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The Cliff Dwellers
In the canons of the Colorado river and
its tributaries are found the ruins of an
ancient race of cliff dwellers. These ruins
are numerous and are scattered over a wide
scope of country, which includes Arizona and
portions of Utah, Colorado and New Mexico.
Many of them are yet in a good state of
preservation, but all show the marks of age
and decay. They are not less than four
hundred years old and are, in all
probability, much older. Their preservation
is largely due to their sheltered position
among the rocks and an exceptionally dry
climate.
The houses are invariably built upon high
cliffs on shelving rocks in places that are
almost inaccessible. In some instances they
can only be reached by steps cut into the
solid rock, which are so old and worn that
they are almost obliterated. Their walls so
nearly resemble the stratified rocks upon
which they stand, that they are not easily
distinguished from their surroundings.
The cliffs are often sloping, sometimes
overhanging, but more frequently
perpendicular. The weather erosion of many
centuries has caused the softer strata of
exposed rocks in the cliffs to disintegrate
and fall away, which left numberless caverns
wherein this ancient and mysterious people
chose to build their eyrie homes to live
with the eagles. The houses are built of all
shapes and sizes and, apparently, were
planned to fit the irregular and limited
space of their environment. Circular watch
towers look down from commanding heights
which, from their shape and position, were
evidently intended to serve the double
purpose of observation and defense.
In the search for evidence of their
antiquity it is believed that data has been
found which denotes great age. In the
construction of some of their houses,
notably those in the Mancos Canon, is
displayed a technical knowledge of
architecture and a mathematical accuracy
which savages do not possess; and the fine
masonry of dressed stone and superior cement
seem to prove that Indians were not the
builders. On the contrary, to quote a recent
writer, "The evidence goes to show that the
work was done by skilled workmen who were
white masons and who built for white people
in a prehistoric age." In this connection it
is singular, if not significant, that the
natives when first discovered believed in a
bearded white man whom they deified as the
Fair God of whose existence they had
obtained knowledge from some source and in
whose honor they kept their sacred altar
fires burning unquenched.
The relics that have been found in the ruins
are principally implements of the stone age,
but are of sufficient variety to indicate a
succession of races that were both primitive
and cultured and as widely separated in time
as in knowledge.
The cliff dwellings were not only the abodes
of their original builders, but were
occupied and deserted successively by the
chipped stone implement maker, the polisher
of hard stone, the basket maker and the
weaver.
Among the relics that have been found in the
ruins are some very fine specimens of
pottery which are as symmetrical and well
finished as if they had been turned on a
potter's wheel, and covered with an opaque
enamel of stanniferous glaze composed of
lead and tin that originated with the
Phoenicians, and is as old as history. Can
it be possible that the cliff dwellers are a
lost fragment of Egyptian civilization?
The cliff ruins in Arizona are not only
found in the canons of the Colorado river,
but also in many other places. The finest of
them are Montezuma's Castle on Beaver creek,
and the Casa Blanca in Canon de Chelly.
Numerous other ruins are found on the Rio
Verde, Gila river, Walnut Canon and
elsewhere.
The largest and finest group of cliff
dwellings are those on the Mesa Verde in
Colorado. They are fully described in the
great work[1] of Nordenskiold, who spent
much time among them. The different houses
are named after some peculiarity of
appearance or construction, like the Cliff
Palace, which contains more than one hundred
rooms, Long House, Balcony House, Spruce
Tree House, etc.
He obtained a large quantity of relics,
which are also fully described, consisting
of stone implements, pottery, cotton and
feather cloth, osier and palmillo mats,
yucca sandals, weaving sticks, bone awls,
corn and beans.
Many well-preserved mummies were found
buried in graves that were carefully closed
and sealed. The bodies were wrapped in a
fine cotton cloth of drawn work, which was
covered by a coarser cloth resembling
burlap, and all inclosed in a wrapping of
palmillo matting tied with a cord made of
the fiber of cedar bark. The hair is fine
and of a brown color, and not coarse and
black like the hair of the wild Indians.
Mummies have been exhumed that have red or
light colored hair such as usually goes with
a fair skin. This fact has led some to
believe that the cliff dwellers belonged to
the white race, but not necessarily so, as
this quality of hair also belongs to
albinos, who doubtless lived among the cliff
dwellers as they do among the Moquis and
Zunis at the present day, and explains the
peculiarity of hair just mentioned.
These remains may be very modern, as some
choose to believe, but, in all probability,
they are more ancient than modern. Mummies
encased in wood and cloth have been taken
from the tombs of Egypt in an almost perfect
state of preservation which cannot be less
than two thousand years old, and are,
perhaps, more than double that age. As there
is no positive knowledge as to when the
cliff dwellers flourished, one man's guess
on the subject is as good as another's.
An important discovery was recently made
near Mancos, Colorado, where a party of
explorers found in some old cliff dwellings
graves beneath graves that were entirely
different from anything yet discovered. They
were egg-shaped, built of stone and
plastered smoothly with clay. They contained
mummies, cloth, sandals, beads and various
other trinkets. There was no pottery, but
many well-made baskets, and their owners
have been called the basket makers. There
was also a difference in the skulls found.
The cliff dwellers' skull is short and
flattened behind, while the skulls that were
found in these old graves were long, narrow
and round on the back.[2]
Rev. H. M. Baum, who has traveled all over
the southwest and visited every large ruin
in the country, considers that Canon de
Chelly and its branch, del Muerto, is the
most interesting prehistoric locality in the
United States. The Navajos, who now live in
the canon, have a tradition that the people
who occupied the old cliff houses were all
destroyed in one day by a wind of fire.[3]
The occurrence, evidently, was similar to
what happened recently on the island of
Martinique, when all the inhabitants of the
village of St. Pierre perished in an hour by
the eruption of Mont Pelee.
Contemporaneous with the cliff dwellers
there seems to have lived a race of people
in the adjoining valleys who built cities
and tilled the soil. Judged by their works
they must have been an industrious,
intelligent and numerous people. All over
the ground are strewn broken pieces of
pottery that are painted in bright colors
and artistic designs which, after ages of
exposure to the weather, look as fresh as if
newly made, The relics that have been taken
from the ruins are similar to those found in
the cliff houses, and consist mostly of
stone implements and pottery.
In the Gila valley, near the town of
Florence, stands the now famous Casa Grande
ruin, which is the best preserved of all
these ancient cities. It was a ruin when the
Spaniards first discovered it, and is a type
of the ancient communal house. Its thick
walls are composed of a concrete adobe that
is as hard as rock, and its base lines
conform to the cardinal points of, the
compass. It is an interesting relic of a
past age and an extinct race and, if it
cannot yield up its secrets to science, it
at least appeals to the spirit of romance
and mystery.
Irrigating ditches which were fed from
reservoirs supplied their fields and houses
with water. Portions of these old canals are
yet in existence and furnish proof of the
diligence and skill of their builders. The
ditches were located on levels that could
not be improved upon for utilizing the land
and water to the best advantage. Modern
engineers have not been able to better them
and in many places the old levels are used
in new ditches at the present time.
Whatever may have been the fate of this
ancient people their destruction must be
sought in natural causes rather than by
human warfare. An adverse fate probably cut
off their water supply and laid waste their
productive fields. With their crops a
failure and all supplies gone what else
could the people do but either starve or
move, but as to the nature of the exodus
history is silent.
Just how ancient these works are might be
difficult to prove, but they are certainly
not modern. The evidence denotes that they
have existed a long time. Where the water in
a canal flowed over solid rock the rock has
been much worn. Portions of the old ditches
are filled with lava and houses lie buried
in the vitreous flood. It is certain that
the country was inhabited prior to the last
lava flow whether that event occurred
hundreds or thousands of years ago.
It is claimed that the Pueblo Indians and
cliff dwellers are identical and that the
latter were driven from their peaceful
valley homes by a hostile foe to find
temporary shelter among the rocks, but such
a conclusion seems to be erroneous in view
of certain facts.
The cliff dwellings were not temporary
camps, as such a migration would imply, but
places of permanent abode. The houses are
too numerous and well constructed to be
accounted for on any other hypothesis. A
people fleeing periodically to the cliffs to
escape from an enemy could not have built
such houses. Indeed, they are simply
marvelous when considered as to location and
construction. The time that must necessarily
have been consumed in doing the work and the
amount of danger and labor involved--labor
in preparing and getting the material into
place and danger in scaling the dizzy
heights over an almost impassible trail, it
seems the boldest assumption to assert that
the work was done by a fleeing and
demoralized mob.
Again, it would be a physical impossibility
for a people who were only accustomed to
agricultural pursuits to suddenly and
completely change their habits of life such
as living among the rocks would necessitate.
Only by native instinct and daily practice
from childhood would it be possible for any
people to follow the narrow and difficult
paths which were habitually traveled by the
cliff dwellers. It requires a clear head and
steady nerves to perform the daring feat in
safety--to the truth of which statement
modern explorers can testify who have made
the attempt in recent years at the peril of
life and limb while engaged in searching for
archaeological treasures.
Judged by the everyday life that is familiar
to us it seems incredible that houses should
ever have been built or homes established in
such hazardous places, or that any people
should have ever lived there. But that they
did is an established fact as there stand
the houses which were built and occupied by
human beings in the midst of surroundings
that might appall the stoutest heart.
Children played and men and women wrought on
the brink of frightful precipices in a space
so limited and dangerous that a single
misstep made it fatal.
It is almost impossible to conceive of any
condition in life, or combination of
circumstances in the affairs of men, that
should drive any people to the rash act of
living in the houses of the cliff dwellers.
Men will sometimes do from choice what they
cannot be made to do by compulsion. It is
easier to believe that the cliff dwellers,
being free people, chose of their own accord
the site of their habitation rather than
that from any cause they were compelled to
make the choice. Their preference was to
live upon the cliffs, as they were fitted by
nature for such an environment.
For no other reason, apparently, do the
Moquis live upon their rocky and barren
mesas away from everything which the
civilized white man deems desirable, yet, in
seeming contentment. The Supais, likewise,
choose to live alone at the bottom of
Cataract Canon where they are completely
shut in by high cliffs. Their only road out
is by a narrow and dangerous trail up the
side of the canon, which is little traveled
as they seldom leave home and are rarely
visited.
To affirm that the cliff dwellers were
driven from their strongholds and dispersed
by force is pure fiction, nor is there any
evidence to support such a theory. That they
had enemies no one doubts, but, being in
possession of an impregnable position where
one man could successfully withstand a
thousand, to surrender would have been base
cowardice, and weakness was not a
characteristic of the cliff dwellers.
The question of their subsistence is
likewise a puzzle. They evidently cultivated
the soil where it was practicable to do so
as fragments of farm products have been
found in their dwellings, but in the
vicinity of some of the houses there is no
tillable land and the inhabitants must have
depended upon other means for support. The
wild game which was, doubtless, abundant
furnished them with meat and edible seeds,
fruits and roots from native plants like the
pinon pine and mesquite which together with
the saguaro and mescal, supplied them with a
variety of food sufficient for their
subsistence as they do, in a measure, the
wild Indian tribes of that region at the
present day.
[1] The Cliff Dwellers of the Mesa Verde, by
F. Nordenskiold, Stockholm. 1893.
[2] An Elder Brother of the Cliff Dwellers,
by T. M. Prudden, M.D. Harper's Magazine,
June, 1897.
[3] Pueblo and Cliff Dwellers of the
Southwest. Records of the Past, December,
1902.
Arizona Indian Genealogy
Notes About the Book:
Source: The Cliff Dwellers, by J. A. Munk
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
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