Poshuouinge Explained

Poshuouinge (pronounced "poe-shoo-wingay") is a large ancestral Pueblo ruin[1] located on U.S. Route 84, about south of Abiquiu, New Mexico. Its builders were the ancestors of the Tewa Pueblos who now (2011) reside in Santa Clara Pueblo and San Juan Pueblo. It has also been referred to informally as Turquoise Ruin, although there is no evidence that turquoise has ever been found in the area.[2] Poshuouinge is situated upstream and due west of another Tewa Pueblo ancestral site, Tsama.

Geography

Poshuouinge was built on a high mesa, some [2] above the Chama River, around 1400. There are two springs located about to the south of the ruins which are believed to have been the main water sources for the habitation.[2] It is accessible by a United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service trail.

This city, at its largest, consisted of about 700 ground floor rooms, most being two or even three stories tall.[3] The city was laid out with two main plazas, and a large kiva near the center of the eastern courtyard. The barrow pits of Poshuouinge were planted with small stone grids in the basement.[4]

History

The city is believed to have been occupied between 1375 and 1475.[5] The site was abandoned around 1500, well before Coronado and the first Europeans arrived. It is believed that its inhabitants left the banks of the Chama River and relocated nearby around the Rio Grande, where their descendants live today.[6]

Archaeology

Adolph Bandelier excavated the area in 1885. J. A. Jeançon and his Tewa workmen unearthed tzii-wi war axes whilst excavating the site in 1919.[7] [8] Jeançon was said "to have interpreted the Poshuouinge shrines in light of ethnographic evidence, arguing that they represented a "world quarter system" similar to that of San Juan Pueblo."[9]

References

36.2122°N -106.274°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Koenig, Harriet. Acculturation in the Navajo Eden: New Mexico, 1550-1750, Archaeology, Language, Religion of the Peoples of the Southwest. 26 September 2011. March 2005. YBK Publishers, Inc.. 978-0-9764359-1-4. 22, 80, 90–.
  2. Book: Morgan, William N.. Ancient architecture of the Southwest. registration. 26 September 2011. 1994. University of Texas Press. 978-0-292-75159-0. 213.
  3. Book: Harris, Richard K.. New Mexico Off the Beaten Path, 9th: A Guide to Unique Places. 26 September 2011. 10 November 2009. Globe Pequot. 978-0-7627-5049-8. 68.
  4. Book: Minnis, Paul E.. Biodiversity and Native America. 26 September 2011. August 2001. University of Oklahoma Press. 978-0-8061-3345-4. 214–.
  5. Book: Killion. Thomas W.. Meeting. Society for American Archaeology.. Gardens of prehistory: the archaeology of settlement agriculture in Greater Mesoamerica. 26 September 2011. 1992. University of Alabama Press. 978-0-8173-0565-9. 56.
  6. Noble, David Grant, Ancient Ruins of the Southwest: An Archaeological Guide, Northland Publishing, Flagstaff, Arizona, pp. 203-205
  7. Book: Reily, Nancy Hopkins. Georgia O'Keeffe, a Private Friendship. 26 September 2011. 1 October 2009. Sunstone Press. 978-0-86534-452-5. 71.
  8. Book: Kidder, Alfred Vincent. The artifacts of Pecos. 26 September 2011. October 1979. Garland Pub.. 978-0-8240-9630-4. 94.
  9. Book: Snead, James Elliot. Ancestral landscapes of the Pueblo world. 26 September 2011. 1 May 2008. University of Arizona Press. 978-0-8165-2308-5. 87.