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Strontium isotopes reveal distant sources of architectural timber in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.

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TLDR
The use of trees from both the Chuska and San Mateo mountains, but not from the San Pedro Mountains, as early as A.D. 974 suggests that selection of timber sources was driven more by regional socioeconomic ties than by a simple model of resource depletion with distance and time.
Abstract
Between A.D. 900 and 1150, more than 200,000 conifer trees were used to build the prehistoric great houses of Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, in what is now a treeless landscape. More than one-fifth of these timbers were spruce (Picea) or fir (Abies) that were hand-carried from isolated mountaintops 75–100 km away. Because strontium from local dust, water, and underlying bedrock is incorporated by trees, specific logging sites can be identified by comparing 87Sr/86Sr ratios in construction beams from different ruins and building periods to ratios in living trees from the surrounding mountains. 87Sr/86Sr ratios show that the beams came from both the Chuska and San Mateo (Mount Taylor) mountains, but not from the San Pedro Mountains, which are equally close. Incorporation of logs from two sources in the same room, great house, and year suggest stockpiling and intercommunity collaboration at Chaco Canyon. The use of trees from both the Chuska and San Mateo mountains, but not from the San Pedro Mountains, as early as A.D. 974 suggests that selection of timber sources was driven more by regional socioeconomic ties than by a simple model of resource depletion with distance and time.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Strontium isotopes and the reconstruction of the Chaco regional system: evaluating uncertainty with Bayesian mixing models.

TL;DR: Overall radiogenic strontium isotope data do not clearly identify a single major geochemical source for maize, ponderosa, and most spruce/fir timber, and the degree to which Chaco Canyon relied upon outside support for both food and construction material is still ambiguous.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ancestral Pueblo Archaeology: The Value of Synthesis

TL;DR: Archaeologists working in the Ancestral Pueblo region of the American Southwest have documented variability in sociopolitical and economic complexity, landscape use, community organization, mobility, and violence at a wide range of temporal and spatial scales from AD 500-1700.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strontium isotopes as an indicator of human migration – easy questions, difficult answers

TL;DR: In this paper, the proportion of two isotopes, the heavier 87Sr and the lighter 86Sr, is measured, following their extraction from the bioapatite of the bone mineral.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wood remains from archaeological excavations: A review with a Near Eastern perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe and discuss the technical issues of identification of archaeo logical wood remains from archaeological excavations and the types of data that can emerge from studying them, and discuss uses of wood; types of wood remains, common micro scopic methods for wood identification, wood anatomical atlases for the Levant and other relevant regions, and the lack of bark descriptions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Applied historical ecology: using the past to manage for the future

TL;DR: A montane grassland restoration project in northern New Mexico is described that was justified and guided by an historical sequence of aerial photographs showing progressive tree invasion during the 20th century, and a south- western network of fire histories illustrates the power of aggregating historical time series across spatial scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mesoscale Disturbance and Ecological Response to Decadal Climatic Variability in the American Southwest

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors predict a wide array of biogeographic phenomena, including soil carbon pools, vegetation physiognomy, species range, and plant and animal diversity, by modulating the frequency, magnitude, and spatial scales of natural disturbances.
Book

Strontium Isotope Geology

TL;DR: In this paper, the Rubidium-Strontium Isochron method was used to measure the geologic time of a given sample, which was then used to calculate the initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the sample.
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