essay

The depopulation of the northern San Juan: Conditions in the turbulent 1200s

Journal of anthropological archaeology14 (2) • Published In 1995 • Pages: 143-169 p,

By: Lipe, William D..

Abstract
Lipe discusses the push and pull forces that lead to the depopulation through emigration of the four corners region. He is mostly concerned with the AD 1200-1300 time period, but his discussion ranges from AD 900 to 1600. He discusses the chronology of the abandonment and how completely various areas were abandoned. He uses tree cutting dates to examine construction periods to determine when areas were abandoned. Population densities are discussed along with settlement and community patterns. Push forces that are examined include subsistence and resource depletion, conflict such as warfare, the reduction of long-distance trade items in the AD 1200s, and the 'great drought' of AD 1276-1299. Forces that might have pulled or encouraged people to migrate may have included new developments in the Rio Grande or Western Pueblo area, more reliable summer rainfall, and different religious ideologies. The answers to the reasons people migrated aren't fully understood as Lipe points out that "once some people left, the situation should have improved for those who remained." (page 163). Lipe also points out that the katsina cult spread in the AD 1300s and 1400s along with a pan-Southwestern earth and fertility cult. Both of these would then be too late to act as attractions for migration. However, movement and social networks for various kinds of exchange is a long-established element of the area so "people of the Northern San Juan had both historical traditions and current information to bring to bear on the question of whether or not to emigrate." (page 164).
Subjects
Internal migration
Settlement patterns
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Population
Geography
Environmental quality
War
tradition
Early 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
900-700 BP (AD 1100-1300)
Coverage Place
northeastern Arizona, southwestern Colorado, northwestern New Mexico, and southeastern Utah, United States
Notes
William D. Lipe
Includes bibliographical references (p. 164-169)
LCCN
82644021
LCSH
Indians of North America--Antiquities