Department of Geography and GIS, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States of America.
Department of Geography & Meteorology, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Indiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 14;13(6):e0198290. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198290. eCollection 2018.
Questions about how archaeological populations obtained basic food supplies are often difficult to answer. The application of specialist techniques from non-archaeological fields typically expands our knowledge base, but can be detrimental to cultural interpretations if employed incorrectly, resulting in problematic datasets and erroneous conclusions not easily caught by the recipient archaeological community. One area where this problem has failed to find resolution is Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, the center of one of the New World's most vibrant ancient civilizations. Discussions of agricultural feasibility and its impact on local population levels at Chaco Canyon have been heavily influenced by studies of soil salinity. A number of researchers have argued that salinized soils severely limited local agricultural production, instead suggesting food was imported from distant sources, specifically the Chuska Mountains. A careful reassessment of existing salinity data as measured by electrical conductivity reveals critical errors in data conversion and presentation that have misrepresented the character of the area's soil and its potential impact on crops. We combine all available electrical conductivity data, including our own, and apply multiple established conversion methods in order to estimate soil salinity values and evaluate their relationship to agricultural productivity potential. Our results show that Chacoan soils display the same salinity ranges and spatial variability as soils in other documented, productive fields in semi-arid areas. Additionally, the proposed large-scale importation of food from the Chuska Mountains region has serious social implications that have not been thoroughly explored. We consider these factors and conclude that the high cost and extreme inflexibility of such a system, in combination with material evidence for local agriculture within Chaco Canyon, make this scenario highly unlikely. Both the soil salinity and archaeological data suggest that there is no justification for precluding the practice of local agriculture within Chaco Canyon.
关于考古人群如何获得基本食物供应的问题,往往难以回答。从非考古领域应用专业技术通常会扩展我们的知识库,但如果使用不当,会对文化解释造成损害,导致有问题的数据集和错误的结论,而这些问题在接收考古界中很难被发现。在新墨西哥州的查科峡谷,这个问题一直没有得到解决,该峡谷是新世界最繁荣的古代文明中心之一。关于查科峡谷农业可行性及其对当地人口水平的影响的讨论受到土壤盐度研究的极大影响。一些研究人员认为,盐渍土壤严重限制了当地的农业生产,反而表明食物是从遥远的来源进口的,特别是恰斯卡山脉。对电导率测量的现有盐度数据进行仔细重新评估,揭示了数据转换和呈现中的关键错误,这些错误错误地描述了该地区土壤的性质及其对作物的潜在影响。我们结合了所有可用的电导率数据,包括我们自己的数据,并应用了多种已建立的转换方法,以估计土壤盐度值并评估其与农业生产力潜力的关系。我们的结果表明,查科土壤显示出与在半干旱地区其他有记录的、多产的田地中相同的盐度范围和空间变异性。此外,从恰斯卡山脉地区大规模进口食物的提议存在严重的社会影响,尚未得到彻底探讨。我们考虑到这些因素,并得出结论,认为这种系统的高成本和极端不灵活性,加上查科峡谷内当地农业的物质证据,使得这种情况极不可能发生。土壤盐度和考古数据都表明,没有理由排除在查科峡谷内进行当地农业的做法。