Settlement, Subsistence, and Society in Late Zuni Prehistory / / Keith W. Kintigh.

Beginning about A.D. 1250, the Zuni area of New Mexico witnessed a massive population aggregation in which the inhabitants of hundreds of widely dispersed villages relocated to a small number of large, architecturally planned pueblos. Over the next century, twenty-seven of these pueblos were constru...

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Place / Publishing House:Tucson : : University of Arizona Press,, [2022]
©1985
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Series:Anthropological papers of the University of Arizona
Physical Description:1 online resource (x, 132 pages) :; illustrations.
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588 |a Description based on: online resource; title from PDF information screen (University of Michigan Press, viewed December 22, 2022). 
520 |a Beginning about A.D. 1250, the Zuni area of New Mexico witnessed a massive population aggregation in which the inhabitants of hundreds of widely dispersed villages relocated to a small number of large, architecturally planned pueblos. Over the next century, twenty-seven of these pueblos were constructed, occupied briefly, and then abandoned. Another dramatic settlement shift occurred about A.D. 1400, when the locus of population moved west to the "Cities of Cibola" discovered by Coronado in 1540. Keith W. Kintigh demonstrates how changing agricultural strategies and developing mechanisms of social integration contributed to these population shifts. In particular, he argues that occupants of the earliest large pueblos relied on runoff agriculture, but that gradually spring-and river-fed irrigation systems were adopted. Resultant strengthening of the mechanisms of social integration allowed the increased occupational stability of the protohistorical Zuni towns. 
546 |a In English. 
650 0 |a Land settlement patterns. 
653 |a Society & culture: general 
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