Archaic–Early Basketmaker Era Explained

The Archaic–Early Basketmaker Era (7000–1500 BCE) was an Archaic cultural period of ancestors to the Ancient Pueblo People. They were distinguished from other Archaic people of the Southwest by their basketry which was used to gather and store food. They became reliant on wild seeds, grasses, nuts, and fruit for food and changed their movement patterns and lifestyle by maximizing the edible wild food and small game within a geographical region. Manos and metates began to be used to process seeds and nuts. With the extinction of megafauna, hunters adapted their tools, using spears with smaller projectile points and then atlatl and darts. Simple dwellings made of wood, brush and earth provided shelter.

The Archaic Basketmaker Era is followed by the Early Basketmaker II Era.

Hunter gatherer culture

Holocene climate changes (beginning about 10,000 BCE) resulted in warmer and drier weather, a contributing factor in the extinction of megafauna, such as the mastodon and mammoth that were hunted by the preceding Paleo-Indians. Besides climate change, the large animals may have perished due to increased human population and their improved hunting techniques. By 6000 BCE two-thirds of all North American animals weighing more than 100 pounds were extinct and the bison antiquus was the only large animal to survive on the Great Plains.[1] [2]

About 5000 BCE Holocene glacial runoff affected Colorado Plateau storm patterns which resulted in significant soil erosion. Between 2500 and 2000 BCE there was significant soil build up. When the climate became too arid to produce sufficient food, people relocated until the rate of precipitation increased. Over time there was an increase in drought-resistant plants and the plants that required regular watering did not survive. Woodlands of spruce and fir were replaced by juniper and pinyon trees in the northern Rio Grande valley. Further south, there were fewer juniper and pinyon trees. Both climatic changes resulted in human movement pattern changes to obtain food.[3]

The Paleo-Indian had a straightforward movement pattern: follow and hunt the big animals. The Archaic individuals followed a new pattern called "making the seasonal rounds" where they moved to familiar places based upon the growing seasons of plants, their major source of food. In the spring, summer and early fall women harvested seeds, nuts, fruit, grasses, juniper berries and mesquite beans. Any surplus food was stored for later use. Men hunted small game like rabbits using traps and snares. During the fall and winter men hunted deer, big horn sheep, bison and antelope with the atlatl and darts.[1] [4] [5]

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GoosefootPinyon nutsRicegrassYucca
Seeds and grassSeeds and greensNutsSeedsFruit

Although the number of people increased during the Archaic era, they traveled in small groups[1] throughout the arid lowlands of juniper and sage to the moister climate of the pinyon forest about 6000feet in elevation.[6] Different sets of projectile points were found within a regional geographic area, made from local stone, an indication that Archaic people ranged across shorter expanses of land. Since they more fully utilized diverse plant and game resources within a region, they didn't need to travel as far to find food. The different shaped tools may have been used for people to identify themselves. The bands of people likely socialized with neighboring tribes, rather than people from distant lands.[7]

Based upon the introduction of cultivation, new dwelling types and artifacts, it is believed that people from southern Arizona and New Mexico moved north and integrated with bands of people in the Colorado Plateau.[1] By the end of the period, some people cultivated food and became less mobile, but agriculture would not be consistently adopted until the 1st century CE in the Early Basketmaker II Era.[8]

Excavation of their campsites and rock shelters revealed that the Archaic-Early Basketmaker people made baskets, tools, gathered wild plants, and killed and processed game. Slab-lined storage cists, found both inside and outside of shelters, were used to store food which indicates a change from a totally nomadic lifestyle.

Basketmaker origin

The population of the Basketmaker people is likely not tied to one particular group of people, but reflective of the migration of agricultural people from the south and adoption of agriculture by local Archaic populations.[9] For instance, people on the Mogollon Rim of New Mexico had cultivated maize and adopted a less transitory lifestyle before the Early Basketmaker people.[10]

Projectile points, a basketry style known as "two rod and bundle", and other similarities existed between artifacts of the Early and Late Basketmaker II Eras and the San Pedro stage of the Cochise tradition.[9]

To adopt the Basketmaker lifestyle, Archaic people would have adopted the cultivation of maize, a less mobile lifestyle and taken up residence in pit-houses. Other differences between the Archaic and Basketmaker cultures were the forms of basketry, symbols used in petroglyphs, burial practices and volume of traded items.[9]

Anthropologist Cynthia Irwin-Williams contends that the Ancestral Puebloans, and hence the Basketmaker culture, developed, at least in part, from the contemporaneous Oshara tradition (ca. 5440 BCE — 460 CE) of the southwest United States, with whom they shared some similarities, such as use of manos and metates, a preference for dwelling on mesas and at canyon heads, and the cultivation of corn.[11]

Shelters

Since the people of the Archaic–Early Basketmaker Era were nomadic hunter gatherers who roamed the Colorado Plateau to hunt game or gather seasonal wild plants, their homes were easily built. The bands of people generally inhabited rock alcoves or lived out in the open in brush shelters and lean-tos.[12] [13] [14] The dwellings were made by digging a shallow basin and building a frame of wooden logs in the shape of a cone, dome or tent. The frames were covered with brush and earthen daub that acted as a sealant for protection against the elements. Rocks may have been placed around the base of the shelter or lean-to and fire pits were sometimes used inside the homes.[13] The shallow-basined lodgings are considered a precursor to the Basketmaker pit-houses.[15]

In the summer, campsites were made at high elevations: on the top of mesas or ridges. They also had temporary campsites in the mountains, low mesas and ponds formed by spring runoff. Structures, built in the later part of this period, were built at lower elevations.[15]

Material goods

Items found at the Archaic-Early Basketmaker sites include:

Archaic-Early Basketmaker sites

Sites that may represent a transition to Basketmaker traditions:

Notes and References

  1. http://www.crowcanyon.org/EducationProducts/peoples_mesa_verde/archaic_overview.asp Archaic: 5500 to 500 B.C. – Overview.
  2. Time-Life Book Editors. (1993) [1992] The First Americans. Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books. pp. 29, 30. .
  3. Plog, Stephen. (1997) Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. London: Thames and Hudson. pp. 48–49. .
  4. Plog, Stephen. (1997) Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. London: Thames and Hudson. pp. 46–47. .
  5. http://www.crowcanyon.org/EducationProducts/peoples_mesa_verde/archaic_food.asp Archaic: 5500 to 500 B.C. – Food.
  6. Pike, Donald G. (1974) Anasazi: Ancient People of the Rock. Palo Alto: American West Publishing Company. p. 17. .
  7. Plog, Stephen. (1997) Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 51. .
  8. http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/blm/co/10/chap2.htm "The Ancient Ones".
  9. http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/d-antlab/Soutwestern%20Arch/Anasazi/basketmaker2.htm Ancestral Pueblo - Basketmaker II.
  10. http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/36/hh36a2.htm Man in the San Juan Valley.
  11. Stiger, Mark. (2008). Hunter-Gather Archaeology of the Colorado High Country. Boulder: The University Press of Colorado. p. 28. .
  12. http://www.nps.gov/chcu/historyculture/archaic-early-basketmaker-period.htm Archaic-Early Basketmaker Period.
  13. http://www.crowcanyon.org/EducationProducts/peoples_mesa_verde/archaic_housing.asp Archaic: 5500 to 500 B.C. - Housing
  14. Rothman, Hal K. (1991) Navajo National Monument: A Place and its People. Chapter I: From Prehistory to the Twentieth Century. Professional Papers No. 40. Santa Fe: Southwest Cultural Resource Center, National Park Service. Retrieved 10-17-2011.
  15. Department of the Interior. 1991. p. 59. Retrieved 10-19-2011.
  16. http://www.crowcanyon.org/EducationProducts/peoples_mesa_verde/archaic_artifacts.asp Archaic: 5500 to 500 B.C. – Artifacts.
  17. Reed, Paul F. (2000) Foundations of Anasazi Culture: The Basketmaker Pueblo Transition. University of Utah Press. p. 159. .
  18. Reed, Paul F. (2000) Foundations of Anasazi Culture: The Basketmaker Pueblo Transition. University of Utah Press. p. 228. .
  19. Reed, Paul F. (2000) Foundations of Anasazi Culture: The Basketmaker Pueblo Transition. University of Utah Press. p. 19. .
  20. Department of the Interior. 1991. Pages 41, 60. Retrieved 10-19-2011.
  21. Reed, Paul F. (2000) Foundations of Anasazi Culture: The Basketmaker Pueblo Transition. University of Utah Press. p. 131. .
  22. Hurley, Warren F. X. (2000). A Retrospective on the Four Corners Archeological Program. National Park Service. Page 2. Retrieved 10-15-2011.
  23. Stiger, Mark. (2001) Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology of the Colorado High Country. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. p. 114. .
  24. Cassells, E. Steve. (1997) [1983] The Archaeology of Colorado. Boulder: Johnson Press. p. 102. .