WSU Researchers See Violent
Era in Ancient Southwest
By Eric Sorensen,Washington State University science writer,
August 4, 2014
Specialized,
dependent community less violent
Era in Ancient Southwest
By Eric Sorensen,
PULLMAN,
Wash. – It’s a given that, in numbers terms, the 20th century was the most
violent in world history, with civil wars, purges and two world wars killing as
many as 200 million people.
But on a per-capita basis, Washington State
University archaeologist
Tim Kohler has documented a particularly bloody period more than eight
centuries ago on what is now American soil. Between 1140 and 1180, in the
central Mesa Verde of southwest Colorado ,
four relatively peaceful centuries of pueblo living devolved into several
decades of violence.
Two
areas diverge in violence
Writing in the journal American Antiquity,
Kohler and his colleagues at WSU and the University of Colorado
Boulder document how nearly nine out of 10 sets
of human remains from that period have trauma from blows to either their heads
or parts of their arms.
“If we’re identifying that much trauma, many
were dying a violent death,” said Kohler, whose study was funded by the
National Science Foundation.
Yet at the same time, in the northern Rio Grande region of what is now New Mexico , people had far less violence
while experiencing similar growth and, ostensibly, population pressures.
Viewed together, said Kohler, the two areas
offer insight into what motivates violence in some societies but not others.
The study also offers more clues to the mysterious depopulation of the northern
Southwest, from a population of about 40,000 people in the mid-1200s to none 30
years later.
Comparative
look at physical trauma
From the days they first arrived in the
Southwest in the 1800s, anthropologists and archaeologists have for the most
part downplayed evidence of violent conflict among the early farmers in the
region. A minority raised the specter of violence but lacked a good measure for
it.
“Archaeologists with one or two exceptions
have not tried to develop an objective metric of levels of violence through
time,” said Kohler. “They’ve looked at a mix of various things like burned
structures, defensive site locations and so forth, but it’s very difficult to
distill an estimate of levels of violence from such things.
“We’ve concentrated on one thing, and that is
trauma, especially to the head and portions of the arms,” he said. “That’s
allowed us to look at levels of violence through time in a comparative way.”
Population
booms
Meanwhile, Kohler and his colleagues are
examining the role of factors like maize production, changes to the climate and
growing population in changing levels of violence. A paper of his published in
June in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that the
Southwest had a baby boom between 500 and 1300 that likely exceeded any
population spurt on earth today.
Both the central Mesa Verde and northern Rio Grande experienced population booms, said Kohler, but
surprisingly, the central Mesa Verde got more violent while the northern Rio Grande grew less so.
Kohler offers a few explanations.
Social structures among people in the northern
Rio Grande
changed so that they identified less with their kin and more with the larger
pueblo and specific organizations that span many pueblos, such as medicine
societies. The Rio Grande
also had more commercial exchanges where craft specialists provided people both
in the pueblo and outsiders with specific things they needed, such as obsidian
arrow points.
But in the central Mesa Verde, there was less
specialization.
“When you
don’t have specialization in societies, there’s a sense in which everybody is a
competitor because everybody is doing the same thing,” said Kohler. But with specialization, people are more dependent on
each other and more reluctant to do harm.
Kohler and his colleagues also cite Harvard
psychologist Steven Pinker’s thinking in his book, “The Better Angels of Our
Nature: Why Violence Has Declined.”
“Pinker thought that what he called ‘gentle
commerce’ was very important in the pacification of the world over the last
5,000 years,” said Kohler. “That seems to work pretty well in our record as
well.”
Wealth,
age might have influenced depopulation
The episode of conflict in southwest Colorado seems to have begun when people in the Chaco
culture, halfway between central Mesa Verde and northern Rio
Grande , attempted to spread into southwest Colorado .
“They were resisted,” Kohler said, “but
resistance was futile.”
From 1080 to 1130, the Chaco-influenced people
in southwest Colorado
did well. In the mid-1100s, there was a severe drought and the core of Chaco culture fell apart. Much of the area around Chaco lost population, and in 1160, violence in the
central Mesa Verde peaked. Slightly more than a century later, everyone left
that area, too.
“In the Mesa Verde there could be a
haves-versus-have-nots dynamic towards the very end,” said Kohler. “The people
who stayed the longest were probably the people who were located in the very
best spots. But those pueblos too were likely losing population.
“And it might have been the older folks who
stuck around,” he said, “who weren’t so anxious to move as the young folks who
thought, ‘We could make a better living elsewhere.’” Older, or with too few
people to marshal a good defense, the remaining people in the Mesa Verde
pueblos were particularly vulnerable to raids.
At least two of the last-surviving large
pueblos in the central Mesa Verde were attacked as the region was being
abandoned. Some of their inhabitants probably made it out alive, but, said
Kohler, “Many did not.”
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