era communities. These features represent early experiments with large-scale water conservation and suggest a long-term commitment to locales by specific communities. Their locations along the canyon edges foreshadow shifts in settlement and increased water conservation strategies that become more pronounced in the later Great Pueblo-period villages-the last villages in this area before the migration of Puebloan people to the south after A.D. 1280.

En la región de Mesa Verde en el suroeste norteamericano hay más de 20 ejemplos conocidos de depresiones prehistóricas de agua (probables reservas) con capacidades mínimas de 38,000–95,000 litres de agua. La localizatión temporal de estas reservas, sus usos exactes, y su importancia como arquitectura pública han sido mal entendidos. Nosotros resumimos la literatura general acerca de estos rasgos, damos un resumen detallado de los resultados de la excavatión de una presa y una reserva. También presentames una síntesis de todos los datos disponibles en la literatura inédita acerca de reservas de agua prehistóricas en nuestra área. Razonamos que las reservas en el norte del suroeste contenlan tipicamente agua doméstica para comunidades especificas y que las primeras reservas grandes fueron rasgos públicos asociados con las comunidades de Chaco. Estas reservas representan los expérimentes de la primeras etapas de conservation de agua en gran scala y sugieren un compromise a largo plazo de comunidades específicas. Los sitios de estos rasgos al borde de los cañones presagian el movimiento de la población y el incremento de estrategias de conservatión de agua que se volvieron más marcadas en la época de los Pueblos Grandes—los últimos pueblos en esta área antes de la emigration hacia el sur ocurrida después de 1280 d.C.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1997

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

Ahlstrom, R. V. N., Van West, C. R., and Dean, J. S. 1995 Environmental and Chronological Factors in the Mesa Verde-Northern Rio Grande Migration. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 14: 125142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anschuetz, K. F. 1995 Saving for a Rainy Day: The Integration of Diverse Agricultural Technologies to Harvest and Conserve Water in the Lower Chama Valley, New Mexico. In Soil, Water, Biology, and Belief in Prehistoric and Traditional Southwestern Agriculture, edited by Toll, H. W., pp. 2539. New Mexico Archaeological Council, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Bayman, J. M., and Fish, S. K. 1992 Reservoirs and Locational Shifts in Sonoran Desert Subsistence. In Research in Economic Anthropology, edited by Croes, D. R., Hawkins, R. A., and Issac, B. L., pp. 267306. Supplement No. 6. Jai Press, Greenwich, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Breternitz, D. A. 1983 Mummy Lake, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado. Manuscript on file, Mesa Verde National Park Research Library, Mesa Verde, Colorado.Google Scholar
Breternitz, D. A. 1980 Ecological Variability and Archaeological Site Location in Southwestern Colorado: The Class II Cultural Resource Inventory of the Bureau of Land Management's Sacred Mountain Planning Unit. Manuscript on file, Colorado Historical Society, Denver.Google Scholar
Crown, P. L. 1987 Water Storage in the Prehistoric Southwest. Kiva 52: 209228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doolittle, W E. 1984 Agricultural Change as an Incremental Process. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 74: 124137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doolittle, W. E., Neely, J. A., and Pool, M. D. 1993 A Method for Distinguishing between Prehistoric and Recent Water and Soil Control Features. Kiva 59: 725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglass, A. E. 1929 The Secret of the Southwest Solved by Talkative Tree Rings. National Geographic Magazine 56: 736770.Google Scholar
Fewkes, J. W. 1919 Prehistoric Villages, Castles, and Towers of Southwestern Colorado. Bulletin No. 70. Bureau of American Ethology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Fish, P. R., and Fish, S. K. 1994 Southwest and Northwest: Recent Research at the Juncture of the United States and Mexico. Journal of Archaeological Research 2: 344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graybill, D. A. 1989 The Reconstruction of Prehistoric Salt River Streamflow. In The 1982-1984 Excavations at Las Colinas: Environment and Subsistence, edited Heathington, C. A. and Gregory, D., pp. 2538. Archaeological Series 162, vol. 5. Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson.Google Scholar
Graybill, D. A., and Nials, F. L. 1989 Aspects of Climate, Streamflow, and Geomorphology Affecting Irrigation Patterns in the Salt River Valley. In The 1982-1984 Excavations at Las Colinas: Environment and Subsistence, edited Heathington, C. A. and Gregory, D., pp. 523. Archaeological Series 162, vol. 5. Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson.Google Scholar
Gregory, D. A. 1991 Form and Variation in Hohokam Settlement Patterns. In Chaco and Hohokam: Prehistoric Regional Systems in the American Southwest, edited by Crown, P. L. and Judge, W.J. pp. 159193. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Haase, W. R. 1985 Domestic Water Conservation among the Northern San Juan Anasazi. Southwestern Lore 51(2): 1527.Google Scholar
Hayes, A. C. 1964 The Archeological Survey of Wetherill Mesa. Archeological Research Series No. 7-A. National Park Service, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Holmes, W. H. 1878 Report on the Ancient Ruins of Southwestern Colorado, Examined during the Summers of 1875 and 1876. In 10th Annual Report of the U.S. Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories for 1876, pp. 383–08. U.S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Howard, J. B. 1993 A Paleohydraulic Approach to Examining Agricultural Intensification in Hohokam Irrigation Systems. In Economic Aspects of Water Management in the Prehispanic New World, edited by Scarborough, V. L. and Issac, B.L. pp. 263324. Research in Economic Anthropology, Supplement No. 7. Jai Press, Greenwich, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Howard, J. B., and Huckleberry, G. 1991 The Operation and Evolution of an Irrigation System: The East Papago Canal Study. Publications in Archaeology No. 18. Soil Systems, Phoenix, Arizona.Google Scholar
Kohler, T. A. 1993 News from the Northern Southwest: Prehistory on the Edge of Chaos. Journal of Archaeological Research 1: 267321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lagasse, P. R, Gillespie, W. B., and Eggert, K. G. 1984 Hydraulic Engineering Analysis of Prehistoric Water- Control Systems at Chaco Canyon. In Recent Research on Chaco Prehistory, edited by Judge, W. J. and Chelberg, J.D. pp. 187211. Reports of the Chaco Center No. 8. National Park Service, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Lipe, W. D. 1995 The Depopulation of the Northern San Juan: Conditions in the Turbulent 1200s. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 14: 143169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P. S., Roys, L., and Von Bonin, G. 1936 Lowry Ruin in Southwestern Colorado. Anthropological Series 23, No. 1. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordenskiold, G. E. A. 1893 The Cliff Dwellers of Mesa Verde, Southwestern Colorado: Their Pottery and Implements. Translated by Lloyd Morgan, D.. P. A. Norstedt and Soner, Stockholm and Chicago.Google Scholar
Petersen, K. L. 1988 Climate and the Dolores River Anasazi: A Paleoenvironmental Reconstruction from a 10,000-Year Pollen Record, La Plata Mountains, Southwestern Colorado. Anthropological Papers No. 113. University of Utah, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Prudden, T. M. 1918 A Further Study of Prehistoric Small House Ruins in the San Juan Watershed. Memoirs Vol. 5, No. 1. American Anthropological Association, Arlington, Virginia.Google Scholar
Ritter, D. F. 1986 Process Geomorphology. Wm. C. Brown Publishers. Dubuque, IoWa.Google Scholar
Roberts, R H. H., Jr. 1930 Early Pueblo Ruins in the Piedra District, Southwestern Colorado. Bulletin No. 96. Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Rohn, A. H. 1963 Prehistoric Soil and Water Conservation on Chapin Mesa, Southwestern Colorado. American Antiquity 28: 441455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohn, A. H. 1977 Cultural Change and Continuity on Chapin Mesa. Regents Press, Lawrence, Kansas.Google Scholar
Scarborough, V. L. 1988 A Water Storage Adaptation in the American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Research 44: 2140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scarborough, V. L. 1991 Water Management Adaptations in Non-Industrial Complex Societies. In Method and Theory in Archaeology, vol. 3, edited by Schiffer, M. B., pp. 101154. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Scarborough, V. L., and Issac, B. L. (editors) 1993 Economic Aspects of Water Management in the Prehispanic New World. Research in Economic Anthropology, Supplement No. 7. Jai Press, Greenwich, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Smith, J. E. 1987 Mesas, Cliffs, and Canyons: The University of Colorado Survey of Mesa Verde National Park 1971-1977. Mesa Verde Research Series No. 3. Mesa Verde, Colorado.Google Scholar
Toll, H. W. 1995 Soil, Water, Biology, and Belief in Prehistoric and Traditional Southwestern Agriculture. New Mexico Archaeological Council, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Varien, M. D., Lipe, W. D., Adler, M. A., Thompson, I. M., 1996 Southwest Colorado and Southeast Utah Mesa Verde Region Settlement, A.D. 1100 to 1300. In The Prehistoric Pueblo World, edited by Adler, M. A.. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. G. 1990 The Chacoan Prehistory of the San Juan Basin. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. G. 1991 Chacoan Subsistence. In Chaco and Hohokam: Prehistoric Regional Systems in the American Southwest, edited by Crown, P. L. and Judge, W.J. pp. 5775. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. G. 1992 Chacoan Water Use and Managerial Decision Making. In Anasazi Regional Organization and the Chaco System, edited by Doyel, D. E., pp. 4557. Anthropological Papers No. 5. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Wilson, C. D., and Blinman, E. 1991 Ceramic Types of the Mesa Verde Region. Office of Archaeological Studies, Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Winter, J. C. 1975 Hovenweep 1974. Archeological Report No. 1. Department of Anthropology, San Jose State University, San Jose, California.Google Scholar
Winter, J. C. 1976 Hovenweep 1975. Archeological Report No. 2. Department of Anthropology, San Jose State University, San Jose, California.Google Scholar
Winter, J. C. 1977 Hovenweep 1976. Archeological Report No. 3. Department of Anthropology, San Jose State University, San Jose, California.Google Scholar
Winter, J. C. 1978 Anasazi Agriculture at Hovenweep, I: Field Systems. Contributions to Anthropological Studies 1: 8397. Center for Anthropological Studies, Albuquerque.Google Scholar