The Early Agricultural period (2100 BC–AD 50) was a time of transformation in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona and Sonora. The settlement patterns of preceramic Early Agricultural cultivators—who remained highly mobile but maintained extensive canal systems—lack parallel among later farmers or foragers. The presence or absence of formal systems of land tenure among these “semisedentary” farmers remains unresolved. However, the labor invested in canal systems created a strong impetus to hold territory near optimal canal take-offs and to transfer this land across generations.
I discuss this question using new data derived from compliance-driven archaeology, from an Early Cienega–phase locus of the Los Pozos site group in the Tucson Basin of southern Arizona. Site structure at repeatedly occupied seasonal settlements suggests the organization of households into lineal groups, which likely held ranked precedence over agricultural land. This is indicated by two lines of evidence: (1) the organization of settlement into multihousehold rings with shared activity areas and (2) formal cemeteries associated with these groups. The secondary reburial of individuals who died at other locations also indicates strong associations between ancestry and territory. This analysis joins the growing body of work detailing the complex relationship between agricultural intensification and sedentism, indicating that the institutional prerequisites for sedentary village life emerged during earlier intermittent occupations.
Early Agricultural Sedentism
The Tucson Basin, located in the southern basin and range province of Arizona in North America, is characterized by intermittently flowing water courses, including the Santa Cruz River and Rillito Creek (Figure 1), and by a biannual rainfall pattern with summer monsoons and winter frontal Pacific storms. Between 2100 BC and AD 50, the area was settled by communities of dedicated maize cultivators. Although current interpretations of the Archaic in the US Southwest / Mexican Northwest note the early adoption of maize in diverse areas, this initially amounted to casual horticulture within an established foraging round (see Roth Reference Roth2016; Vierra Reference Vierra2005, Reference Vierra2018). The Tucson Basin is one of several regions in southern Arizona, Sonora, and Chihuahua, where the scale and sophistication of Middle and Late Archaic maize farming warrants designating an “Early Agricultural” period concurrent with Archaic hunter-forager adaptations (Carpenter et al. Reference Carpenter, Sanchez, Watson and Villalpando2015; Hard and Roney Reference Hard and Roney2020; Mabry and Vint Reference Mabry, Vint, Mills and Fowles2017).
The necessity of such terminology reflects the growing recognition of the long pause between the adoption of cultivars and the emergence of sedentary settlement in many areas of the world (Pringle Reference Pringle1998). Although the Early Agricultural lifeway was radically transformed by the adoption of canal-irrigated agriculture, this did not result in an abrupt transition to sedentism. Early Agricultural settlement was structured by the fundamental tensions between a nascent commitment to canal irrigation and the constraints of preceramic technologies, which limited caching and cooking of dried maize. Early farmers were pragmatically flexible about the dietary prominence of cultivars versus wild staples (Diehl Reference Diehl and Vint2015; Diehl and Waters Reference Diehl, Waters, Kennett and Winterhalder2006; Sinensky and Farahani Reference Sinensky and Farahani2018). Diet breadth remained high throughout the Early Agricultural period, and early farmers did not invest in durable architecture at their frequently flooded, intermittently occupied settlements (Diehl and Waters Reference Diehl, Waters, Kennett and Winterhalder2006; Gregory and Diehl Reference Gregory, Diehl and Schlanger2002; Gregory and Nials Reference Gregory, Nials and Diehl2005).
The resulting rancheria-type settlement pattern—characterized by shifting communities of small, short-lived farmsteads—is unsuited to the site concept as traditionally applied. Darling et alia (Reference Darling, Ravesloot and Waters2004) described this pattern as “tethered drift”: residential communities became tethered to irrigation districts constrained by topographic features of the river reach, but they also relocated seasonally and generationally in response to alluvial cycles (Gregory and Nials Reference Gregory, Nials and Diehl2005; Haynes and Huckell Reference Haynes and Huckell1986), local resource depletion (Diehl and Waters Reference Diehl, Waters, Kennett and Winterhalder2006), and increasing local population density (Mabry Reference Mabry2008). Flexible settlement strategies produced significant variation in the duration and intensity of occupation, with frequent shifts in the core areas of individual settlements (Mabry Reference Mabry2008). Nonetheless, specific points on the landscape emerged as persistent places over centuries of occupation. The term “recurrent sedentism” (Whittlesey et al. Reference Whittlesey, Jerome Hesse and Foster2010) is applied to such sites, describing the repetition of a basic settlement plan over the course of numerous successive short occupations.
The “Los Pozos Site Group” refers to one such territory, which is composed of five archaeological sites—Rillito Fan (AZ AA:12:788[ASM]), El Taller (AZ AA:12:92[ASM]), Los Pozos (AZ AA:12:91[ASM]), Wetlands (AZ AA:12:90[ASM]), and AZ AA:12:16(ASM)—located along the eastern bank of the Santa Cruz River in Tucson, Arizona. This complex represents a 4 km long palimpsest of recurrent occupation, created over two millennia of highly mobile settlement. The location of these sites along the present-day Interstate 10 corridor has resulted in extensive excavation over several decades of compliance archaeology (Figure 2). Excavation in 2019 by Desert Archaeology for the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) expanded the dataset with work at Los Pozos and El Taller.
Temporal Trends
The Los Pozos site group is located upstream of an alluvial reach boundary at the Rillito Fan, a large tributary fan at the confluence of Rillito Creek and the Santa Cruz River. Here, sediment deposition and underflow created an optimal environment for canal irrigation (Nials et al. Reference Nials, Gregory and Brett Hill2011). Irrigation agriculture in the Los Pozos site group dates to the Silverbell Interval (2100–1200 BC; Huckleberry Reference Huckleberry, Griset, Jerome Hesse, Rawson and Barr2018a). Silverbell Interval canals were shallow diversion ditches (Whitney Reference Whitney2022), and their maintenance would not have required the scale of community organization and cooperation seen during later Early Agricultural occupations (e.g., Mabry Reference Mabry and Diehl2000, Reference Mabry and Schlanger2002, Reference Mabry2008). Nonetheless numerous Silverbell-dated loci in this area attest to decreasing mobility.
The succeeding San Pedro phase was characterized by high-volume flooding of the Santa Cruz in the Los Pozos vicinity. This caused channel downcutting, rendering canal irrigation difficult and resulting in local depopulation. Temporary encampments indicate continued use of the area as a resource catchment zone (Nials and Wocherl Reference Nials, Wocherl and Wocherl2007). The floodplain stabilized in the late San Pedro phase during a period of gentle overbank flooding and pedogenesis (Huckleberry Reference Huckleberry, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023a), and the transition to the Early Cienega phase (800–400 BC) marked transformative shifts in the local settlement pattern.
Reconstructions of canal flow capacity at Las Capas, north of Los Pozos, indicate that canals reached approximately 1.5 km in length and irrigated approximately 15 ha of gridded fields by 800–730 BC, feeding an estimated 50 to 100 persons (Mabry Reference Mabry and Schlanger2002; Mabry and Vint Reference Mabry, Vint, Mills and Fowles2017; Vint Reference Vint and Vierra2018). Most posit heterarchical management of irrigation communities, with small groups of households forming cooperatives under weak local leadership (Mabry and Vint Reference Mabry, Vint, Mills and Fowles2017; Wallace and Lindeman Reference Wallace, Lindeman, Young and Herr2012). The evolution of canal systems near Los Pozos was likely similar. Features preserved in fine-grained overbank deposits show that at Rillito Fan and El Taller, complex canal systems fed by the Rillito River replaced smaller Santa Cruz River canals by approximately 820 BC (Huckleberry Reference Huckleberry, Griset, Jerome Hesse, Rawson and Barr2018b). To the south at Los Pozos and Wetlands, larger and more intensively occupied settlements indicate aggregating populations.
Site types by this period included enduring riverine agricultural settlements, smaller hunting/foraging camps on floodplains and on the bajada, and opportunistic seasonal farmsteads along ephemeral creeks and drainages (Vint Reference Vint and Vierra2018). In this sense, Early Agricultural settlement patterns already incorporated the same range of locales and biomes utilized by later sedentary farmers. However, Early Agricultural occupations were significantly more discontinuous: construction sequences and seasonal indicators demonstrate that most of the population left for portions of the year, and long occupational hiatuses frequently occurred (Gregory and Diehl Reference Gregory, Diehl and Schlanger2002). “Central-based wandering” models (e.g., Beardsley et al. Reference Beardsley, Holder, Krieger, Meggers, Rinaldo, Kutsche and Wauchope1955)—in which groups spend part of each year mobile and part aggregated in a large base, to which they may not consistently return—are likely relevant.
During this interval, local population growth and in-migration (Roth and Ahlstrom Reference Roth, Ahlstrom and Wellman2000; Sliva Reference Sliva2015) increased pressure to defend irrigable lands. Seasonal agricultural settlements were occupied for longer portions of the year, by larger groups, over longer spans of time. Simultaneously, residential mobility shifted toward a gendered pattern of logistical mobility. Cienega-phase burial populations show decreasing femoral robusticity among women, indicating a hunter/cultivator task distribution in which men remained mobile in pursuit of game but women were increasingly stationary in riverine farmsteads (McClelland Reference McClelland and Diehl2005; Oglivie Reference Oglivie and Vierra2005; Watson and Stoll Reference Watson and Stoll2013). Burial populations at riverine sites, including Los Pozos, show a slight overabundance of women and children (McClelland Reference McClelland and Diehl2005; Young et al. Reference Young, Watson, McPherson, Crane, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023).
By the Early Cienega phase, formal spatial arrangement is evident at some agricultural settlements. Early Cienega loci at Santa Cruz Bend, Los Pozos, Wetlands, and the Kearny Site (AZ V:13:201) have “house groups,” or ring-like arrangements of structures around a central activity area (Clark Reference Clark2000; Freeman Reference Freeman1998; Mabry Reference Mabry and Mabry1998, Reference Mabry2008:273; Vint et al. Reference Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023). Formal cemeteries also appeared at this time (Thiel Reference Thiel2021, Reference Thiel, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023; Thiel and Mabry Reference Thiel, Mabry and Freeman1998; Watson and Phelps Reference Watson and Phelps2016). Occasionally, Early Cienega houses cluster around a “Big House” community structure (Halbirt and Henderson Reference Halbirt and Henderson1993; Mabry Reference Mabry and Mabry1998). Wallace and Lindeman (Reference Wallace, Lindeman, Young and Herr2012:37) suggest that Big Houses indicate periodic gatherings of larger groups who occupied settlements during ceremonies, canal maintenance, and portions of the agricultural cycle. They indicate organizations above the household level that may correspond to the irrigation community—attributes not evident at comparably sized earlier settlements.
However, this site structure was not universal, or even common—most Early Cienega sites do not have house groups, Big Houses, or formal cemeteries. Moreover, as noted by Mabry (Reference Mabry and Mabry1998:339) with regard to Santa Cruz Bend, house groups were not the normative pattern, even at sites where they occur. As demonstrated by Kent (Reference Kent, Kroll and Price1991, Reference Kent1992), formal site structure among mobile groups is predicated on the anticipated length of stay. The variability of Early Cienega spatial patterning therefore attests to continued variance in the duration and continuity of occupation within and between sites—that is, Early Cienega forager-farmers had suprahousehold institutions that sometimes structured the organization of residential space, but they did not aggregate at most sites for long enough to warrant it.
By the Late Cienega phase (400 BC–AD 50), populations contracted toward a paleochannel complex in the center of Los Pozos, where a series of buried relic Santa Cruz River channels retained greater effective moisture. The “Central Cluster,” with over 254 structures, represented the primary locus of habitation (Gregory Reference Gregory2001; Gregory et al. Reference Gregory, Stevens, Nials, Schurr and Diehl2007). This occupation differed significantly from those that preceded it in the number and density of structures, the scarcity of extramural features, and the disappearance of clearly delineated house rings. Large intramural storage pits indicate shifts in household economy (Gregory Reference Gregory2001; Mabry Reference Mabry2008).
Fluoride content analysis of lagomorph bones from house fill demonstrates that frequent replacement of houses at the Central Cluster over approximately 450 years created the erroneous impression of a very large village. However, these hundreds of structures only represent the dwellings of approximately 2–20 contemporaneous households (Gregory and Diehl Reference Gregory, Diehl and Schlanger2002:213). Consequently, the scale and organization of Early and Late Cienega occupations may not have differed as substantially as feature density suggests. Rather, reduced mobility—the shift from sequentially occupying multiple dispersed habitation loci to repeatedly reoccupying one—obscures site structure. Wocherl (Reference Wocherl and Jane Sliva2005:45) has argued that at least nine potential house rings are apparent within the central cluster of Los Pozos, and she notes that the ring pattern is more clearly defined in contemporaneous but lower-density peripheral loci (Wocherl Reference Wocherl2010).
Increased population density and decreased mobility were likely a consequence of necessity. Although the environmental carrying capacity was not exceeded by the relatively small Early Agricultural population, there was substantial pressure to hold and defend optimal locations with established canal systems. This pressure was exacerbated by lowering water tables by approximately 100 BC, as indicated by arroyo headcutting and the formation of piping vents (Gregory and Nials Reference Gregory, Nials and Diehl2005; Gregory et al. Reference Gregory, Stevens, Nials, Schurr and Diehl2007:52–55; Nials et al. Reference Nials, Gregory and Brett Hill2011). Consequently, Early Agricultural settlement near Los Pozos trended broadly toward occupations of increasing duration, continuity, and intensity, but with periodic shifts back to more dispersed settlement. Precipitation regimes, and cycles of channel entrenchment along this stream reach, factored heavily in this fluctuation (Gregory and Nials Reference Gregory, Nials and Diehl2005).
The Big Tex Locus
The “Big Tex” locus of Los Pozos and adjacent areas of Los Pozos and El Taller were excavated by Desert Archaeology in 2019 (Vint et al. Reference Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023). Collectively, these areas represent a unique cross section of the site group, which include Silverbell Interval camps, a late San Pedro / Early Cienega settlement dating between 1045 and 380 cal BC (2800 ± 30 BP [Beta-567287] to 2350 ± 30 BP [Beta-567298]),Footnote 1 irrigated fields dating to the late San Pedro and Cienega phases, and a Late Cienega pit structure.
Early Cienega features within the Big Tex locus of Los Pozos included two discrete rings of structures, termed the “eastern and western house groups” (Figure 3). Each house group bounded an open communal space and was surrounded by activity areas, indicated by arcs of storage and processing pits. Each was also associated with a well-defined cemetery to the northwest. Calibrated radiocarbon ages from El Taller agricultural fields, approximately 200 m northeast of the houses, range between approximately 800 and 400 cal BC (2330 ± 30 BP [Beta-567299] to 2610 ± 30 BP [Beta-567302]). A minimum of five discrete field systems, delineated by distribution canals, occur within the excavated area, and additional fields were likely present under modern Interstate 10 (Huckleberry Reference Huckleberry, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023b).
Functional Variation and Structure Life Histories
Interpreting the composition of recurrent occupations requires careful consideration of feature function, spatial organization, and sequences of abandonment. Despite the even spacing of structures within the Big Tex house rings, intruding pits indicate that not all structures were simultaneously occupied. Rather, the rings formed over an unknown number of successive occupations. Likewise, variation in the size and form of structures suggests that they represent a mix of residential and storage structures, also impacting estimations of population. In identifying storage versus residential structures, I adopt relational typologies advocated by Gregory (Reference Gregory2001) and Wocherl (Reference Wocherl2018), which compare effective floor area (i.e., floor area not occupied by floor pits) of residential versus storage structures, focusing on internal variation within a specific component (Table 1).
Notes: (-) denotes a maximum effective floor area for partially excavated structures, presuming no pits were located in the unexcavated portion. (~) denotes half-exposed structures, where floor area was calculated by doubling the effective floor area of the exposed portion.
a Effective floor areas were calculated based on the total floor area minus total intramural pit area.
Consideration of the size, internal features, construction histories, and artifact assemblages of Big Tex structures suggest three classes of pit structure. The inferred residential structures with larger effective floor areas (n = 11, averaging 3 m in diameter) also had more labor invested in construction (prepared floors, identifiable postholes, wall plaster, etc.) and more frequently had floor assemblages or diverse floor features. Residential structures were often burned during abandonment. Layers of clean soil or plaster on the floors of residential structures suggest that they were periodically refurbished. However, limited remodeling indicates that most residences at Big Tex had short occupational durations: structures were replaced by a new house after a limited period of refurbishment. Grass phytoliths from roof thatching indicate construction during the spring and summer months, with limited activity extending into late summer or fall (Diehl Reference Diehl, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023a).
Smaller storage structures (n = 9, averaging 2.2 m in diameter) were expediently constructed with steep and/or poorly defined pit walls, no postholes, and large intramural pit volumes (Figure 4). They typically filled with trash and alluvium during abandonment. A third category of indeterminate structure (n = 9, averaging 2.4 m in diameter) had intermediate effective floor areas and few internal features (Figure 4). Poor preservation was often a factor in classifying a structure as “indeterminate.”
When the distributions of residential versus storage features are considered, it is possible to distinguish potential household units, where residential structures pair with storage structures. Not all residences have obvious storage structures, suggesting either shared storage or reliance on multiple storage strategies. Many structures were also noncontemporaneous, complicating relationships between individual features: 60% of structures were intruded by other features, indicating cycles of abandonment and replacement that may have differed between structure types. For example, heavy disturbance within many storage features indicates that intramural pits or the whole structure were repeatedly reexcavated and rebuilt in place.
Some residential structures were also repeatedly rebuilt or refurbished in situ. Patterns of rebuilding preserve even spacing of residences within the ring, suggesting that households occupied customary locations over successive seasonal occupations. For example, in the western residential group, structures 4849 and 4122 were built over older houses that had been abandoned for an unknown duration. In slightly more complex sequences of refurbishment, features 4804 and 4644—originally small storage structures adjacent to houses 4806 and 4622, respectively—were remodeled into residential structures. Both heavily remodeled features were next to houses destroyed in catastrophic conflagrations, suggesting that after the destruction of a residence, a family expanded an adjacent storage structure.
Consequently, although each ring of houses emerged over multiple occupations, it was nonetheless composed of distinct nuclear households at persistent locations, which did not infringe on others’ domestic space. The western residential group consisted of a minimum of three persistent households (houses 4890/4849; 4122/4680 and perhaps 4124; and house 4804), whereas the eastern group had only one repeatedly occupied locale (house 4644; Figure 5). Other residential and indeterminate structures within each ring may represent fluctuations in household size that warranted additional housing. Flannery (Reference Flannery2002) notes that ethnographically, structures in this size range did not house the entire nuclear family: larger huts housed couples and infants and were the focus of household activity, whereas smaller adjacent huts housed children and unmarried dependents.
Presuming persistent house locations correlate with the focal points of individual households, one can posit rough estimations of momentary site population. Average household sizes among ethnographic hunter-gatherers, shifting cultivators, and smallholder farmers all converge around four to six individuals per family (Hamilton et al. Reference Hamilton, Buchanan and Walker2018; Haviland Reference Haviland1972; Netting Reference Netting1993). If Early Agricultural forager-farmers fell within this range, the four persistent households at Big Tex composed a relatively small population of 20 to 30 individuals.
Occupational Sequence, Duration, and Intensity
Incipient soil formation indicates that the eastern house ring was built on a stable surface, unlike the western house ring, which frequently flooded. The eastern half of the locus was therefore the obvious choice for early settlement. Radiocarbon ages and diagnostics indicate late San Pedro activity areas underlying the eastern Early Cienega house ring, and two pit structures under the eastern cemetery appear associated with this occupation. The occupational gap between the San Pedro and Early Cienega components is unclear—however, the reuse of San Pedro activity areas by Early Cienega occupants suggests awareness of the earlier component, either from memory or visible remains.
Bayesian modeling indicates that the occupation of both Early Cienega house groups likely overlapped, although occupation of the eastern house ring may have begun earlier (585-415 cal BC versus 540-400 cal BC) and was of a longer median occupa-tional duration (35 years versus 25 years) (Table 2; see also Supplemental Data 1–4). Probability matrices indicate only 0.7281 probability that the eastern group is older (Figure 6). However, a plateau in the calibration curve results in low precision during this interval. Greater extramural feature density and richer trash fill around the eastern group supports that the Early Cienega occupation of the eastern ring was more intensive, of longer duration, or both. By contrast, the larger number of houses and inhumations in the western group suggests a numerically larger group, which used the locus for a shorter interval.
The prevalence of bell-shaped pits versus storage structures in the earlier eastern group suggests a shift in storage strategy. Concentrations of bell pits near the eastern house group could mean that discontinuous occupation during early settlement warranted heavier reliance on easily concealed extramural storage pits. As the settlement grew and achieved greater occupational permanence, lessened mobility may have reduced risk of food theft. Alternately, the shift from extramural storage areas to discrete storage structures signaled the increasing importance of households as independent economic units (Mabry Reference Mabry2008).
Interpreting bell pits as food storage is not universally accepted. Diehl (Reference Diehl, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023b; Diehl and Davis Reference Diehl, Davis, Vint and Nials2015) questions the utility of Early Agricultural bell pits for food storage due to indications of their frequent flooding. We differ on this point: the correlation of bell pits with the advent of maize farming in multiple regions presents strong evidence of their use as maize storage features (Roth Reference Roth2016; Wocherl Reference Wocherl and Jane Sliva2005). Moreover, Los Pozos bell pits contain a higher density of redeposited trash than other pit types (Diehl Reference Diehl, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023b), and the notable quantities of fire-cracked rock and ground stone present evidence of their association with a suite of activities surrounding intensive, episodic food processing.
However, if the damp environment of Early Agricultural pits did not preclude maize storage, it placed significant constraints on the way maize was cached and the length of time it was stored. The form and wear of ground stone tools indicates that before the AD 500 introduction of flour corn varieties, Early Agricultural populations consumed porridges of rehydrated, fresh, or fermented maize (Adams Reference Adams1999). Pit storage of fresh to fermented staples among diverse historic groups buffered the harvest season by weeks to months and therefore had real implications for residential mobility (Steinkraus Reference Steinkraus1996; Whittaker et al. Reference Whittaker, Kamp, Brenton, Cummings, Whittaker and Anderson2014). Nonetheless, it did not typically constitute a long-term surplus, due to diminishing caloric returns and low viability of pit-cached seed stock. Mobility in pursuit of a diversified subsistence base therefore remained a necessity.
In sum, the archaeological evidence of short-lived features, rebuilding, and so forth provides support for relatively brief and intermittent occupations of the Big Tex locus, occurring within the temporal interval provided by chronometric dates. Mobility may have been reduced during later periods of occupation but remained high. Total reconstruction of an Early Agricultural pit structure was necessary every two to five years, as indicated by experimental reconstructions (Gregory et al. Reference Gregory, Stevens, Nials, Schurr and Diehl2007:101; Gregory and Diehl Reference Gregory, Diehl and Schlanger2002:209). Consequently, the 13 residential and indeterminate pit structures that comprise the eastern and western house groups could be constructed by a mere two households over a 25–35-year span or approximately a single generation—although house placement suggests that three or more households were present simultaneously.
However, burial demographics from both cemeteries are strikingly inconstant with occupations of this small size and limited duration, suggesting that although settlement was punctuated by significant occupational hiatuses, the dead continued to be buried there during these hiatuses. This discrepancy is discussed below.
Cemetery Groups
Both the eastern and western cemeteries are located northwest of their associated residential spaces. This relationship may have cosmographic significance: many of the seated burials in these cemeteries also face northwest, or toward the setting sun (Thiel Reference Thiel, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023). Both cemeteries contain tightly clustered burials, often layered atop one another. The position of skeletal elements indicates that the deceased was typically wrapped in perishable materials, then buried in a seated position. Disturbance and stratigraphic relationships indicate many years of repeated interment within each cemetery. Burial offerings—particularly Pacific Coast marine shell ornaments—were common. The more populous western group had more offerings on average, but the eastern cemetery contained the single richest funerary object, a necklace with over a thousand shell beads (Thiel Reference Thiel, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023; Virden-Lange Reference Virden-Lange, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023).
Superficially, the western and eastern cemeteries seem proportionate to their respective residential groups. The western cemetery, like the western house ring, suggests a larger population (around 74–87 individuals, including approximately 36 adults), whereas the eastern cemetery, like the eastern house group, suggests a smaller unit (around 33–40 individuals, including approximately 19 adults).Footnote 2 Young and colleagues (Reference Young, Watson, McPherson, Crane, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023) note that the number of subadults in the Big Tex cemeteries indicates a fertility and mortality schedule more characteristic of sedentary farmers than previously documented Early Agricultural populations. Dental wear and pathologies also suggest that maize may have composed an unusually large proportion of the diet for an Early Agricultural site.Footnote 3
Radiocarbon samples were not collected from mortuary contexts, and burials cannot be directly dated. However, it is clear that there are more individuals in each cemetery than can be reasonably accounted for by eight residential structures, each occupied for two to five years by a household averaging five individuals. Even if indeterminate structures at Big Tex were in fact residential, or if residences lasted longer than generally posited, the numbers are disproportionate. The implication is that a significant portion of the Big Tex burial population died while residing elsewhere. Indeed, nearly 29% of the burial population consists of secondary inhumations (disinterred and reburied remains), and an additional 24% consists of disturbed interments that could also be secondary inhumations.
Some disarticulation reflects spatial constraints of the cemetery plots: reburial of persons accidentally disturbed while digging a new grave is suggested by occasional reburial of partial remains with an intact primary inhumation. However, most disarticulated interments appear to represent individuals who were buried elsewhere, exhumed, and then reburied at Big Tex. In some cases, mortuary features containing multiple partial individuals and offerings suggest that entire family groups were moved from one burial plot to another. Indeed, similarities in the chronology, spatial organization, mortuary treatment, and material culture of Big Tex and Wetlands, 2 km to the south, suggest that the same population could have repeatedly occupied both areas through the late San Pedro and Early Cienega phases, relocating burials as they moved between settlements (Vint et al. Reference Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023).
Los Pozos–area burial data confirms that Cienega-phase cemeteries were no longer proportionate to the number of directly associated houses (Young et al. Reference Young, Watson, McPherson, Crane, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023; see also Thiel Reference Thiel2021; Watson and Phelps Reference Watson and Phelps2016). Nowhere is this clearer than the Los Pozos Central Cluster, where hundreds of structures produced only 19 associated burials (McClelland Reference McClelland and Diehl2005). In contrast, the cemeteries of small house groups at Wetlands and Big Tex produced 24 and 127 burials, respectively (Thiel and Mabry Reference Thiel, Mabry and Freeman1998; Vint et al. Reference Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023). One possibility—difficult to evaluate with the data available—is that burials are scarce at the Central Cluster and overabundant at earlier loci because Early Cienega cemeteries continued to be used into the Late Cienega phase. Radiocarbon ages confirm that Big Tex was still sporadically occupied as populations aggregated toward the Central Cluster. Continued use of Early Cienega burial plots during occupational hiatuses—or even after the locus largely ceased to be occupied—may have been a way that family groups maintained claims to ancestral territory.
A similar pattern is suggested by the placement of burials within nearby agricultural loci. Field margins contained an unanticipated number of Early Agricultural mortuary features (10 primary inhumations and a disturbed or secondary inhumation). These occurred both between fields and within field berms and cells. Such burials may have asserted claim over agriculturally productive land as mobile groups moved across the landscape according to shifting alluvial regimes or multiyear fallowing cycles. As noted by Netting (Reference Netting1993; see also Mabry Reference Mabry and Schlanger2002, Reference Mabry2008:272), management of canals is typically a communal enterprise, but management of field plots is a household affair. Burials within field systems may have asserted the precedence of specific households to particular fields by right of ancestry.
Lineage and Household Group
Rings of pit structures such as those at the Big Tex locus—sometimes with associated cemeteries or multiple secondary inhumations—have been documented at several Early Cienega sites (Clark Reference Clark2000; Freeman Reference Freeman1998; Mabry Reference Mabry and Mabry1998, Reference Mabry2008:273; Thiel and Mabry Reference Thiel, Mabry and Freeman1998; Watson and Phelps Reference Watson and Phelps2016). Although this arrangement was not the normative pattern, it is widely documented and therefore expresses fundamental aspects of Early Cienega social organization. Mabry (Reference Mabry2008) proposed that Early Agricultural house rings are the earliest iteration of the lineage-based courtyard group, the fundamental corporate unit of later Ceramic period villages. Although Early Agricultural house groups were antecedent to courtyard groups, the term suggests a level of sedentism and complexity that is not implicated during Early Agricultural occupations. As noted by Wallace and Lindeman (Reference Wallace, Lindeman, Young and Herr2012:36), the path to village life proceeded through a very long stage of limited, periodic aggregation; only developing large, enduring aggregations of courtyard groups around AD 500. Although these developments were rooted in integrative mechanisms of the Cienega phase, differences in scale and continuity amount to a qualitatively different phenomenon.
In contrast, consideration of the site structure of early historic O'odham rancherias along the Santa Cruz—which are more comparable to the Early Agricultural period in terms of population mobility and density—reveals the durability of spatial distinctions between lineal and domestic units during more intermittent occupations by irrigation agriculturalists. Seymour (Reference Seymour2011) describes protohistoric O'odham “plazuela” groupings at larger summer and winter settlements as paired arcs or rows of houses, each composed of numerous smaller residence/storage structure pairs, surrounding an open activity area.
These arrangements, described by an early Spanish writer (Juan Mateo Manje, quoted in Seymour Reference Seymour2011:246) as “dividias a trenchos y patcialidades de familias emparentas”—or “divided at intervals and by sections among families, related by marriage”—are posited to correspond to nested units of household, lineal, and intermarrying lineage groups. Notably, the house rows—lineal groups of related nuclear households—expanded laterally over multiple reoccupations, giving an erroneous impression of occupational density. O'odham villages were patrilocal, and they typically passed rights to agricultural fields down the male line (Castetter and Bell Reference Castetter and Bell1942:125–130). By contrast, technological and biological studies of Early Agricultural communities suggest matrilocality (Byrd Reference Byrd2014; Sliva Reference Sliva2015). However, the general concern with spatially manifesting household, lineal, and potentially supralineal divisions relates to the importance of kinship in organizing labor and apportioning resources among irrigation cooperatives (Mabry Reference Mabry2008).
Demonstrating the antiquity of a family's claim to key resource zones is critically important—hence the focus on burial of ancestral remains within agricultural loci, including exhuming and reburying individuals who died elsewhere. Cross-culturally, such corporate affiliations were often expressed by households with valued landholdings and customary patterns of marriage alliance. Conversely, nonlandholding households on community margins showed both shifting affiliations between individual nuclear families and relatively informal settlement structure (Carsten and Hugh-Jones Reference Carsten and Hugh-Jones1995; Joyce and Gillespie Reference Joyce and Gillespie2000). Such systems could account for the variable organization within Early Cienega sites where house groups occur, but not all households belong to these groups.
Geomorphic and paleoenvironmental evidence suggest that there was no scarcity of irrigable land on the Santa Cruz River. However, the labor invested in establishing successful canal systems ensures that conflict would proliferate, were there not systems to establish the relative primacy of households over fallow fields. The mobility of Early Agricultural populations exacerbates such tension. As noted by Netting (Reference Netting1993:162), conflict proliferates among shifting cultivators, who engage in perpetual border disputes to maintain relatively contiguous plots of fields and fallow.
Farmers therefore exist on a flexible continuum from highly mobile cultivators with a high level of conflict; to semisedentary shifting cultivators, where estates are maintained by corporate descent groups; to intensive farmers, where individual households maintain durable rights to heritable smallholdings. This trajectory has bearing on the cultural sequence of southern Arizona, where burial populations show evidence of endemic conflict during the San Pedro phase, decreasing violence and lineal house/cemetery groups in the Cienega phase (Mabry Reference Mabry2008; Watson and Phelps Reference Watson and Phelps2016), and finally, relative stability and agricultural intensification during the Ceramic period.
Concomitant with these organizational shifts, we see shifts in how Early Agricultural people expressed the permanence of the household. For example, Gregory (Reference Gregory2001:39–40) noted that floor features in the Los Pozos Central Cluster contained structured deposits of shell and bone beads, projectile points, and worked artiodactyl femur heads. Such dedications “may be interpreted as representing a consecration of space and a . . . claim of ownership when the structures were built” (Gregory Reference Gregory2001:40). Such deposits were documented in eight residential structures at Big Tex and are particularly associated with structures with a long use life.
Feature 4644 had the most complex deposits (shell, minerals, femur heads, projectiles, and ornaments) and also had the most complex life history. This included expansion into an atypically large structure, replacement of floors and postholes, and eventual abandonment via catastrophic conflagration. Following abandonment, the location persisted as a focus of unusual activity. Rare materials recovered from the post-abandonment fill included pigments and 991 obsidian artifacts from widely dispersed sources: debitage, projectiles, and small flaked “erratics,” the purpose of which is unclear (Sliva Reference Sliva, Vint, Gruner and Lindeman2023). Four other houses also had subfloor offerings and remodeling sequences of varying complexity. Houses therefore appear to accrue enriched deposits as they accrue occupational depth and significance.
Although none of these structures were sufficiently large or elaborate to constitute “Big Houses,” it is nonetheless clear that not all residential structures were created equal. As famously argued by Levi-Strauss (Reference Levi-Strauss1983), personification of the history of the residential group through periodic consecration of the household structure is strongly associated with the intergenerational transference of an estate, either material or immaterial. Parallel patterns typically occur in cemeteries within or adjacent to residences, which provide a tangible connection between land, house, and domestic group. Although these patterns are most marked in sedentary groups with ranked hierarchies, various degrees of differentiation between ordinary residences and houses that have “hardened” into significant locales are made by mobile farmer/foragers in short-lived settlements with flexible hierarchies (Carsten and Hugh-Jones Reference Carsten and Hugh-Jones1995; Joyce and Gillespie Reference Joyce and Gillespie2000).
Often the significance of such structures is achieved only after the deaths of the family's founding couple, at which point the grave site and residence transform into loci of ceremonial activity. Such intergenerational processes of marking may contextualize several events associated with the smaller but potentially older eastern group at Big Tex. For example, stratigraphy suggests that the richest burial—a woman with an elaborate shell necklace—occurred early in the history of the site. Such a treatment might be afforded to a founding matriarch. The extraordinary quantity of obsidian deposited in House 4644 after abandonment likewise lacks parallel at other Early Agricultural period sites. If these places and persons were important to founding the community, their deaths may have warranted removing valuable materials from circulation.
It is unclear to what degree these patterns apply at Early Agricultural sites in adjacent regions, although some processes are likely applicable. A high degree of sedentism has been inferred at large Early Agricultural sites in Sonora and Chihuahua, but currently, depositional contexts preclude detailed reconstructions of normative site structure (Carpenter et al. Reference Carpenter, Sanchez, Watson and Villalpando2015; Hard and Roney Reference Hard and Roney2020). Nonetheless, burning and enriched deposits have been proposed as a ritual closure process for Cienega-phase houses at La Playa, Sonora (Goguitchaichvili et al. Reference Goguitchaichvili, Villalpando, Abrego, Cejudo, Kravchinsky, Bautista, Garcia, Morales and Cervantes2023). Likewise, multiple burials and secondary inhumations at this site suggest related trends in mortuary ritual (Carpenter et al. Reference Carpenter, Sanchez, Watson and Villalpando2015).
The cultural relationship between La Playa and Los Pozos is close. However, such patterns reflect more fundamental concerns with negotiating the early stages of sedentism. Flannery (Reference Flannery2002) posited that the transition from dispersed to aggregated settlement entailed a stage of extended family settlements: sites grew because married descendants remained increasingly attached to the natal residence, pooling labor for intensive subsistence pursuits, and sharing storage to varying degrees. Settlements composed of expanding rings of households marked this transition in Archaic Mesoamerica and the Near Eastern Late Natufian, among others (Flannery Reference Flannery2002). Late Natufian is also notable for mixed secondary/primary burial patterns, indicating both territoriality and high mobility (Bar-Yosef Reference Bar-Yosef1998). Ultimately, such settlements reach a size where households refuse to pool risk, resulting in privatization of storage and increasing aggregation, or dissolution of the settlement (Flannery Reference Flannery2002). Both processes seem implicated at Los Pozos, where storage strategies and settlement location shifted by the end of the Early Cienega phase.
Summary
During the Early Cienega phase, populations in the Los Pozos site group coalesced into structured communities residing at repeatedly occupied locales. Initially, these settlements were located in close proximity to arable lands in the Big Tex locus at the northern end of the settlement, and to the Wetlands locus to the south. The division of these settlements into rings of allied households with shared central space mirrors the division of agricultural fields into household plots along shared canals—reflecting the formalization of domestic space based on the needs of irrigation cooperatives.
The rise of land tenure by lineal or quasilineal groups may have entailed formal patterns of marriage alliance between the holders of desirable farmland—patterns that were seen among historic smallholder farmers with similar segmented spatial organization (Joyce and Gillespie Reference Joyce and Gillespie2000; Seymour Reference Seymour2011). The importance of established land tenure was marked by patterned placement of ancestral burials within residential areas and agricultural plots—including the disinterment of burials during relocation between habitation loci—and the intentional deposition of valuable ornaments and materials in graves and subfloor pits within residences.
These Early Cienega communities were short-lived, and they consisted of small groups of seasonally occupied residences that coalesced temporarily at agriculturally productive locales. Settlements cycled over intervals that spanned one to two generations before being reconfigured either in situ or relocated a short distance away within their territorial range. Although not fully sedentary, the degree of organization expressed in Early Cienega patterns of site structure, house construction, and house replacement was unprecedented at earlier sites, blossomed during the subsequent Late Cienega phase, and was a prelude to the enduring courtyard groups of the Ceramic period that followed. Such relationships between aggregation, intensification, and sedentism are neither simple nor unidirectional. However, there are common responses to scalar stress and decreasing mobility. The patterns seen during the Early Cienega phase echo transformations in diverse societies on the cusp of village life.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank my friends and colleagues: Jim Vint for OxCal modeling and the supplemental material included with this article, Catherine Gilman for drafting figures, Hunter Claypatch for Spanish translation, Mason Niquette for chronometry review, Gary Huckleberry and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments, and everyone else who contributed their thoughts, research, and insights.
Funding Statement
This research was financed by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) under contracts awarded to Desert Archaeology Inc.
Data Availability Statement
Data used in this article may be requested from Desert Archaeology Inc. Desert Archaeology reports can be requested online at https://desert.com/publications.
Competing Interests
The author declares no competing interests.
Supplemental Material
For supplemental material accompanying this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2023.39.
Supplemental Data 1. OxCal model code.
Supplemental Data 2. OxCal model output for the Big Tex locus.
Supplemental Data 3. Modeled dates for the Early Cienega component of the Big Tex locus, Los Pozos.
Supplemental Data 4. Probabilities for the relative age of house groups.