Archaic–Early Basketmakers The first people in the
San Juan Basin were hunter-gatherers: the
Archaic–Early Basketmaker people. These small bands descended from nomadic
Clovis big-game hunters who arrived in the Southwest around 10,000 BC. More than 70 campsites from this period, carbon-dated to the period 7000–1500 BC and mostly consisting of stone chips and other leavings, were found in
Atlatl Cave and elsewhere within Chaco Canyon, with at least one of the sites located on the canyon floor near an exposed arroyo. The Archaic–Early Basketmaker people were nomadic or semi-nomadic
hunter-gatherers who over time began making baskets to store gathered plants. By the end of the period, some people cultivated food. Excavation of their campsites and rock shelters has revealed that they made tools, gathered wild plants, and killed and processed game. Slab-lined storage
cists indicate a change from a wholly nomadic lifestyle.
Ancestral Puebloans By 900 BC, Archaic people lived at Atlatl Cave and similar sites. DNA evidence establishes the people of
Picuris Pueblo once lived in Chaco Canyon. By AD 490, the descendants of those who lived in Chaco Canyon, of the
Late Basketmaker II period, farmed lands around Shabik'eshchee Village and other
pit-house settlements at Chaco. A small population of
Basketmakers remained in the Chaco Canyon area. The broad arc of their cultural elaboration culminated around 800, during the
Pueblo I period, when they were building crescent-shaped stone complexes, each comprising four to five residential suites abutting subterranean
kivas, large enclosed areas reserved for rites. Such structures characterize the
Early Pueblo People. By 850, the Ancient Pueblo population had rapidly expanded: groups resided in larger, more densely populated pueblos. Strong evidence attests to a canyon-wide turquoise processing and trading industry dating from the tenth century. Around then, the first section of
Pueblo Bonito was built: a curved row of 50 rooms near its present north wall. Archaeogenomic analysis of the mitochondria of nine skeletons from high-status graves in Pueblo Bonito determined that members of an elite
matriline were interred here for approximately 330 years between 800 and 1130, suggesting continuity with the matrilineal succession practices of many Pueblo nations today. The cohesive Chacoan system began to unravel around 1140, perhaps triggered by an extreme 50-year drought that began in 1130; chronic climatic instability, including a series of severe droughts, struck the region again between 1250 and 1450. Poor water management led to arroyo cutting; deforestation was extensive and economically devastating: timber for construction had to be hauled instead from outlying mountain ranges such as the
Chuska mountains, more than to the west. Outlying communities began to depopulate and by the end of the century the buildings in the central canyon had been neatly sealed and abandoned. Some scholars suggest that violence and warfare, perhaps involving cannibalism, impelled the evacuations. Dismembered bodies dating from Chacoan times were found at two sites in the central canyon. Yet Chacoan complexes showed little evidence of being defended or defensively sited high on cliff faces or atop mesas. Only several minor sites at Chaco have evidence of the large-scale burning that would suggest enemy raids. Archaeological and cultural evidence leads scientists to believe people from this region migrated south, east, and west into the valleys and drainages of the
Little Colorado River, the
Rio Puerco, and the
Rio Grande. Anthropologist
Joseph Tainter deals at length with the structure and decline of Chaco civilization in his 1988 study
The Collapse of Complex Societies.
Athabaskan succession File:Prehistoric-Roads.jpg|thumb|350px|alt=Large square map of northwestern New Mexico and neighboring parts of, clockwise from left, western Arizona, southeastern Utah, and southwestern Colorado. The map region has a green and blocky rectangular-crescent area at its center labeled "Chaco Culture National Historical Park". Radiating from the green region are seven segmented gold lines: "[p]rehistoric roads", each several dozen kilometers in length when measured according to the map scale factor. Roughly seventy red dots mark the location of "Great House[s]"; they are widely spread across the map, many of them far from the green area, near the extremes of the map, more than one hundred kilometers from the green area. Two proceed roughly south, one southwest, one northwest, one straight north, and the last to the southeast. Yellow dots mark the location of modern settlements: "Shiprock", "Cortez", "Farmington", and "Aztec" to the northwest and north; "Nageezi", "Cuba", and "Pueblo Pintado" to the northeast and east; "Grants", "Crownpoint", and "Gallup" to the south and southwest. They are connected by a network of gray lines marking various interstate and state highways. A fan of thin blue lines along the northern margins of the map depict the San Juan River and its communicants.|Prehistoric roads and great houses in the San Juan Basin, superimposed on a map showing modern roads and settlements
Numic-speaking peoples, such as the
Ute and
Shoshone, were present on the Colorado Plateau beginning in the 12th century. Nomadic
Southern Athabaskan-speaking peoples, such as the
Apache and
Navajo, succeeded the Pueblo people in this region by the 15th century. In the process, they acquired Chacoan customs and agricultural skills. Ute tribal groups also frequented the region, primarily during hunting and raiding expeditions. The modern Navajo Nation lies west of Chaco Canyon, and many Navajo live in surrounding areas.
Excavation and protection The first documented trip through Chaco Canyon was an 1823 expedition led by New Mexican governor
José Antonio Vizcarra when the area was under Mexican rule. He noted several large ruins in the canyon. The American trader
Josiah Gregg wrote about the ruins of Chaco Canyon, referring in 1832 to Pueblo Bonito as "built of fine-grit sandstone". In 1849, a U.S. Army detachment passed through and surveyed the ruins, following United States acquisition of the Southwest with its victory in the
Mexican War in 1848. The canyon was so remote, however, that it was scarcely visited over the next 50 years. After brief reconnaissance work by
Smithsonian scholars in the 1870s, formal archaeological work began in 1896 when a party from the
American Museum of Natural History based in New York City—the
Hyde Exploring Expedition—began excavating Pueblo Bonito. Spending five summers in the region, they sent more than 60,000 artifacts back to New York and operated a series of trading posts in the area. In 1901
Richard Wetherill, who had worked for the Hyde expedition,
claimed a homestead of that included Pueblo Bonito,
Pueblo del Arroyo, and
Chetro Ketl. While investigating Wetherill's land claim, federal land agent Samuel J. Holsinger detailed the physical setting of the canyon and the sites, noted prehistoric road segments and stairways above Chetro Ketl, and documented prehistoric dams and irrigation systems. His report went unpublished and unheeded. It urged the creation of a national park to safeguard Chacoan sites. The next year,
Edgar Lee Hewett, president of New Mexico Normal University (later renamed
New Mexico Highlands University), mapped many Chacoan sites. Hewett and others helped enact the Federal
Antiquities Act of 1906, the first U.S. law to protect relics; it was, in effect, a direct consequence of Wetherill's controversial activities at Chaco (including amateur excavations, reuse of ruin materials for building, and a large livestock ranching operation). The Act also authorized the president to establish
national monuments: on March 11, 1907, Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed Chaco Canyon National Monument. Wetherill relinquished his land claims. In 1920, the
National Geographic Society began an archaeological examination of Chaco Canyon and appointed
Neil Judd to head the project. After a reconnaissance trip that year, Judd proposed to excavate
Pueblo Bonito, the largest ruin at Chaco. Beginning in 1921, Judd spent seven field seasons at Chaco. Living and working conditions were spartan at best. In his memoir, Judd wrote, "Chaco Canyon has its limitations as a summer resort". By 1925, his excavators had removed 100,000 short tons of
overburden, using a team of "35 or more Indians, ten white men, and eight or nine horses". The team found only 69
hearths in the ruin, a puzzling discovery as winters are cold at Chaco. Judd sent
A. E. Douglass more than 90 specimens for
tree-ring dating, then in its infancy. At that time, Douglass had only a "floating"
chronology. Only in 1929 did a Judd-led team find the "missing link". Most of the beams used at Chaco were cut between 1033 and 1092, the height of construction there. In 1949, the
University of New Mexico deeded over adjoining lands to form an expanded Chaco Canyon National Monument. In return, the university maintained scientific research rights to the area. By 1959, the
National Park Service had constructed a park visitor center, staff housing, and campgrounds. As a historic property of the National Park Service, the National Monument was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966. In 1971, researchers Robert Lister and James Judge established the "Chaco Center", a division for cultural research that functioned as a joint project between the University of New Mexico and the National Park Service. A number of multidisciplinary research projects, archaeological surveys, and limited excavations began during this time. The Chaco Center extensively surveyed the
Chacoan roads, well-constructed and strongly reinforced thoroughfares radiating from the central canyon. The richness of the cultural remains at park sites led to the expansion of the small National Monument into the Chaco Culture National Historical Park on December 19, 1980, when were added to the protected area. In 1987,
UNESCO designated the park a
World Heritage Site. To safeguard Chacoan sites on adjacent
Bureau of Land Management and
Navajo Nation lands, the Park Service developed the multi-agency Chaco Culture Archaeological Protection Site program. These initiatives have identified more than 2,400 archeological sites within the current park's boundaries, only a small fraction of which have been excavated. == Management ==