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Early Canal Systems in the North American Southwest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2023

Gary Huckleberry*
Affiliation:
Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
*
Corresponding author: Gary Huckleberry; Email: ghuck@arizona.edu
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Abstract

Current evidence suggests that Indigenous farmers in the North American Southwest began canal irrigation in the second millennium BC, marking an important change in food production technology. Early canal systems are preserved in alluvial floodplains of the US-Mexico Borderlands region, tend to be deeply buried, and can appear as natural fluvial features. Here I discuss some of the challenges in identifying early canals and associated fields and present case studies from the Santa Cruz River in southern Arizona where buried channels dating as early as 1600–1400 BC were likely human constructed. These small channels share several stratigraphic properties and are consistent with hypotheses of early canal irrigation practiced by small family groups reliant on mixed farming and foraging. Through time, irrigation canal systems expanded in size, resulting in increased labor investment, sedentism, and productivity and facilitating the development of larger irrigation communities. Stratigraphic and geomorphic properties of early canal systems thus far identified along the Santa Cruz River provide a framework for identifying potential early canal evidence in other fine-grained floodplains of the Southwest, thereby improving our understanding of Indigenous agricultural intensification.

Resumen

Resumen

La evidencia actual sugiere que los agricultores indígenas del suroeste de América del Norte comenzaron el riego por canales en el segundo milenio aC, lo que marcó un cambio importante en la tecnología de producción de alimentos. Los primeros sistemas de canales se conservan en llanuras aluviales de inundación en las zonas fronterizas de EE.UU.-México, tienden a estar profundamente enterrados, y puede aparecer como características fluviales naturales. Aquí discuto algunos de los desafíos en la identificación de los primeros canales y campos y presento estudios de caso del río Santa Cruz en el sur de Arizona, donde los canales enterrados que datan desde 1600–1400 aC probablemente fueron construidos por humanos. Estos pequeños canales comparten varias propiedades estratigráficas y son consistentes con las hipótesis de los primeros canales de riego practicados por pequeños grupos familiares que dependían de la agricultura mixta y la caza y la recolección. A lo largo del tiempo, los sistemas de canales de riego aumentaron de tamaño, lo que resultó en una mayor inversión laboral, sedentarismo y productividad, y facilitar el desarrollo de comunidades de regantes más grandes. Las propiedades estratigráficas y geomórficas de los primeros canales identificados hasta ahora a lo largo del río Santa Cruz brindan un marco para identificar posibles evidencias de las sistemas de canales tempranos en otras llanuras aluviales de grano fino del suroeste y mejorar nuestra comprensión de la intensificación agrícola indígena.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for American Archaeology
Figure 0

Figure 1. Simplified surficial geologic map of the Tucson Basin with locations of the Clearwater, Rillito Fan, and Las Capas sites (adapted from Huckleberry 2018a:Figure 16.1). Numbered drainages in inset map: (1) Río Sonoyta, (2) Río Altar, (3) Río Boquillas, (4) Río Magdalena, (5) Río Casas Grandes, (6) Brawley Wash, (7) San Pedro River, (8) San Simon Wash, (9) Santa Cruz River, (10) Gila River, and (11) Salt River.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Example showing stratigraphic similarities between canals and natural channels: (A) Natural channels in the Santa Cruz River floodplain, Tucson (Huckleberry 2022a); (B) Hohokam canal alignment within Salt River floodplain (Phoenix) containing multiple inset parabolic channels (Anderson et al. 1994).

Figure 2

Table 1. Tucson Basin Cultural Chronology.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Time series of San Pedro, Cienega, Hohokam, and Silverbell canal cross sections documented along the Santa Cruz River in the Tucson area. Primary sources: Clearwater (Klimas et al. 2006); Las Capas (Huckleberry 2022b; Mabry et al. 2008); Parque de Santa Cruz (Huckleberry 2009); Rillito Fan (Huckleberry and Rittenour 2014); Valencia Road (Huckleberry and Lindeman 2016). Layout adapted from Mabry and colleagues (2008:Figure 10.3).

Figure 4

Figure 4. Map showing location of Feature 151 in relation to younger canals in the western part of the Congress Street Locus at AZ BB:13:481 (adapted from Klimas et al. 2006:Figure 4.97).

Figure 5

Figure 5. Stratigraphic profiles of case study canals at the Clearwater (Klimas et al. 2006), Rillito Fan (Huckleberry 2018a), and Las Capas (Huckleberry 2022b) sites. See Supplemental Table 1 for stratigraphic descriptions.

Figure 6

Table 2. Radiocarbon Ages and Context.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Oblique photograph of Feature 49 exposed through excavation at the Rillito Fan site (photograph by Gary Huckleberry).

Figure 8

Figure 7. (A) Bordered agricultural fields at Las Capas (adapted from Nials 2015a:Figure 11.7); (B) schematic cross section showing construction of canal field lateral and field berm (adapted from Huckleberry 2018b:Figure 15.3); (C) photo of planting hole in profile (Brack and Ruble 2013:Figure 2.3; photo reproduced by permission of Desert Archaeology, Inc.).

Figure 9

Figure 8. Stratigraphic exposure of San Pedro phase agricultural field at the Las Capas site (photograph by Gary Huckleberry).

Figure 10

Table 3. Stratigraphic and Hydraulic Properties Associated with Buried Irrigation Canals in the Santa Cruz River Floodplain.

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