Architecture as Artifact: Pit Structures and Pueblos in the American Southwest
- 1 July 1987
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 52 (3) , 538-564
- https://doi.org/10.2307/281598
Abstract
The use of architecture as an artifact gives archaeologists a data set that we have rarely employed to examine cultural evolutionary questions. In this paper I consider the determinants of some architectural forms and propose some causes of architectural change, specifically in the American Southwest. Using ethnographic material from around the world, I demonstrate the relationship between structure seasonality and two of the most common southwestern architectural forms, pit structures and pueblos. The ethnographic record also suggests that the conditions surrounding the southwestern use of pit structures, and to a lesser degree of pueblos, are rather different from what many archaeologists have supposed. The differences in the conditions under which pueblos are used rather than pit structures form the basis for a theoretical framework that begins to explain the transition between the two kinds of structures in the prehistoric Southwest.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Architectural Analogue to Hopi Social Organization and Room Use, and Implications for Prehistoric Northern Southwestern CultureAmerican Antiquity, 1983
- Social Differentiation and Leadership Development in Early Pithouse Villages in the Mogollon Region of the American SouthwestAmerican Antiquity, 1982
- Cultural-Ecological Aspects of the Pithouse-to-Pueblo Transition in a Portion of the SouthwestAmerican Antiquity, 1981
- Egalitarianism Among Hunters and GatherersAmerican Anthropologist, 1980
- Social Responses During Severe Food Shortages and Famine [and Comments and Reply]Current Anthropology, 1980
- Deprivation and ReciprocityMan, 1974
- Lappish Guest Relationships under Conditions of Cultural Change1American Anthropologist, 1966
- Concerning the Existence of the Pit House in South AmericaAmerican Antiquity, 1953
- Social and Economic Organization of the Rowanduz KurdsThe Geographical Journal, 1941
- Art. IX.—The customs of the Ossetes, and the Light they throw on the Evolution of law. Compiled from Professor Maxim Kovalefsky's Russian Work on “Contemporary Custom and Ancient Law,” and translated with Notes by E. Delmar Morgan, M.R.A.SJournal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1888