Why did they
leave? It is impossible to find a single cause that can explain it,
but there appear to be several that contributed. First, the climate
during the Pueblo III period was somewhat unstable with erratic rainfall
patterns and periods of drought. This weather problem climaxed with
a thirty-year drought starting about 1270 that coincided with a cooling
trend that significantly shortened the growing season. Perhaps the expanding
population had pressed the limits of the land's capacity to support
the people so that they were unable to survive the climatic upheavals
of the thirteenth century.
Could they have
been driven out by nomadic tribes, such as Utes or Navajos? There is
no direct evidence that either group, or any other like them, was in
the area that early. There is mounting evidence, however, that the Numic-speaking
peoples, of whom the Utes and Paiutes are part, had spread northwestward
out of southwestern Nevada and were in contact with the Pueblo-like
peoples of western Utah by A.D. 1200. It is certainly possible that
they were in San Juan County shortly after that. Ute and Paiute sites
are very difficult to distinguish from Anasazi campsites, and we may
not be recognizing them. Navajos were in northwestern New Mexico by
1500, but we do not know where they were before that. Perhaps the answer
to the Anasazis' departure from Utah lies in a combination of the bad-climate
and the arriving-nomads theories.
See: J. Richard
Ambler and Marc Gaede, The Anasazi (1977); and Linda S. Cordell, Prehistory
of the Southwest (1984).
Winston Hurst |