While the work of excavation and repair of Cliff
Palace described in the preceding pages adds nothing distinctly new to
existing knowledge of cliff-dweller culture, it renders a more
comprehensive idea of the conditions of life in one of the largest of
these interesting ancient, settlements in our Southwest. Of all the
questions that present themselves after a work of this kind, perhaps
the most important, from a scientific point of view, is, What relation
exists between the culture of Cliff Palace and that of the neighboring
pueblos? Directly across the canyon, in full view of Cliff Palace, there
is a typical pueblo ruin, almost identical in character with many others
scattered throughout the Southwest, some of which are known to have been
inhabited in historic times by ancestors of Pueblo peoples still living.
The contribution here made to the knowledge of cliff-dwelling culture
will, it is hoped, shed light on the question, In what way are the
cliff-dwellers and the Pueblos related?
The relationship in culture of the former people of
Cliff Palace to those of the large pueblo ruin on the mesa across the
canyon is most instructive. How were the inhabitants of these two
settlements related; and were the two sites inhabited simultaneously, or
is the pueblo ruin older than Cliff Palace? So far as the culture of the
inhabitants of the two is known (and knowledge of the pueblo is scant),
the two settlements were synchronously inhabited, but nothing in them
gives indication of the period of their occupancy. These questions can
be settled only by the excavation of this pueblo or of some similar ruin
on the plateau.a Nordenskiöld, with the data possessed by him,
did not hesitate to express decided views on this point:
We are forced to conclude that they [cliff-houses]
were abandoned later than the villages on the mesa. Some features, for
example, the superposition of walls constructed with the greatest
proficiency on others built in a more primitive fashion (see plate XIII)
indicate that the cliff-dwellings have been inhabited at two different
periods. They were first abandoned, and had partly fallen into ruin, but
were subsequently repeopled, new walls being now erected on the ruins of
the old. The best explanation hereof seems to be the following: On the
plateau, and in the valleys the Pueblo tribes attained their widest
distribution and their highest development. The numerous villages at no
great distance from each other were strong enough to defy their hostile
neighbors. But afterwards, from causes difficult of elucidation, a
period of decay set in, the number and population of the villages
gradually decreased, and the inhabitants were again compelled to take
refuge in the remote fastnesses. Here the people of the Mesa Verde
finally succumbed to their enemies. The memory of their last struggle is
preserved by the numerous human bones found in many places, strewn among
the ruined cliff-dwellings. These human remains occur in situations
where it is impossible to assume that they have been interred.
aA true comparison of the mesa habitation and
the cliff-dwelling can be made only by renewed work on the former, which
is now little more than a huge pile of fallen walls. Present indications
show a greater antiquity of the mesa ruin, the site of which afforded
more adequate protection. On this supposition the mesa ruins would be
considered older than the cliff ruins, and those of the valley the most
ancient. If the ruins in Montezuma valley are the oldest, we can not
suppose that the culture originated in the cliffs and spread to the
valley. The circular subterranean kiva bears indication of having
originated in valleys rather than in caverns. Nordenskiöld does not
mention the large ruin on the bluff west of Cliff Palace.
Closely connected with the relative age and the
identity of the Mesa Verde cliff-house and pueblo culture are the age
and relationship of different cliff-houses of the same region, for
example, Cliff Palace and Spruce-tree House. The relative number of
kivas may shed light on this point.
The relative proportion of the number of kivas to
secular houses varies in Cliff Palace and Spruce-tree House. In the
former there are about 7 secular rooms to every kiva; in the latter
about 15. Long House has a still more marked difference, there being
here only a few secular houses and a maximum number of kivas. Whether
this variation has any meaning it is impossible to say definitely;
theoretically, as compared with modern pueblos, the proportionately
larger number of kivas points to a sociological condition in Cliff
Palace characteristic of more primitive times. The larger the number of
kivas relatively to secular rooms the older the ruin. Long House would
be regarded as older than Cliff Palace, and Cliff Palace older than
Spruce-tree House, Balcony House being the most modern and the last of
the four to be deserted. A cliff-dwelling with a kiva but without
secular rooms is rare, and one with secular rooms but without kivas is
likewise unusual. Where the latter exists it is so situated as to
indicate that it was subordinated to neighboring large
cliff-dwellings.
The relative number of circular kivas in ruins and in
modern inhabited pueblos where the circular form of room is found is
larger in the ruins than in the inhabited pueblos. The proportionate
number of circular rooms to secular rooms in cliff-dwellings of the Mesa
Verde is also larger than in pueblo ruins like those of the Chaco.
Apparently the older the pueblo the greater the relative number of
kivas. If, as is suspected, a larger number of kivas indicates
relatively greater age, the explanation may be sought in the amalgamation
of clans and the development of religious fraternities. Hypothetically,
in early days each clan had its own men's room, or kiva, but when clans
were united by marriage and secret ceremonies were no longer limited to
individual Clans, the participants belonging to several clans, a
religious fraternity was developed and several clan kivas consolidated
or were enlarged into fraternity kivas such as we find among the Hopi
and other Pueblos.
From a study of kivas the conclusion is that
Spruce-tree House is more modern than Cliff Palace. This conclusion is
borne out also by the fact that the water supply at Spruce-tree House is
more abundant than that at Cliff Palace.
In one or two architectural features Cliff Palace is
unique, although sharing with other cliff-houses of the Mesa Verde
National Park many minor characters. The first difference between Cliff
Palace and Spruce-tree House, outside of the disparity in their size and
the relatively large proportion of secular to ceremonial rooms in the
latter, is the existence in the former of terraces and retaining walls.
Spruce-tree House is built on one level, above which rise the secular
houses while below are the ceremonial rooms or kivas. The contrast of
this simple condition with that of Cliff Palace, with its three
terraces and the complicated front wall at several levels thereby necessitated,
is apparent.
There are several other ruins in the Mesa Verde Park
in which the configuration of the rear of the cave led to the
construction of the cliff-house in terrace form. This is well
exemplified in the Spring House, where buildings on an upper level
occupy much the same relation to those below as the ledge houses to the
main ruin, and in ruins in the Canyon de Chelly, like those in Mummy
Cave, where this relation of the buildings on the ledge to those on top
of the talus is even more pronounced. Architectural features in
cliff-houses are due to the geological structure of the cave in which
they are situated rather than to cultural differences.
Nothing was found to indicate that Cliff Palace was
inhabited during the historic period. The inhabitants were not
acquainted with metals brought by white men to the Southwest. The
absence of glass and of glazed pottery is also significant. No sheep,
horses, or other beasts of burden paid them tribute. In fact, there is
no evidence that they had ever heard of white men. These ruins belong to
the stone age in America and show no evidence of white man's
culture.
Except that it is prehistoric, the period at which
Cliff Palace was inhabited is therefore largely a matter for
archeological investigation to determine, and thus far no decisive
evidence bearing on that point has been produced. It has been held that
Cliff Palace is five hundred years old, and some writers have added five
centuries to this guess; but the nature of the evidence on which this
extreme antiquity is ascribed to the ruin is not warranted by the
evidence available.
No additional information was obtained bearing on
current theories of the causes that led the ancient occupants of the
Mesa Verde cliff-dwellings to adopt this inhospitable and inconvenient
habitat. It is probable that one and the same cause led to the
abandonment of Spruce-tree House, Cliff Palace, and other Mesa Verde
cliff-houses. The inhabitants of these buildings struggled to gain a
livelihood against their unfavorable environment until a too-exacting
nature finally overcame them. There are no indications that the abandonment
of Cliff Palace was cataclysmic in nature: it seems to have been a
gradual desertion by one clan after another. One of the primary reasons
was change of climate, which caused the water supply to diminish and the
crops to fail; but long before its final desertion many clans abandoned
the place, and drifting from point to point sought home-sites where
water was more abundant. All available data lend weight to a belief that
the cliff-houses of Mesa Verde were not abandoned simultaneously, but
were deserted one by one. Possibly the inhabitants retired to the river
valleys, where water was constant, and later gave up life on the mesa.
But even then the culture was not allowed to continue unmodified by
outside influences. Where the descendants of Cliff Palace now dwell, or
whether they are now extinct, can be determined only by additional
research.
Evidence is rapidly accumulating in support of the
theory that the "cliff-dweller culture" of our Southwest was preceded
by a "pit-house culture," the most prominent feature of which is the
small circular or rectangular rooms, artificially excavated laterally in
cliffs or vertical in the ground, which served this ancient people
either as dwellings or for storage. The side walls of these rooms were
supported in some instances by upright logs, and commonly clay was
plastered directly on the walls of the excavations. The architectural
survival of subterranean rooms exists among the cliff-dwellings in
circular underground kivas, the variations of which are so well
illustrated in Cliff Palace.
In connection with these "pit rooms," which are never
large, may be mentioned the large subterranean artificial excavations
found scattered over the Pueblo area of the Southwest. Such occur in
the Gila valley, and have been reported from the San Juan drainage; they
have been identified as reservoirs and also as kivas. Some of these
subterranean rooms are rightly identified as kivas, but others have
architectural features that render this interpretation improbable. What
their function was and how they are connected with the people who built
the smaller subterranean rooms of the Southwest can be determined only
by excavations and a study of the features of both types.
The most important step that remains to be taken in
the scientific study of the ruins of the Mesa Verde National Park is to
discover the relation of the culture of Cliff Palace to that of the
neighboring pueblo. This will necessitate the scientific excavation and
repair of the latter ruin and a comparison of its major and minor
antiquities with those of Cliff Palace. The age of cliff-dwellings in
different parts of the Southwest undoubtedly varies. Certain Pueblo
ruins are older than some cliff-dwellings, and there are cliff-houses
more ancient than Pueblo ruins. Continued research in the Mesa Verde
region will doubtless shed light on the relative age of Cliff Palace and
the great pueblo ruin opposite it.