essay

Impressions of Pueblo III settlement trends among the Rio Abajo and Eastern Border pueblos

prehistoric pueblo world, a.d. 1150-1350Tucson • Published In 1996 • Pages: 177-187

By: Spielmann, Katherine A..

Abstract
Spielmann summarizes the data on settlement patterns in northeastern New Mexico for the Pueblo II-Pueblo IV periods. Only the data that pertain to the Pueblo IV period were marked for Outline of Cultural Materials codes. Spielmann summarizes the archaeology of the eastern Pueblos in the northern Rio Grande region of New Mexico. She divides the area up into seven districts: Middle Pecos-Roswell district, Sierra Blanco-Sacramento Mountains district, Chupadera Mesa-Salinas district, Galisteo Basin district, Tijeras Canyon district, Upper Pecos district, and Northeastern New Mexico. She explores some of the reasons behind the aggregation that occurred before and during this time period and provides a general sense of the trends in demographic and settlement patterns through a synthesis of settlement data available largely in published sources.
Subjects
Settlement patterns
Dwellings
Internal migration
External migration
Land use
Chronologies and culture sequences
tradition
Late Anasazi
HRAF PubDate
2012
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Archaeologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
Sarah Berry; 2011
Field Date
not specified
Coverage Date
1100-400 BP (AD 900-1600)
Coverage Place
northeastern New Mexico, United States
Notes
Katherine A. Spielmann
Based on a conference held at the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center in Cortez, Colo., from Mar. 28 to Apr. 1, 1990. It was organized by William Lipe and Stephen Lekson
Includes bibliographical references (p. 186-187)
LCCN
95032452
LCSH
Pueblo Indians--Antiquities--Congresses
Pueblo Indians--Land tenure--Congresses
Pueblo Indians--Social conditions--Congresses
Land settlement patterns--Southwest, New--Congresses
Demographic archaeology--Southwest, New--Congresses
Southwest, New--Antiquities--Congresses