Continuity and Connections (ASWM 37-1)

Continuity and Connections: The Living Landscapes of Mesa Verde

Issue editor: Donna M. Glowacki

64 pages

Taw’toy’kya. Kash’katrati. Hwâalâ P’ê W ækêewâ. Tewayogeh. Gad Deelzhahi. Mesa Verde has many names and holds many stories. This edition of Archaeology Southwest Magazine gathers many strands to tell the story of Mesa Verde today and for the future.

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Description

Inside this issue:

Continuity and Connections: The Living Landscapes of Mesa Verde, Donna M. Glowacki

The Value of Knowing, Brian Vallo

Founding a Mesa Verde Homeland: Basketmaker III Period Migration and Community Creation, Shanna Diederichs and Kari L. Schleher

Hwâalâ P’ê W ækêewâ: Hemish Connections to the Central Mesa Verde Region, Christopher Toya

Deep Soils and Deep History: The Great Sage Plain, Jason Chuipka

A Zuni Perspective on the Mesa Verde Region, Octavius Seowtewa

The Haynie Site: A Great House Village in the Mesa Verde Region, Susan C. Ryan and Lyle Balenquah

Sartorial Splendor: Clothing and Basketry at Mesa Verde in the 1200s, Edward A. Jolie and Laurie Webster

Spotlight: Investigating Pueblo Jewelry in the Mesa Verde Region, Michelle I. Turner and Kari L. Schleher

Reconnecting the Ancestral Pueblo World through Pottery Design, Benjamin A. Bellorado, Jamie Merewether, Lori Stephens Reed, Kari L. Schleher, Michelle I. Turner and Jonathan Dombrosky

The Pueblo Farming Project, Paul Ermigiotti and Mark D. Varien

Resiliency, Community, and Water Storage on the Mesa Verde North Escarpment, Brian Yaquinto

Picuris Connections to Mesa Verde, Cecilia Shields

History of Research at Mesa Verde National Park, Timothy D. Hovezak

Preservation Spotlight: The Alcoves of Mesa Verde, Christine McAllister and Kay E. Barnett

Spotlight: Site 5MV90: Discovery of a Pit Structure, Joel Gamache and Kay E. Barnett

Spotlight: Terrestrial Laser Scanning: New Tools for Documenting Ancestral Pueblo Architecture, Sheldon Baker

Reflections on the Village Ecodynamics Project, Tim Kohler, Mark Varien, Scott Ortman and Kyle Bocinsky

Mesa Verde Region Community Centers: Forty Years of Research, Grant D. Coffey and Mark D. Varien

Before Migration: The Castle Rock Community in the 1200s, Radosław Palonka

Spotlight: New Findings about Castle Rock Community’s Rock Imagery, Radosław Palonka and Katarzyna Ciomek

Looking at Mesa Verde from the Middle San Juan, Paul F. Reed and Lori Stephens Reed

Looking at Mesa Verde from the West, Winston B. Hurst and James R. Allison

Journeys to the Fourth World: Hopi and Mesa Verde Connections, Lyle Balenquah

The Mesa Verde Migrations: What Happened and Where Did They Go? Donna M. Glowacki

The Protohistoric Period in the Central Mesa Verde Region, Kellam Throgmorton

Respectful Caretakers and Guardians, Regina Lopez-Whiteskunk

The Continued Importance of Gad Deelzhahi in the Diné World, Wade Campbell and Richard M. Begay

The Diné (Navajo) in Mesa Verde, Timothy D. Hovezak

An Elder’s Perspective on Mesa Verde, Tessie Naranjo

Back Sight, Stephen E. Nash

Archaeology Southwest Magazine Vol. 37, No. 1

Continuity and Connections: The Living Landscapes of Mesa Verde

Issue editor: Donna M. Glowacki

Taw’toy’kya. Kash’katrati. Hwâalâ P’ê W ækêewâ. Tewayogeh. Gad Deelzhahi. Mesa Verde has many names and holds many stories. This edition of Archaeology Southwest Magazine gathers many strands to tell the story of Mesa Verde today and for the future.

Continuity and Connections: The Living Landscapes of Mesa Verde, Donna M. Glowacki

Mesa Verde National Park

Ute Mountain Ute Tribal Park

“Social Identity in the Northern San Juan,” Archaeology Southwest Magazine Vol. 24, No. 3 (free PDF download)

The Value of Knowing, Brian Vallo

Pueblo of Acoma

Founding a Mesa Verde Homeland: Basketmaker III Period Migration and Community Creation, Shanna Diederichs and Kari L. Schleher

Crow Canyon Archaeological Center

The Basketmaker Communities Project

Hwâalâ P’ê W ækêewâ: Hemish Connections to the Central Mesa Verde Region, Christopher Toya

Pueblo of Jemez

Valles Caldera National Preserve

Deep Soils and Deep History: The Great Sage Plain, Jason Chuipka

Woods Canyon Archaeological Consultants

A Zuni Perspective on the Mesa Verde Region, Octavius Seowtewa

Pueblo of Zuni

The Haynie Site: A Great House Village in the Mesa Verde Region, Susan C. Ryan and Lyle Balenquah

Crow Canyon Archaeological Center

Explore the Haynie site

The Northern Chaco Outliers Project

Sartorial Splendor: Clothing and Basketry at Mesa Verde in the 1200s, Edward A. Jolie and Laurie Webster

Carolyn Osborne’s study

Aztec Ruins National Monument

History Colorado Center

Spotlight: Investigating Pueblo Jewelry in the Mesa Verde Region, Michelle I. Turner and Kari L. Schleher

The Northern Chaco Outliers Project

Reconnecting the Ancestral Pueblo World through Pottery Design, Benjamin A. Bellorado, Jamie Merewether, Lori Stephens Reed, Kari L. Schleher, Michelle I. Turner , and Jonathan Dombrosky

The pottery in this study was recovered during investigations at the Lakeview Community, which is, turn, part of the Northern Chaco Outliers Project.

The Pueblo Farming Project, Paul Ermigiotti and Mark D. Varien

Crow Canyon Archaeological Center

The Pueblo Farming Project

Maize Database Project

Resiliency, Community, and Water Storage on the Mesa Verde North Escarpment, Brian Yaquinto

Brian works in the Bureau of Land Management’s Tres Rios Field Office.

Reese, Kelsey M.

2021  Resilient Communities of the Mesa Verde North Escarpment, AD 890–1300. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame.

Picuris Connections to Mesa Verde, Cecilia Shields

Picuris Pueblo

History of Research at Mesa Verde National Park, Timothy D. Hovezak

Important events in the development and preservation of Mesa Verde National Park

Preservation Spotlight: The Alcoves of Mesa Verde, Christine McAllister and Kay E. Barnett

Preservation at the park

Spotlight: Site 5MV90: Discovery of a Pit Structure, Joel Gamache and Kay E. Barnett

Results of Archeological Surveys and Testing for the Mesa Top and Cliff Palace Loops Roadwork (opens at YouTube)

Spotlight: Terrestrial Laser Scanning: New Tools for Documenting Ancestral Pueblo Architecture, Sheldon Baker

Reflections on the Village Ecodynamics Project, Tim Kohler, Mark D.Varien, Scott Ortman, and Kyle Bocinsky

The Village Ecodynamics Project

Mesa Verde Region Community Centers: Forty Years of Research, Grant D. Coffey and Mark D. Varien

Crow Canyon Archaeological Center

Projects mentioned in the article:

Sand Canyon Pueblo Archaeological Project

Pueblo Cultures in Transition Conference (resulting volume)

The Village Ecodynamics Project

Other related projects included here.

Before Migration: The Castle Rock Community in the 1200s, Radosław Palonka

Spotlight: New Findings about Castle Rock Community’s Rock Imagery, Radosław Palonka and Katarzyna Ciomek

Looking at Mesa Verde from the Middle San Juan, Paul F. Reed and Lori Stephens Reed

Aztec Ruins National Monument

Chaco Culture National Historical Park

“Footprints in the Middle San Juan,” Archaeology Southwest Magazine Vol. 34, No. 4

Looking at Mesa Verde from the West, Winston B. Hurst and James R. Allison

Journeys to the Fourth World: Hopi and Mesa Verde Connections, Lyle Balenquah

Becoming Hopi: A History, edited by Wesley Bernardini, Stewart B. Koyiyumptewa, Gregson Schachner, and Leigh J. Kuwanwisiwma. University of Arizona Press, 2021 (e-pub) and 2023 (paperback).

The Mesa Verde Migrations: What Happened and Where Did They Go? Donna M. Glowacki

Living and Leaving: A Social History of Regional Depopulation in Thirteenth-Century Mesa Verde, Donna M. Glowacki. University of Arizona Press 2021 (e-pub) and 2023 (paperback).

The Protohistoric Period in the Central Mesa Verde Region, Kellam Throgmorton

Respectful Caretakers and Guardians, Regina Lopez-Whiteskunk

Ute Mountain Ute Tribal Park

The Continued Importance of Gad Deelzhahi in the Diné World, Wade Campbell and Richard M. Begay

The Diné (Navajo) in Mesa Verde, Timothy D. Hovezak

An Elder’s Perspective on Mesa Verde, Tessie Naranjo

Santa Clara Pueblo

Back Sight, Stephen E. Nash

Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research

“How Archaeologists Uncover History with Trees,” SAPIENS, Nov. 8, 2017