Great Houses, Shrines, and High Places: Intervisibility in the Chacoan World

Author:

Van Dyke Ruth M.,Bocinsky R. Kyle,Windes Thomas C.,Robinson Tucker J.

Abstract

AbstractPhenomenological archaeologists and GIS scholars have turned much attention to visibility—who can see whom, and what can be seen—across ancient landscapes. Visible connections can be relatively easy to identify, but they present challenges to interpretation. Ancient peoples created intervisible connections among sites for purposes that included surveillance, defense, symbolism, shared identity, and communication. In the American Southwest, many high places are intervisible by virtue of the elevated topography and the open skies. The Chaco phenomenon, centered in northwestern New Mexico between A.D. 850 and 1140, presents an ideal situation for visibility research. In this study, we use GIS-generated viewsheds and viewnets to investigate intervisible connections among great houses, shrines, and related features across the Chacoan landscape. We demonstrate that a Chacoan shrine network, likely established during the mid-eleventh century, facilitated intervisibility between outlier communities and Chaco Canyon. It is most likely that the Chacoans created this network to enable meaningful connections for communication and identity. We conclude that the boundaries of the Chaco phenomenon are defined in some sense by intervisibility.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Museology,Archaeology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History

Reference122 articles.

1. Van Dyke Ruth M. 2004 Memory, Meaning, and Masonry: The Late Bonito Chacoan Landscape. American Antiquity 69:413–431.

2. Powers Robert P. , Gillespie William B. , and Lekson Stephen H. 1983 The Outlier Survey: A Regional View of Settlement in the San Juan Basin. Reports of the Chaco Center, No. 3. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Albuquerque.

3. Williams Patrick Ryan , and Nash Donna J. 2006 Sighting the Apu: A GIS Analysis of Wari Imperialism and the Worship of Mountain Peaks. World Archaeology 38:455–468.

4. Lekson Stephen H. 1999 The Chaco Meridian: Centers of Political Power in the Ancient Southwest. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, California.

5. Windes Thomas C. , Anderson Rachel , Johnson Brian , and Ford Cheryl 2000 Sunrise, Sunset: Sedentism and Mobility in the Chaco East Community. In Great House Communities across the Chacoan Landscape, edited by John Kantner and Nancy M. Mahoney, pp. 39–59. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 64. Tucson.

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