Introduction

Paleoindian
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Archaic
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Basketmaker II
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Basketmaker III
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Pueblo I
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Pueblo II
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

Pueblo III
  Overview
  Food
  Housing
  Artifacts

 


The Pueblo I Period: A.D. 750 to 900

Housing

Dramatic changes in housing took place during the Pueblo I period, changes in which archaeologists recognize the beginnings of true pueblo architecture. The word pueblo is Spanish for “town” or “village,” and it was during the Pueblo I period that the first villages came into being in the Mesa Verde region. Any settlement with more than 50 rooms is considered by archaeologists to be a village.

The most dramatic change in family housing during the Pueblo I period was the building of substantial aboveground rooms, one story tall, that were used not only for food storage, but also for daily living. Unlike the aboveground rooms of the Basketmaker III period, which were not connected to one another, those built during the Pueblo I period were constructed side-by-side, with “shared” walls. These groups of rooms are called “roomblocks,” and they are usually located north of the pithouses. Some rooms were used exclusively for storing dried corn and other foodstuffs. Others have fire hearths and food-grinding tools in them, which indicates that people lived and worked in them for at least part of the year. The open area between the roomblock and the pithouses was a plaza, which was used as an additional work area when weather permitted. As during the preceding period, refuse accumulated in a designated midden area south of the pithouses (Figure 1).

Pueblo I period village. Adapted from Figure 1.8 in McPhee Community Cluster Introduction, by A. E. Kane. In Dolores Archaeological Program: Anasazi Communities at Dolores: McPhee Village, edited by A. E. Kane and C. K. Robinson. Bureau of Reclamation Engineering and Research Center, Denver, 1988.
Figure 1: Pueblo I Period Village

Early in the Pueblo I period, roomblocks were built with a combination of stone, plant materials, and adobe. Upright stone slabs formed the base of the walls, and wooden posts, brush, and adobe were used to construct the upper part of the walls, in the jacal fashion. Through time, more and more stone was incorporated into the construction of these rooms, so that by the end of the Pueblo I period, many rooms included walls that were at least partly masonry. Masonry walls consisted of stacked stone blocks, usually set in place with mortar.

So what was happening with pithouses during this time? They were becoming deeper, and their roofs were becoming flatter. Some structures were up to 2 meters (6 to 7 feet) deep, and their roofs were flush or nearly flush with the surrounding ground surface (Figure 2). Entry into these pithouses was exclusively through the smoke hole in the roof, because antechambers had been replaced by simple ventilation shafts, usually at the south end of the structure. Benches, common in Basketmaker III pithouses, became less common during the Pueblo I period, but other interior details, such as hearths, deflectors, and wing walls, were similar to those seen in earlier structures.

Pueblo I pithouse cross section. Pen-and-ink drawing by Lew Matis. Copyright Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.

Figure 2: Pueblo I Pithouse Cross Section

Archaeologists believe that people continued to live in pithouses at least during part of the year. But evidence also suggests that, in addition to the routine daily activities of cooking, eating, and sleeping, certain ritual functions may have been performed in Pueblo I pithouses as well. For example, the presence of a small, round pit called a sipapu (pronounced SEE-pah-poo) is often interpreted as evidence of ritual activity. When present, sipapus are located north of the hearth and are often filled with clean sand (Figure 3). Sipapus are thought by some Pueblo Indians to represent the hole from which humans emerged from the underworld.

Pueblo I pithouse schematic. Copyright Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
Figure 3: Pueblo I Pithouse Schematic

Great kivas, the large public buildings first seen during the Basketmaker III period, became larger and more common during the Pueblo I period. These underground structures were sizeable enough to accommodate many people, far more than the members of a single family. Archaeologists believe that great kivas served the important social function of bringing together many members of the community on important occasions.

Finally, small, isolated structures consisting of one or two rooms were built next to agricultural fields during this time. Called “field houses,” these structures allowed people to spend several days away from their villages in order to keep watch over their crops.