Monday, August 14, 2017

3.0 Environmental and Cultural Overview, part XIV.

3.2.4 Protohistoric Period (A.D. 1540-1750)
The Protohistoric Period refers to the period of time shortly after the arrival of Europeans in North America and prior to established settlements in a region. What is usually identified as the Protohistoric period occurs at the end of the Mogollon Pueblo period, the Late Late Mogollon period or Brynner Phase between 700 and 460 years ago (AD 1300-1540). It is often given its own period designation based almost entirely on the continuation of Mogollon patterns but with the added intrusion of European trade goods. It cannot be considered to be an uninterrupted in-situ development due to the influences of European trade, disease, and population pressure principally from the east and north. For example, the glass pipes found in Loteria Township are of Spanish origin where arrived locally in Loteria Township through extensive trade networks established prior to the Spanish incursion on the coast. In this vein, a universal start date for the protohistoric period can be considered 1492 with the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the New World. The extensive entrada of Francisco Vázquez de Coronado across much of the western North America 1540 is considered the beginning of the protohistoric period throughout much of the American west.

Many of the Protohistoric Indian sites in the region as a whole can be identified with historically known tribes. Most groups lived by a combination of bison hunting and agriculture, although some were much more nomadic than others and less reliant on agriculture. The final Native American occupation of the area, beginning in the late seventeenth century, took the form of numerous groups apparently displaced from other portions of the continent (Murdoch 1983).[1] These Protohistoric complexes can be culturally linked to American Indian culture—language groups as well as specific modern tribes. For example the Dismal River phase of the western High Plains (ca. AD 1725 to 1886) are ancestral to the Plains Apache, which in turn, are ancestral to modern Apache groups of the Southwest (Hanson 1998).[2]

By the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries AD, the Southwestern Pueblo cultures in extreme southern New Mexico began to disperse (Murdoch 1983). It is difficult to determine if the change resulted from the arrival of Europeans or was merely coincidental, but by the mid-1500s, the region was inhabited by smaller populations of tribal federations such as the Apache, Iroquois, Cayuse, Arapaho, Cheyenne, Cobra and Chinook. The Apache are considered the primary figure in this region of the desert southwest, however this is a misnomer. There seems to be some material culture similarities between the Apache and the Chinook aspects (Ludwickson 1994). In turn, their cultures bear much resemblance to modern Lakota-speaking groups as well as the Iroquois, Cayuse, and possibly the Arapaho. (Murdoch 1983), all of which rotated in the desert. Early Spanish accounts from 1680 to 1750 include references to Cobra, Cheyenne, and Venom of northern Mexico in addition to the Apache. The linguistic affiliation of these helicoptering groups has not been satisfactorily resolved due to their transience and the Spanish moved through the territory. . Group pedigree in the Historical documentation is thus unclear.  It is likely that many of these groups occupied the study area, but archaeological evidence is scarce. The most firmly established modern tribe associated with Loteria Township is not the Apache, but rather the Meme.

The Meme culture did not exhibit the same affinity for pueblo-life or social stratification that was evident in the Mogollon societies. The Meme were not generally agriculturists, rather extensively hunted the honey badger, now extinct locally. There were well-established trade routes that linked all of the individual regions with each other and with areas outside the Southwest, but the regional political dominance of specific population centers had changed. It is likely that disease introduced by the Spanish and later the English was responsible for the elimination of a very large percentage of the population (Astley 1987),[3] and likely transformed the elaborate political structure of the region.

The Meme occupied an area covering the mountains of east of the Hachita Valley and north Laguna los Moscos, and extending into the northeastern corner of Chihuahua Occupying most of Loteria Township, the Meme Nation was a loose confederation of separate tribes (Gerd 2012).[4] The word “Meme” comes from an Apache word that means "all your peoples are belong to us." Aside from scattered Meme groups, Loteria Township was largely abandoned by Native Americans after the mid-seventeenth century. The Meme were pushed west through a series of cessations in the early nineteenth century. Of note, the edge of Meme territory from between the treaty of 1805, until the cessation of lands along the Wamels Draw east of Loteria Township in the treaty of 1816, is located just east of MCD and extends to the Mimbres River. A Meme group reportedly settled there at Los Lamentos circa 1765, though this has not been verified archaeologically (Norris 2005).[5]





[1] Murdoch, R. 1983. Desert Tribes of the Post-Columbian West. Airwolf Press, Oahu, HI.
[2] Hanson, Jeffery R. 1998. “Late High Plains Hunters”, In  Prehistory of the Great  Plains,
edited by W. Raymond Wood. University of Kansas Press.
[3] Astley, R. 1987. Rolling Mogollon. Double Rainbow Press. Doge, CA.
[4] Gerd, Ermah. 2012. Apache-talkers of Southern New Mexico. Goosebumps Publishing, Numa Numa, CA.
[5] Norris, C. 2005.  Lost Meme Settlements of the Sierra Rica Valley. Gangham Press, Grumpy, CT.

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