I recently visited the ruins at Honanki and Palatki. These are prehistoric settlements built into the red rock cliffs near Sedona, AZ. Today, the people who built these dwellings are called "Sinagua", which comes from Spanish for "without water". But everyone needs water, right? I wondered where these people got drinking water.
I looked for springs around Honanki and Palatki and didn't find any. That's weird!
| Zoom in to see locations of Honanki (H) and Palatki (P) in relation to USGS-mapped springs (blue) and NAU-mapped springs (green). |
Although springs have dried up in recent times, the USGS spring data was mapped in the late 1800s / early 1900s when many more springs were flowing. It looks like the geology of the Sedona Red Rock cliffs just don't produce springs. So even if the location of springs was different 800 years ago, it would be surprising if there were springs in the cliffs where these people lived.
The closest mapped spring (blue dot = unconfirmed water source) is 1.5 and 2.7 miles away, respectively, but there is no evidence of water in the aerial imagery. The next closest (green dot = confirmed water source) is 4.7 and 3 miles away, respectively. Neither Palatki nor Honanki is even built in one of the larger drainages that might flow more often/longer; the drainages that feed their valleys are quite short.
I don't think these settlements had access to aboveground water throughout the year unless they dug wells or used cisterns to store water.
These and other prehistoric communities in the desert Southwest often built cliff dwellings high above canyon floors, far from surface water sources. Archaeologists believe these people collected runoff during rainstorms using check dams and seeps, and stored water in cisterns or ceramic containers for later use.
Across the prehistoric Southwest, populations used ingenious methods to exploit scarce water:
- Rock overhangs and cisterns captured and stored rainwater.
- Seasonal mobility allowed families to occupy dry sites part of the year.
- Terraced fields, check dams, and soil-retention walls conserved moisture for crops.
- Small permanent settlements clustered near ephemeral water sources, such as seeps and seasonal pools.
In conclusion, while many large settlements in the prehistoric Southwest were built near springs or rivers, groups like the Anasazi, Sinagua, and others developed highly effective ways to survive in water-scarce environments through dry-land agriculture, runoff collection, and strategic mobility.
No comments:
Post a Comment