
The Prehistory of Gold Butte
Dramatic developments occurred in this area of the Desert West. Farmers suddenly appeared in the Virgin River basin about 1,600 years ago. At such iconic sites as Lost City, Main Ridge, and Mesa House, full village and agricultural life developed over the span of a few hundred years only to completely vanish by AD 1250 after a series of droughts and other cultural disruptions. The Patayan held sway for several hundred years, between AD 1100 and 1500, but didn’t advance much beyond the Colorado River corridor. Finally, the Southern Paiute arrived and occupied not only the Virgin River basin and Gold Butte but much of the northwestern quadrant of the Southwest from at least the time of historic contact (AD 1500) to the present.
This mix of cultures illustrates historical contingency, in place development, and external relationships that should be expected along a boundary area such as Gold Butte. By looking at hinterlands adjoining the prehistoric settlements that clustered along the Virgin River corridor before, during, and after the Puebloan period, the authors suggest that changes in settlement- subsistence and lifeways at core settlements along the riverine corridor have corresponding effects on the character and intensity of hinterland occupation.
- Alaotsikko
- A Virgin River Hinterland, Clark County, Nevada
- Kirjailija
- Kelly McGuire, William Hildebrant, Amy Gilreath, Jerome King, John Berg
- ISBN
- 9781607813057
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 800 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 30.12.2013
- Kustantaja
- University of Utah Press,U.S.
- Sivumäärä
- 288