Tseh So, a small house ruin, Chaco canyon, New Mexico : (preliminary report) |
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![]() | Tseh So, a small house ruin, Chaco canyon, New Mexico : | ![]() |
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II. Appendix II
BURIALS FROM MOUND 50 AND MOUND 51
By Donovan Senter
The physical anthropologist must work hand in hand with the
archaeologist in solving the problems of the migrations of peoples and
of cultures. Every skeleton should be worked up as an integral part
of the data of archaeology to aid in solving the problems of cultural
relations. Certainly a physical type will change less than a pottery
type in a given stretch of time. Eventually, the cross finds of skeletons
as well as cross finds of pottery will figure in reports. Each skeleton
should be treated as an "artifact" to be studied in its relations to the
rest of the archaeological data pertaining to the site, period, and
complex.
As a study grows and we reach the point of planning our digging
to fill in hiatuses in our knowledge of relationships in sequences of pottery,
wall types, other material cultural manifestations, and physical
types, we shall fill in the chapters of the culture history of a region with
more precision and with infinitely less loss of time than is possible in
earlier and more hit or miss work. Why should the culture carrier not
be studied as closely as his manifestations? Each excavation report
should include measurements and other physical anthropological data,
with an analysis, as an integral part of the problem, and the archaeologist
should consider it as one of the factors to be considered in his distribution
studies. It is not true that "men interbreed but pots do not,"
but certainly when there is a blending of techniques of pottery making,
future pots are much less likely long to show the results of that amalgamation
than are the carriers of the two techniques, who likewise
blended. The physical combination may be analyzed and associated
with the two pottery techniques, or at least with the culture complexes
that accompanied those techniques.
The few skeletons which may appear from a small excavation do
not constitute an adequate series for conclusions, but the archaeologist
should measure and observe those skeletons and publish the raw measurements,
at least, with a clear statement of their cultural association.
Later, when sufficient data on any culture aspect have been accumulated
in this manner, the raw data may be collected from the
smaller publications and analyzed. One cannot analyze three skeletons
but he can at least present their measurements so that they may be
statistically analyzed by someone when a sufficient series has been collected,
even though it be by small bits here and there. There is, of
course, possibility of divergence of techniques in anthropometry but
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at all. Anthropometrical techniques are not difficult and most archaeologists
have had the elements of this training, so that a few days
taken from the study of pottery or of stone work would be sufficient to
work up a few otherwise neglected bones.
There is much to be said for the "validity of the argument in
favor of the delayed publication of a final report,"[1]
but many times
these withheld data published in preliminary form would aid many
workers in continuing their own research problems. Often two or more
heads are better than one if they are working separately with all
possible data toward the solution of a problem.
One may look forward to the day when excavations will be made
especially to find the relations between certain physical types and to
fill in their gaps, just as excavations were made at the previously
carefully selected site of Showlow[2]
to fill in a troublesome gap in the
tree ring chronology.
Disposal of the Dead in the Chaco
Ever since the first excavations were begun in Chaco ruins, archaeologists
have wondered at the amazing dearth of burials there. The
canyon was the home of thousands of people at one time, as is proved
by the number of rooms of the same building date in the large pueblos,
and an archaeologist acquainted with the burial customs of the northern
prehistoric Southwestern Pueblo people would expect to find thousands
of graves. Instead, entire seasons have passed without the uncovering
of a single skeleton, and the location of sixteen at Tseh So in 1936,
fragmentary as they were, was reason for rejoicing.
As early as Jackson's expedition a skull was taken from a stratum
sixteen feet below the surface near Pueblo del Arroyo.[3]
At this point the
profile of the canyon showed the ancient river bed, since filled, and "an
undulating stratum of broken pottery, flint-chippings, and small bones
firmly embedded in a coarse gravelly deposit" which represented "the
ancient surface of the grounds about the pueblo, and was probably the
sloping bank of the stream, which during the occupancy of the pueblo
may have been a considerable river. Since the desertion of this region
the old bed has become filled to the depth of at least fourteen feet, and
through this the arroyo has made its present channel. A system of
thorough excavation would undoubtedly reveal many interesting things
and is probably the only method by which anything satisfactory will
ever be learned of the industrious people who once filled this narrow
valley."[4]
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During the August, 1936, session in the Chaco, the University dug
a trench south of Chetro Ketl, with two main objects in view: (1) to
explore the possibility of a burial ground deep below the present surface
of the canyon, and (2) to ascertain some indications of the precise
profile of the landscape between Chetro Ketl and the present arroyo.
No burials were found, but dated erosion surfaces show that many a
Chaco burial ground could be so well covered with silt deposits, sixteen
feet above the old surface at this point, that even if indications of it
were found by trenching, a major excavation project would be required
to remove the skeletons.[5]
Other evidences of the deep fill which has
covered the Chaco floor since the time burials would have been interred
into it was the fourteen-foot fill found at the back wall of Chetro Ketl,[6]
the twelve-foot fill observed in 1936 over a pit house cut in half by a
break of the arroyo bank below Shabik'eschee Village, the twelve-foot
fill observed by Judd in 1922 above a pit house cut in half by falling
arroyo banks one mile east of Pueblo Bonito,[7]
and the two to six-foot
fill around the low mound on which Pueblo Bonito itself was built as
indicated by Judd's three trenches cut to a depth of twelve feet.[8]
Whatever
burials may have been made in the canyon floor must await uncovering
by teams and scrapers or by another period of erosion.
To the southwest of Chaco Canyon but in the Chaco culture district,
a cemetery was pilfered a few years ago by the Navajos and the
vessels sold to a trader. The pottery indicated its period as Pueblo III
and possibly as Pueblo II, as well. No large ruin was near, but potsherd
areas were found on the surfaces of low mounds near the burials.
The principal reason for supposing that the ancient people of the
Chaco buried their dead in cemeteries on the canyon floor is that this
was the general custom for the majority of people in the northern part
of the Pueblo area. There is evidence, however, that more than one
type of burial was made in the Chaco.
Pepper removed about 30 skeletons from a mound near Peñasco
Blanco and a mound just south of the gap which opens out from the
Chaco south and west of Pueblo Bonito.[9]
These may have represented
any period from Pueblo I to Pueblo III. He also removed a few burials
from the room fills of Pueblo Bonito,[10]
and Judd uncovered seventy-one
burials in four rooms of the same village.[11]
Most of Judd's burials were
disturbed and the bones mixed, the vessels overturned and often broken.
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the burials found undisturbed by Pepper were rich in turquoise,
and turquoise was as valuable to prehistoric thieves as diamonds
to those of today. Both Judd's and Pepper's series are now in the
National Museum at Washington.[12]
A series of thirteen skeletons from Chetro Ketl, Talus Unit No. 1,[13]
Rinconada, and near Una Vida were removed by the University of New
Mexico and the School of American Research before 1936; they are at
present in the Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe.[14]
Of these, all but
two came from rooms. One was found in the refuse dump of Chetro
Ketl,[15]
and one was discovered partly washed out from its position beneath
the edge of a large boulder of the talus slope about one-half mile
east of Una Vida. Both the latter were flexed and accompanied by
offerings, and most of those from Pueblo Bonito and from Chetro Ketl
appear to have been flexed, although a few were extended and many
were so badly disturbed as to give no indication of their original position.
Almost all were accompanied by mortuary offerings of pottery,
and many had jewelry of turquoise and of shell beads, turquoise inlay,
and jet, shell, and pink stone carved into small animals (perhaps
fetishes). Morris found most of the Aztec Ruin burials flexed, wrapped
with matting, accompanied with pottery, and frequently disturbed.
With Judd, he suggests ancient grave robberies as the cause.[16]
Pepper noted a number of burials of children beneath the floor
of rooms in Pueblo Bonito and concluded that this "must have been a
custom among the people who inhabited this pueblo."[17]
This gives six types of burials: burials in the valley floor, burials
in mounds, burials in room fills, burials in refuse heaps, burials beneath
the boulders of talus slopes, and child burials beneath room
floors. There are two other possibilities to be considered in the disposal
of the Chaco dead, and those are that cremation and perhaps cannibalism
were practised.
Pepper found "a number of worked human bones"[18]
in one room
of Pueblo Bonito and cracked and calcined bones in another.[19]
In one
room of Peñasco Blanco he uncovered calcined bones which appeared to
have been split open, and he concluded that these people may have
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they were starving.
Hewett referred to the ash and charcoal filling the vaults of the
great kiva of Chetro Ketl, but he found no identifiable bones there. He
suggests that the vaults are "large enough to have served for the roasting
of a whole buffalo, and they would have served perfectly for the
incineration of the dead."[20]
There is no reason to suppose that they
used these vaults for the cremation of the dead, however, except that
their size would have been adequate, that some burned human bones
had been found in the other ruins, and that inhumations are scarce.
The possibility that burial grounds have been deeply covered with
drift since the period of prhistoric occupation of the pueblo has been
discussed, and it seems that bones from burials which must have been
disturbed when new graves were made, or which were disturbed at
one time or another by thieves, might have been worked and utilized,
or cracked open and burned. Ceremonial cannibalism and hunger remain
as alternative explanations, but in the district where almost
every burial uncovered shows disturbance in ancient times, the scattering
of human bones and their occasional use scarcely seems to require
those explanations. Cremation was the custom for southern Arizona,
but inhumation was customary for the northern area, in spite of a few
rare evidences of cremation reported from Hawikuh and the Jeddito
district[21]
and from around Flagstaff, where Hohokam dwellings and
shards indicate strong influence from the South.[22]
The sixteen burials removed from Tseh So and from the one room
opened in the adjoining ruin, Mound 51, were all from room fills, with
the exception of one infant interred just above a Pueblo I wall and
later covered by the Pueblo II wall of the western edge of the site. All
of the five Pueblo I burials had been so disturbed that the original
position of the body could not be ascertained. Of the eleven burials of
Pueblo II from the two sites, the group of seven adult and one adolescent
skeleton showed five flexed, one extended, and three too disturbed
to indicate original position. Of the three infants, two were extended,
and one too disturbed for data.
On the basis of what is known concerning Chaco burials at present,
we can conclude that adult bodies were usually flexed but frequently
extended for inhumation in open cemeteries or in room fills,
and that occasionally they were placed along the talus slopes or in a
refuse mound. Infants were frequently buried extended, although the
number observed is too small to indicate what the general custom may
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room. Cremation for disposal of the dead or for preparation of the
body for ceremonial or for simple cannibalism may have occurred, but
we are yet without data to substantiate such a theory.
Senter: Preliminary report "Tree Ring Analysis and Deposition," Tree Ring
Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 3, 1937; full report in Appendix I to this report.
Judd: "Archaeological Investigations at Pueblo Bonito," p. 85-6, 1925 and
"Everyday Life in Pueblo Bonito," p. 245.
Woods: "Burial No. 4, Talus Unit No. 1, Chetro Ketl," pp. 61-62, and "Talus
Unit No. 1, Chetro Ketl," pp. 144-146.
Hawley: "The Significance of the Dated Prehistory of Chetro Ketl," p. 63, and
Fig. 3, Plate XIV.
Burial Removal and Preservation of Bones
The present tendency is for archaeologists to know enough about
metric and morphologic observations so that they may work up the
skeletal material from their excavations. With the exception of measurements
such as skull capacity, these usually can be done in the field.
Thus one determines just what material should be saved, and the bulk
of the "scrap" can be discarded without first carrying it back into
town, thus saving both storage space and shipping expenses.
It is highly desirable to preserve and to catalog all skeletons in the
field, if the conditions permit. Alvar,[23]
a commercial preparation, has
been found to be very well adapted to the preservation of friable bones,
and with it many which could not otherwise be used are saved for
measurements. Sizing glue in a rather thin, warm solution may be
brushed over bones or may serve as a liquid into which to dip and thus
to preserve bones which are chalky or fairly friable.
All bones should be cleaned of as much dirt and mud as possible at
the time of their removal from the ground. The transportation of
skulls full of earth should be avoided. Should a skull crack and break,
it should not be fitted together again before transportation, for the
broken edges are easily shattered by motion during transportation.
Each broken portion should be wrapped separately in newspapers to
protect it so that eventual restoration is facilitated. Many bones, and
especially skulls, may be treated with a preservative in situ, thus avoiding
any fractures at the time of removal.
Most important from the point of view of the archaeologist is the
culture stratum with which the skeleton and burial goods may be
correlated. Therefore, in the excavation of a skeleton two things must
be determined: (1) does the burial appear to have been intruded into
the deposit within which it rests, or (2) was it laid down with the
deposit? If it was intruded into the deposit, from what archaeological
level did it come? Such problems as these are solved only by carefully
searching for the outline of a pit into which the burial was laid
and for the level from which the pit originated. If the burial is accompanied
by mortuary offerings of pottery, these may aid in determining
its horizon.
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![illustration](https://iiif.lib.virginia.edu/iiif/uva-lib:163086/full/!1600,1600/0/default.jpg")
Fig. 6—Burial Records from Mounds 50 and 51
Woodbury: "The Use of Polymerised Vinyl Acetate and Related Compounds
in the Preservation and Hardening of Bones," p. 449-450.
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Burial Customs of Mounds 50 and 51
Of the sixteen burials (fig. 6) removed from the two mounds, six
were oriented north-south, and two east-west; the others were too disturbed
for observations. All of the five Pueblo I burials were infants,
three found in Room 3 and one in Room 7, Mound 50, and the other
beneath the Pueblo II west wall of the same pueblo. All were disturbed:
hence their body position is unknown. Remains of twilled grass mats
which wrapped two were evident; three had never been wrapped in
matting or the matting had disappeared through decay. Two were
accompanied by one Red Mesa bowl apiece; three burials yielded no
grave goods, but the femur from one of these was encircled with six
stripes of dark paint.
These Pueblo I burials were given period identification by their
accompaniment of Red Mesa Black on White bowls and by their position
in the Pueblo I fill of Room 3 and, in one case, location beneath the
wall of a Pueblo II room.
Seven burials representing Pueblo II were found in Mound 50 and
four in Mound 51. Of the former, four were adults, two males, one
female, and one undetermined. Three were flexed; one was disturbed.
Of the whole group, two were found in Room 6, four in Room 22, and
one in Room 11. Two of the adults were wrapped with matting, one section
showing its twilled weave. One infant was wrapped in a twilled
mat. Morris found most of the Aztec Ruin burials similarly wrapped.[24]
All were accompanied with pottery offerings. One adult had only
a crude undecorated jar, one had a vessel of McElmo Black on White
and one of Escavada Black on White, one had a vessel of Gallup Black
on White, and one had a vessel each of Tusayan polychrome, of Wingate
Black on Red, of Escavada Black on White, and of Gallup Black
on White. With the body were also one bone awl and two small
malachite balls.
Of the infants, one was accompanied by a large shard of Wingate
Black on Red, one with a small shell earplug, and one with a McElmo
bowl, fourteen bone beads, and some walnuts which appear to have
been beads.
Four burials were removed from the single room opened in
Mound 51. Three were adults, one an adolescent, one male, one female,
and two unidentified. Two were flexed, two disturbed. One was lying
on coarse yucca cord matting. One showed a clump of grass adhering
to his left parietal, perhaps having been placed beneath the head as a
cushion. One adult was accompanied with vessels of McElmo Black
on White, of Kana-a Gray, and of Exuberant Corrugated. The others
were without pottery except for shards.
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Bc50 60/5 |
Bc50 60/9 |
Bc50 60/10 |
Bc51 60/1 |
Bc51 60/4 |
|
Sex | Male | Female | Female | Female | Male |
Condition | frag. | frag. | frag. | frag. | frag. |
Sex Criteria | certain | certain | uncertain | ||
Muscularity | large | small | medium | ||
Age | 56-75 | 18-20 | 21-35 | ||
Weight | light | light | |||
Deformation | lambdoid | lambdoid | lambdoid r. | ||
Degree | pron. | medium | |||
Cause | artificial | artificial | artificial | ||
Frontal Region | |||||
Brow Ridges | |||||
Type | divided | median | median | ||
Size | medium | small | small | ||
Glabella | medium | small | |||
Height | medium | medium | medium | ||
Slope | medium | slight | slight | ||
Metopism | traces | traces | |||
Postorbital Costr. | medium | medium | small | ||
Bosses | medium | small | medium | ||
Median Crest | abs. | abs. | |||
Breadth | large | large | |||
Parietal Region | |||||
Saggital Elevation | small | small | small | ||
Postcoronal Dep. | small | small | medium | ||
Bosses | small | ||||
Foramina | small | small | |||
Temporal Region | |||||
Fullness | large | ||||
Mastoids | medium | small | medium | ||
Supramastoid Crest | large | small | medium | ||
Sphenoid Depression | medium | ||||
Occipital Region | |||||
Curve | pron. | small | pronounced | ||
Inion | none | none | none | ||
Torus size | medium | small | medium | ||
Torus shape | mound | mound | mound | ||
Lambdoid Flattening | pron. | medium | pron. | ||
Transverse Suture | trace | absent | absent | ||
Serration | |||||
Lambdoid | medium | medium | submedium | ||
Coronal | simple | simple | simple | ||
Saggital | ? | simple | submedium | ||
External Occlusion | |||||
Coronal | complete | open | open | ||
Saggital | complete | open | open | ||
Lambdoid | advanced | open | open | ||
Os Incae | absent | absent | absent | ||
Wormian Bones | few | few | few | ||
Pterion Form | H | ||||
Median Occipital Fossa | absent | absent | |||
Condyles Elevation | large | ||||
Basion | |||||
Styloids | small | small | |||
Pharyngeal Tubercle | absent | small | |||
Pharyngeal Fossa | absent | absent | |||
Lacerate Foramina | small | ||||
Glenoid Fossa Depth | small | small | medium | ||
Postglenoid Process | small | small | absent | ||
Tympanic Plate | medium | thin | |||
Auditory Meatus | oval | oval | |||
Petrous Depression | |||||
External Pterygoid Plate | small | ||||
Internal Pterygoid Plate | medium | ||||
Pterygo-basal Foramina | indicated | ||||
Orbits Shape | rhomboid | ||||
Inclination | medium | ||||
Lacrimo-ethmoid Art. | medium | ||||
Infra-orbital Suture | none | ||||
Suborbital Fossa | absent | slight | |||
Os Japonicum | absent | ||||
Malar | |||||
Size | medium | small | |||
Lateral Projection | large | ||||
Anterior Projection | medium | ||||
Marginal Process | absent | absent | |||
Zygomatic Process | |||||
Nasion Depression | medium | small | |||
Nasal Root Height | medium | low | |||
Breadth | medium | large | |||
Nasal Bridge Height | medium | ||||
Breadth | large | ||||
Nasal Profile | concavo-conv. | ||||
Nasal Sills | dull | sharp | sharp | ||
Nasal Spine | medium | small | |||
Subnasal Grooves | small | absent | absent | ||
Mid-facial Prognathism | absent | ||||
Alveolar Prognathism | slight | ||||
Total Prognathism | slight | ||||
Alveolar Border Absorb. | pron. | none | |||
Preservation | poor | ||||
Palate Shape | parabolic | ||||
Palate Height | low | low | |||
Palatine Torus Form | absent | absent | |||
Size | |||||
Transverse Suture | anterior | ||||
Postnasal Spine | medium | ||||
Mandible | |||||
Size | medium | medium | |||
Chin Form | median | ||||
Chin Projection | medium | ||||
Alveolar Prognathism | slight | ||||
Genial Tubercles | small | slight | |||
Mylo-hyoid Ridge | pron. | medium | |||
Gonial Angles | |||||
Pterygoid Attachment | medium | medium | |||
Eversion | small | ||||
Tooth Eruption | complete | ||||
Lost | 29-32 | ||||
Mandibular Torus | none | absent | |||
Teeth Wear | slight | pron. | |||
Quality | good | ||||
Accessory Cusps | |||||
Caries | none | pres. | |||
Abscess | 4-X | 4-X | |||
Size | medium | small | |||
Pyorrhea | present | none | |||
Shovel Incisors | |||||
Bite | edge | ||||
Crowding | |||||
Molar Cusps |
Bc50 60/5 |
Bc50 60/9 |
Bc50 60/10 |
Bc51 60/1 |
Bc51 60/4 |
|
Cranial Index | |||||
Height-Length | |||||
Height-Breadth | |||||
Fronto-parietal | |||||
Auricular Height-Length | |||||
Cranial Module | |||||
Facial | |||||
Upper Facial | |||||
Cranio-facial | |||||
Nasal | 53 | ||||
Left Orbital | 79.4 | ||||
Nasalia-Transverse | 65. | ||||
Interorbital | 22.2 | ||||
External Palatal | |||||
Mandibular | |||||
Zygo-gonial | |||||
Fronto-gonial | |||||
Zygo-frontal | |||||
Horizontal Circumference | |||||
Nasion-Opisthion | |||||
Transverse Arc | |||||
Glabello-occipital Length | |||||
Maximum Width | |||||
Basion-Bregma Height | |||||
Mean Thickness L. Parietal | 5 | ||||
Minimum Frontal Diameter | 92 | ||||
Auricular Height | |||||
Frontal Height | |||||
Frontal Angle | |||||
Total Facial Angle | |||||
Mid-facial Angle | |||||
Alveolar Angle | |||||
Bizygomatic Diameter | |||||
Nasion-Menton Height | |||||
Nasion-Prosthion Height | 71 | ||||
Basion-Nasion Length | |||||
Basion-Prosthion Length | |||||
Nasal Height | 51 | ||||
Nasal Breadth | 27 | ||||
Orbital Height—Left | 31 | ||||
Orbital Breadth—Left | 39 | ||||
Orbital Height—Right | 31 | ||||
Orbital Breadth—Right | 40 | ||||
Nasalia—Upper Breadth | 13 | ||||
Nasalia—Lower Breadth | 20 | ||||
Interorbital Breadth | 22 | ||||
Biorbital Breadth | 99 | ||||
Palate—External Length | |||||
Palate—External Width | |||||
Condylo-symphysial Length | 103 | ||||
Bicondylar Width | 117 | ||||
Height of Symphysis | |||||
Bigonial | 89 | ||||
Minimum Br. Ascending | |||||
Ramus | 35 | 39 | |||
Mean Angle Mandible | 118 | 113 | |||
Stature (Pearson Formula) | |||||
Cranial Capacity | |||||
Right Humerus | |||||
Shape of Shaft | Plano-convex | ||||
Perf. of Olecranion Fossa | absent | ||||
Supracondyloid Process | absent | ||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Maximum Middle | 22 | ||||
Minimum Middle | 15 | ||||
Max. Diam. Head | |||||
Middle Index | 68 | ||||
Humero-fem. Index. | |||||
Left Humerus | |||||
Shape of Shaft | Plano-convex | Prismatic | |||
Perf. of Olecranion Fossa | absent | present | |||
Supracondyloid Process | absent | absent | |||
Maximum Length | 322 | ||||
Maximum Middle | 22 | 18 | |||
Minimum Middle | 15 | 14 | |||
Max. Diam. Head | 42 | ||||
Middle Index | 68 | 33 | |||
Humero-fem. Ind. | |||||
Right Radius | |||||
Bowing | |||||
Shaft Shape | |||||
Interosseous Crest | |||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Humero-rad. Ind. | |||||
Left Radius | |||||
Bowing | slight | ||||
Shaft Shape | prism | ||||
Interosseous Crest | medium | ||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Humero-rad. Ind. | |||||
Right Ulna—Max. Length | |||||
Left Ulna—Max. Length | |||||
Right Scapula | |||||
Superior Border | concave | ||||
Notch | submedium | ||||
Vertebral Border | straight | ||||
Teres Insertion | small | ||||
Shape of Acromion | |||||
Clavicular Facet | |||||
Age Plaque | |||||
Glenoid Shape | |||||
Glenoid Lipping | beginning | ||||
Pleating | medium | ||||
Buckling | present | ||||
Atrophic Patches | pronounced | ||||
Left Scapula | |||||
Superior Border | concave | ||||
Notch | submedium | ||||
Vertebral Border | convex | ||||
Teres Insertion | small | ||||
Shape of Acromion | interm. | ||||
Clavicular Facet | lipped | ||||
Age Plaque | pron. | ||||
Glenoid Shape | oval | ||||
Glenoid Lipping | beginning | ||||
Pleating | medium | ||||
Buckling | present | ||||
Atrophic Patches | pron. | ||||
Right Scapula | |||||
Total Height | 152 | ||||
Inferior Height | 119 | ||||
Breadth | 103 | ||||
Total Index | 67.7 | ||||
Inferior Ind. | 86.5 | ||||
Left Scapula | |||||
Total Height | 152 | ||||
Inferior Ht. | 118 | ||||
Breadth | 100 | ||||
Total Index | 65.3 | ||||
Inferior Ind. | 84.7 | ||||
Right Clavicle | |||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Left Clavicle | |||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Claviculo-Humeral Ind. | |||||
Right | |||||
Left | |||||
Sternum | |||||
Fusion | |||||
Foramen | |||||
Suprasternal Ossif. | |||||
Sternal Ribs | |||||
Right Femur | |||||
Third Trochanter | absent | medium | |||
Crista | medium | medium | |||
Fossa | absent | absent | |||
Torsion | |||||
Poirier's Facet | present | ||||
Bowing | medium | ||||
Shaft Section | oval | oval | |||
Bicondylar Length | |||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Max. Diam. Hd. | 44 | ||||
Subtrochanter AP. | 26 | 29 | |||
Subtrochanter Lat. | 30 | 34 | |||
Middle AP | 30 | 27 | |||
Middle Lateral | 24 | 28 | |||
Platymeric Index | 86.6 | 55.8 | |||
Middle Index | 80 | 96 | |||
Left Femur | |||||
Third Trochanter | absent | ||||
Crista | medium | ||||
Fossa | absent | ||||
Torsion | |||||
Poirier's Facet | present | ||||
Bowing | |||||
Shaft Section | oval | ||||
Bicondylar Length | |||||
Maximum Length | |||||
Max. Diam. Hd. | 44 | ||||
Subtrochanter AP. | |||||
Subtrochanter Lat. | |||||
Middle AP. | |||||
Middle Lateral | |||||
Platymeric Index | |||||
Middle Index | |||||
Right Tibia | |||||
Proximal Retroversion | medium | ||||
Shape of Shaft (Hrd.) | III | ||||
Squatting Facets | absent | ||||
Maximum Length (l. s.) | |||||
Middle AP. | |||||
Middle Lat. | |||||
Nutrient For. AP. | |||||
Nutrient For. Lat. | |||||
Middle Index | |||||
Platycnemia Ind. | |||||
Left Tibia | |||||
Proximal Retroversion | medium | ||||
Shape of Shaft (Hrd.) | III | ||||
Squatting Facets | present | ||||
Maximum Length (l. s.) | |||||
Middle AP. | |||||
Middle Lat. | |||||
Nutrient For. AP. | 36 | ||||
Nutrient For. Lat. | 20 | ||||
Middle Index | |||||
Platycnemic Ind. | 55.5 | ||||
Right Fibula | |||||
Max. Length | |||||
Left Fibula | |||||
Max. Length | |||||
Tibio-Femoral Indices | |||||
Right | |||||
Left | |||||
Right Innominate | |||||
Phases of Symphysis | IX | ||||
Bony Outgrowths | absent | ||||
Ischiatic Notch | |||||
Preauricular Sulcus | |||||
Ilium | |||||
Ischiatic Spine | |||||
Innominate Height | 209 | ||||
Innominate Breadth | |||||
Innominate Index | |||||
Left Innominate | |||||
Phases of Symphysis | IX | IX | |||
Ischiatic Notch | |||||
Preauricular Sulcus | absent | large | |||
Ilium | flaring | ||||
Ischiatic Spine | broken | ||||
Innominate Height | 211 | ||||
Innominate Breadth | 152 | ||||
Innominate Index | 72 | ||||
Pelvis as a Whole | |||||
Subpubic Angle | narrow | large | |||
Brim Shape | heart | ||||
Pubic Rami | lipped | ||||
Total Brd. (bi-iliac) | |||||
Max. Brd. (superior str.) | 133 | ||||
AP. Diam (sup. strait) | 103 | ||||
Bi-ischiatic Brd. | |||||
Interspinous Diam. | 93 | ||||
Brim Index | 77 | ||||
Total Pelvic Index | |||||
Sacrum | |||||
Segments | 5 | ||||
Sacral Curve | pron. | ||||
Curve Begins | three | ||||
Simian Notch | |||||
Sacral Type | homobasal | ||||
Spinal Closure Begins | five | ||||
Hiatus | |||||
Arthritic Changes | present | ||||
Height | 117 | ||||
Breadth | 117 | ||||
Index | 100 | ||||
Lumbars | |||||
Centra Hts. (ant.) | 132 | ||||
Centra Hts. (post.) | 150 | ||||
Lumbar Vert. Ind. | 88.8 | ||||
Right Calcaneum | |||||
Axis of Tuberosity | |||||
Tendon Attachment | |||||
Lateral Process | |||||
Astragalar Facets | separate | ||||
Max. Length | 64 | ||||
Max. (s. t.) Brd. | 33 | ||||
Length-Brd. Ind. | 51.5 | ||||
Left Calcaneum | |||||
Axis of Tuberosity | medium | ||||
Tendon Attachment | medium | ||||
Lateral Process | submed. | ||||
Astragalar Facets | fused | ||||
Max. Length | 74 | 64 | |||
Max. (s. t.) Brd. | 39 | 34 | |||
Length-Brd. Ind. | 52.7 | 53 | |||
Right Astragalus | |||||
Angle of Diversion | small | ||||
Squatting Facets | absent | ||||
Obliquity External Facet | |||||
Torsion Head | |||||
Max. Length | |||||
Max. Breadth | |||||
Height | |||||
Length-Ht. Ind. | |||||
Left Astragalus | |||||
Angle of Diversion | small | small | |||
Squatting Facets | absent | absent | |||
Obliq. Ext. Facet | medium | small | |||
Torsion Head | medium | large | |||
Max. Length | 51 | ||||
Max. Breadth | 39 | ||||
Height | 30 | ||||
Length-Ht. Ind. | 58.7 |
![Click to Enlarge Page [161](https://iiif.lib.virginia.edu/iiif/uva-lib:163101/full/!200,200/0/default.jpg)
The Pueblo II burials were distinguished for period by their
accompanying pottery types and complexes, by their position in Pueblo
II fill in rooms (which probably places them as late rather than as
early Pueblo II in these ruins) and by the obvious high levels of origin
of the graves.
Conclusions on Burial Customs
The burials from these two mounds were predominantly in room
fills, predominantly flexed, wrapped in or placed upon matting, and accompanied
by pottery. Infants may have been buried in the extended
position rather than flexed. Most of the graves were disturbed, the
bones were out of place, and bones from two skeletons were frequently
mixed together. Other skeletons were represented by but a few bones
or fragments. Prairie dogs, grave robbers, or superposition of burials
may have been responsible for the general state of disturbance of
burials.
Conclusions on Bone Material
This season's series, if we may grace this fragmentary group of
bones with that title, offers little scope for the wielding of calipers.
The empty spaces in the above schedule clearly point to the unsatisfactory
condition of the skeletons, but those filled in call attention just
as strikingly to the fact that although a skeleton may be crushed, its
usefulness is not entirely lost.[25]
"Morphological features which can be
observed and described but cannot be measured are probably of greater
anthropological significance than diameters and indices."[26]
A majority
of these observations can be taken on skeletal material which in the old
days would have been considered osteometrically hopeless.
"Unfortunately the personal equation of the observer inevitably
enters into the graduation of such morphological observations. It has
long been my custom to grade and record morphological features with
respect to their development as compared with my judgment of average
development in adult male Europeans. The reader may inquire, `What
kind of "adult male European" is referred to?' My conception of the
adult male European is essentially that of a Northwestern European
of stature 170 cm. or more, of moderate muscularity, with a cranium
neither markedly dolicocephalic nor pronouncedly brachycephalic, and
with a face neither short and broad nor long and narrow, but of medium
proportions. Other features, such as are individually observed and
graded, would conform to the mode. Brow-ridges would not be very
strongly marked, for example, nor would the chin eminence be poorly
developed. Taking this hypothetical average male European as a
standard, I grade features on the following scale: absent, small or
![Click to Enlarge Page 162]](https://iiif.lib.virginia.edu/iiif/uva-lib:163102/full/!200,200/0/default.jpg)
am confident that an experienced anatomical observer who has practised
this method for many years, as I have done, can attain to a considerable
degree of accuracy and consistency in making these morphological
observations. Of course, sets of observations made by different
observers are not necessarily strictly comparable. However unsatisfactory
one may consider such qualitative observations, he must admit
that they are better than nothing at all. They lend themselves to a
measure of statistical treatment and are certainly superior to the
vague and general descriptions of skull `types' which many craniologists
append to their metrical studies."[27]
In view of T. Dale Stewart's recent note[28]
concerning "different
types of cranial deformity in the pueblo area," it is interesting to find
that, where the skulls of this group were not too broken for observations,
the lambdoid type of deformation prevailed. He pointed out that
this type of deformity seems to be limited to Southwestern Colorado,
Chaco Canyon, and the Zuñi and Allentown regions. It is in these
same areas that we find a spread of the Chaco type culture. Thus a
skeleton becomes just as much an artifact as a potsherd is an artifact.
Wherever the Chaco people migrated after 1100 A. D., they probably
carried with them their custom of lambdoid deformation.
Arthritis was a common ailment in Chaco, if we can judge by this
fragmentary collection. Skeleton No. Bc 50 60/5 had an arthritic foot
and showed compression fractures in the dorsal vertebrae. Bc 51 60/1
exhibited the head of a radius with arthritic lesions.
No. Bc 51 60/4 displays an ossification of the ligamentum apicis
dentis epistrophei.
In themselves the observations above prove nothing. They represent,
however, all that could be done in a physical anthropological way
to what appeared to be on first sight nothing but a pile of broken
bones. A sufficient number of seasons' analyses will compile into a
series adequate for conclusions, where otherwise existed a vacuity.
Such a small series of fragmentary skeletons, even though from a single
identified culture level, Pueblo II, offers little in significant results, but
its immediate importance lies in the possibility of comparisons of data
from other larger groups. T. Dale Stewart, Assistant Curator of Physical
Anthropology in the National Museum, has ready for publication his
measurements and observations on a series of about 100 skeletons from
the Chaco Canyon, and this material may be expected to throw considerable
light upon our problems.[29]
Bc51 60/3 was removed in situ to the museum for exhibit as a Chaco burial.
It was in perfect condition but was not measured.
![]() | Tseh So, a small house ruin, Chaco canyon, New Mexico : | ![]() |