Water Control and Subsistence
by Melissa J. Churchill
1
                        The people of Woods Canyon Pueblo grew crops, hunted animals, gathered
                        plants, collected and managed water, and used a variety of resources in
                        their environment to build and heat their homes, cook food, and make tools
                        and clothing. In this chapter, I discuss where the residents obtained
                        domestic water, how they managed water runoff, and where they grew their
                        crops. I also draw on the results of faunal (animal bone) and archaeobotanical
                        (plant) analyses to reconstruct the diet as well as the hunting, gathering,
                        and agricultural practices of the people of Woods Canyon Pueblo.
Water Resources and Water Management
2
                        Water was essential for drinking, cooking, washing, building homes,
                        watering plants, and making pottery. The proximity of Pueblo III sites
                        to natural water sources and the common occurrence of Pueblo III water-control
                        features demonstrate that access to, and management of, water was a primary
                        concern of the people living in the Mesa Verde region during this time
                        (Haase 1985*1:19, 20, 24).
                        Reservoirs and stone alignments were the most common water-conservation
                        devices of the Pueblo III period (Haase
                            1985*1:20), and both are present at or near Woods Canyon Pueblo.
Natural Water Sources
3
                        Springs and seeps are located in the canyon bottom south of, and
                        upstream from, the site. Currently, there is water in the canyon bottom
                        year-round, which may be partly the result of modern irrigation. Even
                        so, it is likely that the springs and seeps provided a year-round supply
                        of water when the pueblo was occupied. Water that was captured in the
                        nearby reservoir appears to have been a supplemental source of domestic
                        water.
Woods Canyon Reservoir (Site 5MT12086)
4
                        Woods Canyon Reservoir is located .75 km northeast of Woods Canyon
                        Pueblo, near a tributary of Woods Canyon (Database
                            Map 337). Water was not intentionally diverted from existing drainages
                        into the reservoir, nor was the reservoir fed by a spring. Rather, rainfall
                        and water runoff from the surrounding area was impounded by a horseshoe-shaped
                        dam constructed of earth and some stone. The predominance of white ware
                        jar sherds found in the vicinity of the reservoir indicates that the water
                        in the reservoir was used for domestic, rather than agricultural, purposes;
                        white ware jars would have been appropriate for transporting water the
                        short distance to the site (Wilshusen
                            et al. 1997*1:674, 675). Furthermore, the shallow depth of the soil
                        near the reservoir and the absence of a canal system argue against the
                        impounded water having been used to irrigate fields, although pot irrigation
                        is a possibility (Wilshusen et
                            al. 1997*1:675).
5
                        The available evidence suggests that the reservoir was built earlier
                        than the pueblo, although their periods of use overlapped. A detailed
                        analysis of the dating of the pueblo is presented in "Chronology";
                        in that chapter, a case is made for construction beginning in the midA.D.
                        1100s, with occupation continuing through the late 1200s. A comparison
                        of the formal white ware pottery types from both the pueblo and the reservoir
                        (Table 1) reveals
                        that the assemblage from the reservoir is dominated by Mancos Black-on-white
                        and McElmo Black-on-white, which suggests that this feature was constructed
                        and used sometime between A.D. 1125 and 1200. The small amount of Mesa
                        Verde Black-on-white, a later type that predominated in the mid- to late
                        1200s, indicates only limited use of the reservoir during this period.
                        The white ware assemblage from the pueblo, on the other hand, contains
                        significant proportions of all three types but has a much higher percentage
                        of Mesa Verde Black-on-white than does the reservoir, which suggests that
                        occupation of the pueblo continued after the reservoir was no longer used
                        or was used only occasionally.
6
                        It is unlikely that people would have abandoned a water source,
                        or that a pool of water would have gone unused during the late Pueblo
                        III period. One possible explanation for why the reservoir might not have
                        been used, or not used very much, during this period is that there was
                        seldom any water in it, which in turn could indicate that there was a
                        drought during the middle to late 1200s. Another possibility is that,
                        over time, the reservoir filled with so much silt that it was no longer
                        able to hold water.
7
                        I should note that sample size might be skewing the results, because
                        the pottery assemblage from the pueblo is almost 10 times larger than
                        the assemblage from the reservoir. It is also possible that Mesa Verde
                        Black-on-white sherds are underrepresented at the reservoirthe assemblage
                        is characterized by a high percentage of jar sherds, which as a group
                        tend to be decorated with designs that make their assignment to formal
                        type difficult, and a low percentage of bowl and mug sherds, which are
                        more likely to exhibit typical Mesa Verde Black-on-white stylistic elements
                        and therefore are more likely to be assigned to that category (see Wilshusen
                            et al. 1997*1:674). The ratio of "typed" white ware bowl sherds to
                        "typed" white ware jar sherds is only approximately 1:1 in the assemblage
                        from the reservoir, whereas in the assemblage from the pueblo it is 4:1.
                        A comparison of type frequencies for jar and bowl sherds at the reservoir
                        shows little difference between the two (Table
                            2). Most notable is the low frequency of both bowl and jar sherds
                        typed as Mesa Verde Black-on-white at the reservoir. There is much more
                        variation in the frequencies of jar and bowl sherds at the pueblo. When
                        the typed white ware sherds from the early and late components at the
                        pueblo are subdivided by form, the reservoir assemblage still appears
                        to be earlier than the pueblo assemblage. These data seem to reflect a
                        true scarcity of Mesa Verde Black-on-white at the reservoir.
8
                        Thus, I conclude that the reservoir was built before Woods Canyon
                        Pueblo, probably by people living at several earlier mesa-top sites near
                        the reservoir (Dexter, the Bass Site Complex, and the Albert Porter preserve;
                        see Database
                                Map 337). It is likely that the reservoir was associated with
                        a long-lived community rather than with Woods Canyon Pueblo exclusively
                        (Wilshusen et al. 1997*1:679).
9
                        Unlike the springs and seeps in the canyon bottom, the reservoir
                        did not provide a constant source of water to the residents of Woods Canyon
                        Pueblo. Water would have been contained in the reservoir only after rains
                        or during spring snowmelt, when water would have been captured behind
                        the dam. Even though a reservoir of this size could have held 40,000 to
                        50,000 gallons of water (Wilshusen
                            et al. 1997*1:673), it probably did so only sporadically during the
                        summer monsoon season. The springs and seeps in the canyon bottom undoubtedly
                        were a more reliable source of water, and they are closer to the pueblo
                        than is the reservoir. The distance between the reservoir and the pueblo
                        is almost half a mile. The most direct route to the reservoir from the
                        pueblo was from a side canyon just east of the site. Although the route
                        to and from the reservoir is not arduous, carrying pottery vessels full
                        of water back to the pueblo would have made the trip more difficult.
Checkdams
10
                        Linear alignments of stones are visible in the main drainage that bisects
                        the site, in several peripheral drainages, on the talus slope, and at
                        the base of the slope near the canyon bottom. Most of these alignments
                        are believed to be checkdams, that is, constructions used specifically
                        for water management and soil conservation (see Hayes
                            [1964*1], Rohn [1963*1],
                        and Winter [1978*1] for more-detailed
                        discussions of the possible functions of checkdams), as opposed to dams,
                        which are used for water impoundment.
11
                        Most checkdams at Woods Canyon Pueblo are located in the main drainage
                        that bisects the site. The checkdams extend across the drainage and are
                        clustered in groups of two to three. Six sets of checkdams, not all of
                        which were mapped, have been identified in the main drainage; most are
                        located above the canyon rim. Two of the sets above the cliff were partly
                        exposed during test excavations in Nonstructure 9-N and are discussed
                        in paragraphs 1219. Below the cliff face,
                        the main drainage is more entrenched, and rubble from nearby buildings
                        made the identification of checkdams more difficult.
Checkdams in Nonstructure 9-N
12
                        Two sets of checkdams were excavated in Nonstructure 9-N, located
                        above and near the edge of the canyon rim, in the main drainage of the
                        site (see Database
                                Map 270). These checkdams were constructed of large, unshaped
                        rocks. The walls were dry-laid and uncoursed. The three checkdams visible
                        on the modern ground surface range from 6 m to more than 20 m long. In
                        contrast, walls identified during the Chapin Mesa survey at Mesa Verde
                        National Park average 4.5 to 5.5 m in length (Rohn
                            1963*1:442), and the walls at Point of Pines average 10 m, rarely
                        exceeding 20 m (Woodbury 1961*1:12).
                        Thus, some of the walls in Nonstructure 9-N at Woods Canyon are longer
                        than the walls in either of those other locations.
13
                        Most of the checkdams in Nonstructure 9-N are one stone wide and
                        a little less than 50 cm thick. One wall (Nonstructure 9.1-N, Feature
                        3) is 1.36 m thick, although this measurement may include fallen stones.
                        With the exception of one unusually tall checkdam (Feature 3), the average
                        existing height of the checkdams in Nonstructure 9-N is .5 m, and most
                        stand only a few courses high. The tall checkdam is comparable in height
                        to most of the checkdams on Chapin Mesa (Rohn
                            1963*1:442). It is probable that the shorter walls at Woods Canyon
                        originally stood taller and have collapsed over time.
14
                        The northern set of checkdams consists of two parallel walls (Nonstructure
                        9.1-N, Feature 1, and Nonstructure 9.2-N, Feature 2) that lie close to
                        each other and perpendicular to the drainage (Database
                                Map 299). The southern wall is the most substantial of the two;
                        it rests on bedrock and was built first. The northern wall was built on
                        a layer of sediment that had accumulated behind the southern wall. The
                        fact that the sediment had not been removed before the second checkdam
                        was built suggests that the purpose of the first wall was to promote sediment
                        accumulation. The proximity of the two checkdams, and the order in which
                        they were built, suggests that the later wall might have been built to
                        replace the earlier wall or to help it slow the flow of water.
15
                        Three walls (Nonstructure 9.1-N, Features 3 and 4, and Nonstructure 9.3-N,
                        Feature 5) make up the southern set of checkdams in Nonstructure 9-N (Database
                                Map 270). They were built very close to the cliff edge and close
                        to one another. The northernmost (Feature 3) and southernmost (Feature
                        5) walls are quite long and extend across both branches of the main drainage.
                        The north wall and middle wall (Feature 4) were built first, directly
                        on bedrock. Later, the south wall was built on a layer of construction
                        fill. Construction sediment downslope from the north wall and on both
                        sides and the top of the middle wall might have helped these constructions
                        retain water. It seems unlikely that walls made exclusively of stone could
                        have held water for long.
16
                        The checkdams in Nonstructure 9-N might have served several purposes.
                        They probably were intended to slow runoff rather than to channel or impound
                        water. If they had been designed to channel water, they would have been
                        neither straight (Doug Ramsey, personal communication 1996) nor oriented
                        perpendicular to the drainage. The linear configuration of these walls
                        contrasts sharply with the curved dam at Woods Canyon Reservoir and would
                        have rendered them ineffective at retaining water for any length of time.
                        The three checkdams near the canyon edge would have prevented water from
                        cascading over the 35- to 40-ft cliff, which in turn would have prevented
                        damage to the buildings below and controlled erosion both above and below.
17
                        The most massive checkdam exposed in Nonstructure 9-N (Feature
                        3) might have impounded water, although it seems unlikely that it was
                        designed for that purpose. The wall stands 1.12 m tall, which falls within
                        the range of the estimated height of the Woods Canyon Reservoir dam (Wilshusen
                            et al. 1997*1:673). Sediment intentionally placed on the downslope
                        side of the wall would have improved the water-retaining capability of
                        this dam. The sediment might have been placed as part of the construction
                        of the checkdam or added later to reinforce the stone wall; it also could
                        have been excess accumulated sediment that was removed from the behind
                        the wall and deposited on the downslope side during routine cleaning and
                        maintenance. Distinctive laminae behind the wall are evidence that sediment
                        settled out of slow-moving or standing water. All these circumstances
                        indicate that water did in fact accumulate behind the checkdam, but the
                        presence of additional checkdams farther down the drainage suggests that
                        the impoundment of water may have been incidental.
18
                        Researchers have suggested that crops might have been planted in
                        the sediment that accumulated behind this type of checkdam (Hayes
                            1964*1; Rohn 1963*1; Smith
                            1987*2; Winter 1978*1;
                        Woodbury 1961*1). The checkdams
                        would have trapped or slowed runoff, allowing silt to settle out of the
                        water and create fertile terraces that could have been farmed (Rohn
                            1963*1:441, 442). Ernest M. Vallo, Sr., of the pueblo of Acoma in
                        New Mexico and a member of Crow Canyon's Native American advisory group,
                        offered his own perspective on the possible functions of these constructions.
                        He believes that the residents of Woods Canyon Pueblo might have planted
                        crops to the side of the main channel, where water could have seeped or
                        been carried to the plants. Alternatively, the nutrient-rich sediments
                        that accumulated behind the checkdams may have been collected and transported
                        to nearby fields, a strategy that was practiced in the "old days" at Acoma
                        (Ernest M. Vallo, Sr., personal communication 1996).
19
                        There is evidence that sediment accumulated behind at least one
                        of the walls (Feature 1) during the occupation of Woods Canyon Pueblo.
                        The fine sediments that accumulated behind other checkdams (Features 2
                        and 3) also might have been deposited during occupation. The sediment
                        originated from the mesa top above the site and could have traveled to
                        the canyon edge only when an erosional environment existed. Such an environment
                        was probably present during the occupation of the site, when vegetation
                        had been cleared from the area (Doug Ramsey, personal communication 1996).
Other Checkdams at Woods Canyon Pueblo
20
                        Two possible checkdams were identified toward the southern end
                        of the site, near the base of the talus slope (Database
                                Map 330). The upper checkdam might be an extension of a massive
                        retaining wall located along the east side of the main drainage. The lower
                        checkdam is separate from, but close to, the retaining wall. These two
                        features might have been built to prevent soil erosion from around the
                        bases of the buildings to the south. Alternatively, the walls might have
                        diverted water out of the main channel to irrigate the relatively flat
                        area that lies east of the drainage and north of the buildings. Ernest
                        Vallo, Sr., believes that the main purpose of these ancient checkdams
                        was to prevent erosion, slow down water runoff, and trap rainwater (Ernest
                        M. Vallo, Sr., personal communication 1996).
21
                        Several checkdams are also located along the drainage that roughly
                        marks the west edge of the site. Two prominent alignments of boulders
                        are on the canyon edge. Farther down the slope, there are several rough
                        stone alignments that might have been checkdams. There may be a series
                        of checkdams along a peripheral drainage that empties into an area that
                        could have been a garden or field (Nonstructure 1-N). Most of these possible
                        checkdams were not mapped.
22
                        The tallest exposed wall on the site is located midway down the
                        talus slope, immediately west of the main drainage. The wall is 20 to
                        25 m long and reaches a height of 2 m above the modern ground surface.
                        Its east end forms a corner with another wall. There is no kiva depression
                        behind this wall. It is possible that the wall was constructed to impede
                        the flow of water, and the flat area behind the wall could have been used
                        for a garden or field. Two walls in almost the same configuration and
                        constructed of massive stones were identified farther upslope just west
                        of the drainage and might have served a similar purpose. Further testing
                        would be required to make a final determination on the function of these
                        walls, and none is labeled a checkdam on Database Map 330.
23
                        Portions of nine stone alignments were identified in a large, flat,
                        open area designated Nonstructure 1-N. These walls promoted the accumulation
                        of sediments and therefore might have created areas where crops could
                        have been planted. These walls are discussed in greater detail in paragraphs
                            2836.
Agricultural Areas
Identification of Agricultural Areas
24
                        Several locations at or near the site would have been suitable
                        for farming or gardening, including the mesa tops, the canyon bottom,
                        and the checkdam terraces. The mesa tops surrounding Woods Canyon are
                        believed to have been used as farmland by the earlier residents of the
                        community who lived at the mesa-top sites of Albert Porter, Bass, Dexter,
                        and 5MT4700. It is likely that the people living at Woods Canyon Pueblo
                        also planted crops on the mesas, even though their homes were farther
                        away from the fields than were the earlier sites. The thick, eolian soils
                        on the mesas are ideal for dry-land farming because they retain moisture
                        from rainfall and melted snow.
25
                        The people also might have farmed in the broad, flat canyon bottom of
                        Woods Canyon, which contains rich floodplain deposits and several springs
                        and seeps. However, cold-air drainagethat is, the tendency for cold
                        air to "pool" in low-lying areasmight have affected the length of
                        the growing season in some years, occasionally limiting agricultural production
                        in this area.
26
                        Checkdams in the main drainage (Nonstructure 9-N; see paragraphs
                            1219) and in several peripheral drainages at the site might
                        have trapped sediment, creating terraces of nutrient-rich soil that could
                        have been used as fields or garden plots. Similarly, flat terraces behind
                        walls built on, or at the bases of, slopes (Nonstructure 1-N) might have
                        been farmed. In dry years, terraces such as these could have been critical
                        farming or gardening areas, because, unlike fields on open mesa tops,
                        they would have been watered by runoff (see Rohn
                            1963*1:447; Woodbury 1961*1:12).
                        Even so, the crops from small terraces at Woods Canyon Pueblo probably
                        only supplemented the crops from the mesa top and the canyon bottom because
                        the terraces would not have been large enough to grow crops for the entire
                        population of the pueblo (see Smith
                            [1987*2:29] for interpretations of similar terraces at Mesa Verde
                        National Park).
27
                        Modern Hopi farmers use a wide variety of agricultural fields,
                        many designated for the planting of specific crops (Rohn
                            1963*1:447). Similarly, farmers at the pueblo of Acoma use terraces
                        as special fields for the cultivation of ceremonial plants, a practice
                        that may have been employed prehistorically at Woods Canyon Pueblo as
                        well (Ernest M. Vallo, Sr., personal communication 1996).
Possible Agricultural Terraces in Nonstructure 1-N
28
                        Nonstructure 1-N is an open, relatively flat area in the canyon
                        bottom (Database
                                Map 330). The area is located at the foot of the steep talus slope
                        and measures approximately 375 m2 (about one-tenth of an acre).
                        Architectural units surround Nonstructure 1-N on its north, west, and
                        east sides. In two places, there are gaps in the architecture where two
                        small drainages enter the area. The drainage in the northwest corner lies
                        between two kiva suites and is spanned by several possible checkdams.
                        The drainage near the northeast corner cuts between two boulders. The
                        southern boundary of this possible terrace is marked by a stone alignment.
                        The area to the south of this alignment slopes gently to the south.
29
                        On the basis of surface indications, we first defined Nonstructure 1-N
                        as a possible plaza or a great kiva. The results of testing indicate that
                        neither a plaza nor a great kiva is present. Instead, Crow Canyon's excavations
                        exposed a kiva (Structure 9-S), midden deposits from the surrounding buildings,
                        crude stone walls, small extramural pits, and extramural surfaces in this
                        area. Although our testing was limited in scope, we concluded that Nonstructure
                        1-N was probably used for multiple purposesas a midden, as a possible
                        outdoor work area, and as a possible garden or a small agricultural fieldover
                        a long period of time. Here, I focus on its possible use as an agricultural
                        area.
30
                        Portions of nine extramural walls were documented in Nonstructure
                        1-N and in the north end of Nonstructure 4-N, an adjacent study area (see
                        Database
                                Map 258). The walls in Nonstructure 4-N are similar to the walls
                        in Nonstructure 1-N. In fact, one section exposed in Nonstructure 4-N
                        (Nonstructure 4.4-N, Feature 3) is believed to be a section of a wall
                        that was also partly exposed in Nonstructure 1-N (Nonstructure 1.20-N,
                        Feature 7). With one exception (Nonstructure 1.8-N, Feature 3), the walls
                        are oriented east-west, the ideal orientation for slowing water runoff
                        from the small drainages at the north end of Nonstructure 1-N. The walls
                        consist of rough alignments of large, unshaped stones. All of the stones
                        in each wall rest at approximately the same elevation. Two-thirds of the
                        walls are only one course high; the remaining one-third are composed of
                        three to four roughly stacked courses. Two walls are known to extend beyond
                        the excavation units in which they were exposed because they are visible
                        on the modern ground surface; they measure 6 and 18 m long, respectively.
                        The average thickness of these walls where both faces are visible is 39
                        cm, which suggests that the walls were not thicker than masonry room walls.
31
                        The stratigraphic position of the walls indicates that some were
                        probably used in conjunction with other walls; others, however, were no
                        longer in use when other nearby walls were built. Three walls are interpreted
                        as having been built early in the occupation of the pueblo, and the remainder
                        are interpreted as being later constructions.
32
                        Three possible stone alignments were constructed during the early occupation
                        of this area (Nonstructure 1.5-N, Feature 5; Nonstructure 1.22-N, Feature
                        8; and Nonstructure 1.19-N, Feature 12) (Database
                                Map 261). These walls were found .5 to 1.0 m below the modern
                        ground surface and rest on undisturbed native sediment. They are clustered
                        together at the south end of Nonstructure 1-N.
33
                        Seven stone alignments are inferred on the basis of their location
                        on or near the modern ground surface to have been built relatively late
                        in the occupation of the pueblo; these are Nonstructure 1.6-N, Feature
                        2; Nonstructure 1.8-N, Feature 3; Nonstructure 1.20-N, Feature 7; Nonstructure
                        1.16-N, Feature 10; Nonstructure 1.12-N, Feature 11; Nonstructure 4.6-N,
                        Feature 1; and Nonstructure 4.4-N, Feature 3 (Database
                                Map 259 and Database
                                Map 260). With the possible exception of Feature 3 in Nonstructure
                        4.4-N, these walls rest on cultural deposits. In most cases, they are
                        located in midden deposits, and they probably prevented the refuse from
                        eroding downslope.
34
                        Some of the fill at the south end of Nonstructure 1-N (Segment
                        1) might have been deposited intentionally to create farming or gardening
                        terraces. It was clear that these sediments had not been deposited naturally,
                        but they did not appear to be trash deposits either, which was the most
                        common type of cultural deposit at the site. A couple of natural strata
                        that might have been altered by agricultural activities were also identified
                        at the south end of Nonstructure 1-N (Segment 2).
35
                        The presence of occupational and postoccupational alluvial deposits
                        indicates that water moved through this large terraced area both during
                        and after the occupation of the pueblo, probably directed there by the
                        two northern drainages. Runoff likely would have deposited sediment behind
                        the walls and might have helped to irrigate the terraces after they were
                        established.
36
                        Before Crow Canyon's excavations began at the site, a Native American
                        consultant from Hopi remarked that Nonstructure 1-N would have been an
                        excellent garden area (Varien et
                            al. 1995*1:8). The presence of stone alignments and stratigraphic
                        deposits that appear to be consistent with agricultural activity supports
                        the hypothesis that this area might have been a garden or small field.
                        The stone alignments appear to have been constructed to reduce erosion
                        and promote the accumulation of sediment. The naturally deposited sediments
                        might have been supplemented by intentionally deposited fill.
Plant and Animal Resources
37
                        The results of the analysis of plant remains recovered from Woods
                        Canyon Pueblo (see "Archaeobotanical
                            Remains") provide information about the diet, agricultural practices,
                        and wood-procurement strategies of the village inhabitants. The abundance
                        of maize (corn) in the assemblage clearly documents the importance of
                        this plant as a food source. Even though beans and squash were not recovered
                        in the analyzed samples from Woods Canyon, they were staples of the Pueblo
                        diet in ancient times and likely were consumed by the Woods Canyon residents
                        as well. The presence of maize stalks and cobs in the assemblage suggests
                        that the agricultural fields were close enough to the village that fairly
                        large portions of the plantsnot just the kernelscould be transported
                        to the site. Local wild plants, including chenopodium-amaranth and groundcherry,
                        were also collected by the inhabitants of the pueblo. In "Archaeobotanical
                            Remains," Rainey and Jezik argue that the high proportions of maize
                        and weedy plant remains, relative to less desirable or higher-cost foods
                        such as wolfberry and cactus fruit, suggest that food was relatively plentiful.
                        Juniper, pine, and sagebrush were the most common types of fuelwood identified
                        in the Woods Canyon Pueblo assemblage, and juniper and some pinyon were
                        used to construct kiva roofs.
38
                        The results of animal bone analysis are reported in "Faunal
                            Remains." For the most part, the various animals represented by the
                        remains were consumed as food. The assemblage indicates that the inhabitants
                        of the pueblo relied on turkey and rabbits (cottontails and jackrabbits)
                        as their primary sources of animal protein and fat. Turkey remains are
                        more than twice as abundant as rabbit (lagomorph) remains. Artiodactyl
                        (deer, sheep, or pronghorn antelope) remains are extremely rare at the
                        site. The low percentage of artiodactyl remains is typical of many Pueblo
                        III sites in the Mesa Verde region (Driver
                            2002*1). In addition, there are other sites in the region where turkey
                        remains outnumber rabbit remains by at least two to one and artiodactyl
                        remains make up 1 percent or less of the faunal assemblages, which leads
                        Driver to infer that people were not hunting large game (see discussion
                        in "Faunal Remains").
                        Comparisons of faunal remains from the four major sections of the site
                        did not reveal any significant differences in species represented. This
                        suggests that use of faunal resources was similar across the site and
                        throughout the occupation.
39
                        The human skeletal remains examined from Woods Canyon Pueblo indicate
                        that the residents were relatively well nourished and healthy (see "Human
                            Skeletal Remains"). The people were average to above average in height
                        and exhibited a low incidence of anemia. Dental enamel hypoplasia, an
                        indicator of malnutrition and/or infection, was pervasive but not pronounced.
                        Concurrent stress markers indicative of serious or prolonged episodes
                        of stress were absent from the individual skeletal remains.
Summary
40
                        The people of Woods Canyon Pueblo obtained water from seeps and
                        springs in the canyon bottom and supplemented their supply with water
                        from a nearby reservoir. They controlled water runoff by building checkdams
                        in the main drainage, in peripheral drainages, and on steep slopes of
                        the site. The residents probably grew crops on the nearby mesa tops; they
                        also might have planted gardens and small fields within the pueblo, especially
                        in level areas at the bases of the steep slopes and on terraces that formed
                        behind checkdams. Botanical and faunal evidence points to a diet of domesticated
                        plants (maize) and domesticated animals (turkeys), supplemented by a variety
                        of wild plants and animals (primarily rabbits). And, if the small sample
                        of human skeletal remains analyzed during test excavations is representative
                        of the population of the village as a whole, then the people of Woods
                        Canyon were a relatively well fed and healthy group.
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