Riddles of the Anasazi
Toward the end of the 13th century, something went terribly wrong among the Anasazi. What awful event forced the people to flee their homeland, never to return?
- By David Roberts
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2003, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
More recently, the excavators at Castle Rock recognized that some of the dead had been cannibalized. They also found evidence of scalping, decapitation and “face removing”—a practice that may have turned the victim’s head into a deboned portable trophy.
Suspicions of Anasazi cannibalism were first raised in the late 19th century, but it wasn’t until the 1970s that a handful of physical anthropologists, including Christy Turner of Arizona State University, really pushed the argument. Turner’s 1999 book, Man Corn, documents evidence of 76 different cases of prehistoric cannibalism in the Southwest that he uncovered during more than 30 years of research. Turner developed six criteria for detecting cannibalism from bones: the breaking of long bones to get at marrow, cut marks on bones made by stone knives, the burning of bones, “anvil abrasions” resulting from placing a bone on a rock and pounding it with another rock, the pulverizing of vertebrae, and “pot polishing”—a sheen left on bones when they are boiled for a long time in a clay vessel. To strengthen his argument, Turner refuses to attribute the damage on a given set of bones to cannibalism unless all six criteria are met.
Predictably, Turner’s claims aroused controversy. Many of today’s Pueblo Indians were deeply offended by the allegations, as were a number of Anglo archaeologists and anthropologists who saw the assertions as exaggerated and part of a pattern of condescension toward Native Americans. Even in the face of Turner’s evidence, some experts clung to the notion that the “extreme processing” of the remains could have instead resulted from, say, the post-mortem destruction of the bodies of social outcasts, such as witches and deviants. Kurt Dongoske, an Anglo archaeologist who works for the Hopi, told me in 1994, “As far as I’m concerned, you can’t prove cannibalism until you actually find human remains in human coprolite [fossilized excrement].”
A few years later, University of Colorado biochemist Richard Marlar and his team did just that. At an Anasazi site in southwestern Colorado called CowboyWash, excavators found three pit houses—semi-subterranean dwellings—whose floors were littered with the disarticulated skeletons of seven victims. The bones seemed to bear most of Christy Turner’s hallmarks of cannibalism. The team also found coprolite in one of the pit houses. In a study published in Nature in 2000, Marlar and his colleagues reported the presence in the coprolite of a human protein called myoglobin, which occurs only in human muscle tissue. Its presence could have resulted only from the consumption of human flesh. The excavators also noted evidence of violence that went beyond what was needed to kill: one child, for instance, was smashed in the mouth so hard with a club or a stone that the teeth were broken off. As Marlar speculated to ABC News, defecation next to the dead bodies 8 to 16 hours after the act of cannibalism “may have been the final desecration of the site, or the degrading of the people who lived there.”
When the Castle Rock scholars submitted some of their artifacts to Marlar in 2001, his analysis detected myoglobin on the inside surfaces of two cooking vessels and one serving vessel, as well as on four hammerstones and two stone axes. Kuckelman cannot say whether the Castle Rock cannibalism was in response to starvation, but she says it was clearly related to warfare. “I feel differently about this place now than when we were working here,” a pensive Kuckelman told me at the site. “We didn’t have the whole picture then. Now I feel the full tragedy of the place.”
That the Anasazi may have resorted to violence and cannibalism under stress is not entirely surprising. “Studies indicate that at least a third of the world’s cultures have practiced cannibalism associated with warfare or ritual or both,” says WashingtonStateUniversity researcher Lipe. “Occasional incidents of ‘starvation cannibalism’ have probably occurred at some time in history in all cultures.”
From Colorado, I traveled south with Vaughn Hadenfeldt to the Navajo Reservation in Arizona. We spent four more days searching among remote Anasazi sites occupied until the great migration. Because hiking on the reservation requires a permit from the Navajo Nation, these areas are even less visited than the Utah canyons. Three sites we explored sat atop mesas that rose 500 to 1,000 feet, and each had just one reasonable route to the summit. Although these aeries are now within view of a highway, they seem so improbable as habitation sites (none has water) that no archaeologists investigated them until the late 1980s, when husband-and-wife team Jonathan Haas of Chicago’s Field Museum and Winifred Creamer of Northern Illinois University made extensive surveys and dated the sites by using the known ages of different styles of pottery found there.
Haas and Creamer advance a theory that the inhabitants of these settlements developed a unique defense strategy. As we stood atop the northernmost mesa, I could see the second mesa just southeast of us, though not the third, which was farther to the east; yet when we got on top of the third, we could see the second. In the KayentaValley, which surrounded us, Haas and Creamer identified ten major villages that were occupied after 1250 and linked by lines of sight. It was not difficulty of access that protected the settlements (none of the scrambles we performed here began to compare with the climbs we made in the Utah canyons), but an alliance based on visibility. If one village was under attack, it could send signals to its allies on the other mesas.
Now, as I sat among the tumbled ruins of the northernmost mesa, I pondered what life must have been like here during that dangerous time. Around me lay sherds of pottery in a style called Kayenta black on white, decorated in an endlessly baroque elaboration of tiny grids, squares and hatchings—evidence, once again, that the inhabitants had taken time for artistry. And no doubt the pot makers had found the view from their mesa-top home lordly, as I did. But what made the view most valuable to them was that they could see the enemy coming.
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Comments (5)
Cool i love the anasazi people. it is so fun to research. I figured out things about them i never knew. it is very interesting. thanx for making these websites and letting people visit them i know i really enjoyed them or it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! love Sexy
Posted by Joshua Wachter on January 30,2013 | 02:01 PM
The Anasazi are often said by to have simply vanished one day, leaving their tools food pottery and homes behind them. Those who imply that the cultural artifacts we find of the Anasazi as if they were suddenly dropped when the entire civilization disappeared are wrong. According to Craig Childs who spoke to archeologist who have studied in the field for years: “…the mystery was an oversimplified and outdated notion. The reality is that there is ample evidence of their existence and considerable evidence to support explanations for their “disappearance” that are not mysterious or even particularly unusual.Careful examination of the evidence along with sociological patterns will surely alleviate any idea that the Anasazi simply dropped from their carefully and masterfully constructed dwellings onto the pages of prehistory in one sudden inexplicable cosmic poof!
Posted by Timothy J. Robeck on October 28,2012 | 12:34 PM
I like to appologize for a cmt I made earlier on an article that was incomplete. This article on the Anasazi People was great. Full of information thats not in the history books, and the photo gallery was also very informative. Its amazing how a culture could live the way they did and survive so long and change thier way of life like the myians did. Will anyone ever know what really happen to these great people. I sure hope so. Thank you for your time.
Posted by Pauline Mann-Krueger on July 2,2010 | 03:49 AM
The coprolite found could have been from invaders, which makes more sense since the very few samples are from Cowboy Wash and Southwest CO. Also, there is no evidence that this was widespread and in fact the limited occurrences suggests otherwise. To posture these few instances as part of the Anasazi culture or even to suggest it related to drought is irresponsible archeology at best. At worst, lazy and bombastic hyperbole.
Posted by ijostl on June 21,2010 | 09:09 PM
Greetings
I'm planning on an trip to Chaco Canyon this Spring,a native american guide or an archiologist w/out attitute is what would make the experience complete.
Any referrals for this services?
Thanks
Merci
Posted by Merci on January 7,2010 | 02:57 PM
Cool i love the anasazi people. it is so fun to research. I figured out things about them i never knew. it is very interesting. thanx for making these websites and letting people visit them i know i really enjoyed them or it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! love Sexy
Posted by sexy on May 22,2008 | 01:14 PM