Research Objectives and Methods
by Melissa J. Churchill
1
                        The Crow Canyon Archaeological Center conducted research at Woods
                        Canyon Pueblo (Site 5MT11842) to improve our understanding of settlement
                        aggregation in the Mesa Verde region during the late Pueblo II and Pueblo
                        III periods (A.D. 10001300) and to contribute to an ever-growing
                        body of research into the depopulation of the region by the end of the
                        latter period. The excavations at Woods Canyon Pueblo were conducted as
                        part of Crow Canyon's Village Testing Project, which is summarized in
                        Ortman et al. (2000*1).
                        For a discussion of the research design that guided our investigations
                        at Woods Canyon Pueblo specifically, see Wilshusen
                            (1994*2).
2
                        Crow Canyon archaeologists designed the Village Testing Project
                        to complement the Center's earlier research in the nearby Sand Canyon
                        locality (Database
                                Map 338). Our research in the Sand Canyon locality suggested that
                        large villages had formed rapidly in the mid-1200s as people moved from
                        small upland settlements to large villages in canyon environments. The
                        Village Testing Project focused on the investigation of large, late sites
                        outside the locality in an effort to determine whether this aggregation
                        might have been part of a larger phenomenon in the central Mesa Verde
                        region (see Ortman et al.
                            2000*1). The testing program conducted at Woods Canyon Pueblo and
                        Woods Canyon Reservoir (Site 5MT12086) examined whether the changes through
                        time in settlement patterns, subsistence practices, and the use of the
                        cultural landscape that were identified in the Sand Canyon locality also
                        occurred in the Woods Canyon community.
3
                        On the basis of our limited excavations, it appears that Woods
                        Canyon Pueblo was a small village compared with other late Pueblo villages
                        in the Mesa Verde region, but that its occupation was much longer, spanning
                        almost 150 years. The departure of the residents from Woods Canyon coincided
                        with the final emigrations out of the region in the late A.D. 1200s.
Research Questions
4
                        The research questions at Woods Canyon Pueblo focused on three
                        broad topics: (1) site chronology, (2) village layout and organization,
                        and (3) agriculture practices and water and soil management. In the lists
                        of specific questions that follow, the chapters of this report that address
                        each question are noted in parentheses.
Site Chronology
When was Woods Canyon Pueblo occupied? (Chronology, Artifacts)
Were all areas of the village occupied at the same time? (Chronology, Abandonment and Emigration, Artifacts)
When did the occupation of the pueblo end? (Chronology, Abandonment and Emigration, Artifacts)
How were structures abandoned at Woods Canyon Pueblo? (Abandonment and Emigration)
Village Layout and Organization
What was the physical layout of the pueblo, and what does the layout tell us about the internal organization of the village? (Architecture and Site Layout)
What types of buildings were present? (Architecture and Site Layout)
How were the various buildings used? (Architecture and Site Layout)
What types of public architecture were present? (Architecture and Site Layout)
How was the section of the site known as the "rim complex" used? (Architecture and Site Layout, Artifacts, Archaeobotanical Remains)
When was the rim complex constructed relative to the other architecture at the pueblo? (Chronology, Architecture and Site Layout, Artifacts)
Agricultural Practices and Water and Soil Management
Where did the people of Woods Canyon Pueblo get their water? (Water Control and Subsistence)
Can water-control features be identified for the village? (Water Control and Subsistence)
Did the people of Woods Canyon Pueblo build and use the reservoir located northeast of the site? (Water Control and Subsistence)
How were the water-control features on the canyon rim constructed and used? (Water Control and Subsistence)
Were there gardens or small agricultural fields within the village? (Water Control and Subsistence)
Other Research Questions
How many people lived in the pueblo? (Population Estimates)
Is there evidence of long-distance trade? (Artifacts)
What plant and animal resources were used by the people of Woods Canyon Pueblo? (Water Control and Subsistence, Archaeobotanical Remains, Faunal Remains)
Methods
5
                        Seventy-five small units, less than one percent of the 18.5-acre
                        site, were excavated as part of Crow Canyon's three-year testing program.
                        Test excavation of a small number of kivas and their associated middens
                        was our primary focus, but we examined several possible public areas and
                        water-control features as well. The sampling strategies employed allowed
                        us to address many of the research questions posed above; however, because
                        the testing was limited in scope, further excavations would be required
                        to refine the chronological history of the village, make a stronger case
                        for how the rim complex may have been used, and identify whether gardens
                        or small agricultural fields were present within the pueblo. 
Kiva Testing
6
                        The objectives of the kiva-testing program were threefold. Our
                        primary goal was to gain a better understanding of when the site was constructed,
                        which required the collection of as many tree-ring dating samples as possible.
                        Because dateable specimens are much more likely to be preserved in kivasand
                        particularly in kivas that burnedour excavations focused on the
                        test excavation of these subterranean structures rather than of surface
                        rooms. Second, we wanted to evaluate how kivas at Woods Canyon Pueblo
                        were used and abandoned. For this, we needed to examine kiva stratigraphy
                        and sample enough floor and roof-fall assemblages to reconstruct activities
                        and abandonment processes. The third objective of the testing program
                        was to estimate the population of the village. The test excavation of
                        a subset of the possible kivas identified during mapping allowed us to
                        determine how many of the suspected kivas were in fact kivas, and this
                        information, extrapolated across the entire site, provided us with the
                        data necessary for estimating the population of the village as a whole.
7
                        Eight circular depressions or flat areas thought to perhaps be
                        kivas were randomly selected from what were tentatively identified as
                        the three main residential sections of the site (the upper west side,
                        the canyon bottom, and the east talus slope). Each depression or flat
                        area was tested by excavating a 2-x-1-m unit in its approximate northwest
                        quadrant, and six of the eight (Structures 1-S, 2-S, 3-S, 4-S, 5-S, and
                        7-S) turned out to be kivas. Two additional kivas (Structures 6-S and
                        8-S) were selected "judgmentally," that is, they were specifically chosen
                        for excavation because we wanted to quickly expand our kiva sample and
                        it was clear from evidence visible on the modern ground surface that these
                        two structures were, in fact, kivas. One of these, Structure 6-S, was
                        located in the rim complex. An additional kiva (Structure 9-S) was unexpectedly
                        found below Nonstructure 1-N, for a total of nine kivas that were tested
                        during Crow Canyon's excavations.
Midden Testing
8
                        Our initial goal in testing middens was to better understand changes
                        in pottery over time. Our strategy was to identify and test burned kivas
                        whose dates of construction could be determined on the basis of tree-ring
                        dates, and then excavate a limited portion of the middens associated with
                        these same structures. The scarcity of burned roof fall in the tested
                        kivas, however, made it difficult to estimate construction dates, which
                        in turn prevented us from studying pottery change through time. Nonetheless,
                        the midden assemblages helped us address questions about site chronology,
                        intrasite organization and occupation, and subsistence strategies.
9
                        An area was defined as a midden if moderate quantities of artifacts
                        were present on the modern ground surface or if the area was located immediately
                        south of a kiva, where middens are typically found. Six midden areas were
                        tested (Nonstructures 3-N, 4-N, 5-N, 6-N, 7-N, and 8-N). The refuse from
                        four of the areas (Nonstructures 4-N, 6-N, 7-N, and 8-N) is believed to
                        have originated from specific tested kivas, because of the proximity of
                        the kivas to the midden areas and the absence of other nearby structures.
                        The other two midden areas (Nonstructures 3-N and 5-N) appear to be generally
                        associated with tested kivas, but it is clear that the refuse in them
                        also could have originated from other structures in the immediate vicinity.
                        Three to four 1-x-1-m units were randomly selected from each possible
                        midden area. If these units did not produce an adequate sample of refuse,
                        "judgment" units were placed in areas that were thought to contain more
                        trash.
10
                        All the deposits in a given "midden" area, whether they consisted
                        of midden deposits, natural deposits, extramural surfaces, or native sterile
                        deposits, were designated parts of the same large nonstructure. As a result,
                        a nonstructure as defined at Woods Canyon Pueblo contained multiple deposits
                        (and different kinds of deposits), rather than a single cultural
                        deposit as is standard at other sites excavated by Crow Canyon. For example,
                        a nonstructure at Woods Canyon Pueblo could include several extramural
                        surfaces, several midden deposits, and postoccupational fill. In an effort
                        to separate the multiple deposits included in a particular nonstructure,
                        we retroactively assigned every cultural deposit within the nonstructure
                        a subunit number. For example, a secondary refuse deposit and an extramural
                        surface in Nonstructure 5-N became Nonstructure 5.1-N and Nonstructure
                        5.2-N, respectively. The designations for natural deposits and mixed deposits
                        were not changed; rather, they were grouped with the original nonstructure
                        (in this example, Nonstructure 5-N) and are identified as "noncultural"
                        in the database. In some of these nonstructural areas, limited amounts
                        of midden were exposed, and often the midden deposits were no longer intact
                        because they had been naturally redeposited from upslope.
                        
Testing of Public Space
11
                        The rim complex and a suspected plaza in the canyon bottom (Nonstructure
                        1-N) were tested as possible public areas at Woods Canyon Pueblo. Investigations
                        were aimed at understanding how these areas were used and what they might
                        reflect about village organization, social differentiation, and community
                        integration.
12
                        Testing in the rim complex involved exposing sections of the enclosing
                        wall that defined this space, exposing the exterior faces of buildings
                        contained in this space, partly excavating a kiva, and looking for evidence
                        of a plaza surface. The plaza area (Nonstructure 2-N) was divided into
                        two sampling strata. The first sampling stratum included all the visible
                        open space, and the second sampling stratum included areas covered by
                        rubble. Five 1-x-1-m units were randomly selected from Sampling Stratum
                        1, and three 1-x-1-m units were selected from Sampling Stratum 2. One
                        unit was expanded into a 2-x-1-m unit because more space was needed for
                        excavators to maneuver after a wall was exposed. Five judgment units were
                        also opened adjacent to architectural features and buildings. Another
                        judgment unit was excavated in a kiva (Structure 6-S). Lastly, all standing
                        walls and wall features in the rim complex were recorded.
13
                        The possible plaza in the canyon bottom (Nonstructure 1-N) was
                        tested by excavating 10 1-x-1-m judgment units. Testing revealed that
                        this area was not used as a plaza; rather, it might have served as a garden,
                        as well as a place where trash was discarded.
Testing of Water-Control Features
14
                        In an attempt to better understand the construction, use, and age of water-control
                        features at Woods Canyon Pueblo, we tested several checkdams in the main
                        drainage that bisected the site. Judgment units were placed adjacent to
                        possible checkdams visible on the modern ground surface on top of the
                        cliff (Nonstructure 9-N). Sections of five checkdams were exposed during
                        testing. A prehistoric reservoir (Site 5MT12086) located northeast of
                        the pueblo was also tested before excavations at Woods Canyon Pueblo began.
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