Centuries of Decline During the Hohokam Classic Period at Pueblo Grande
In the prehispanic Southwest, Pueblo Grande was the site of the largest platform mound in the Phoenix basin and the most politically prominent village in the region. It has long been held to represent the apex of Hohokam culture that designates the Classic period.
New data from major excavations in Phoenix, however, suggest that little was "classic" about the Classic period at Pueblo Grande. These findings challenge views of Hohokam society that prevailed for most of the twentieth century, suggesting that for Pueblo Grande it was a time of decline rather than prosperity, a time marked by overpopulation, environmental degradation, resource shortage, poor health, and social disintegration. During this period, the Hohokam in the lower Salt River Valley began a precipitous slide toward the eventual abandonment of a homeland that they had occupied for more than one thousand years.
This volume is a long-awaited summary of one of the most important data-recovery projects in Southwest archaeology, synthesizing thousands of pages of data and text published in seven volumes of contract reports. The authors — all leading authorities in Hohokam archaeology who played primary roles in this revolution of understanding — here craft a compelling argument for the eventual collapse of Hohokam society in the late fourteenth century as seen from one of the largest and seemingly most influential irrigation communities along the lower Salt River.
Bio
David Abbott is an associate professor of in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change. He combines pottery studies with geological, petrographic and chemical analyses to examine the exchange and social networks of the Hohokam regional system and the impact of large-scale irrigation on sociocultural evolution.
Praise for this book
Due to the size and scope of the project, discussions of regional processes, and the surprising conclusions, this volume will be influential and controversia ... Based on the vast millions of dollars invested across the nation [in contract archaeology programs], and nowhere more than in Arizona, the profession and the public have a right to expect more books of this nature.
Journal of Anthropological Research
"The interpretations are thought-provoking and run counter to the popular understanding of who the Hohokam were and how masterfully they controlled the world around them ... Non-Hohokam specialists and interested lay persons will be stunned by the information, and they will be intrigued by the environmental and social parallels with other portions of the American Southwest."
Carla Van West Statistical Research, Inc.