Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-tsvsl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-01T17:44:18.482Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pre-Altithermal Archaeology in the Sierra Pinacate, Sonora, Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

The 600 square mile volcanic area of the Sierra Pinacate, in extreme northwestern Sonora, Mexico, comprises a unique geologic and ecologic enclave in which archaeological remains have been undisturbed by erosion. Situated in an essentially waterless desert, its semipermanent waterholes have been foci of human activity since man's first entry into the region. Three geologic phenomena indicate the chronology of artifacts in the region. Desert pavements formed by aeolian deflation of loess are altithermal phenomena. Two degrees of thickness of desert varnish on pavement and associated artifacts provide evidence that man was present during a pluvial period preceding an altithermal episode centering around 17,000 B.C., as well as throughout the well-known Pluvial period. The formation of caliche below ground level helps place excavated artifacts in sequence. M. J. Rogers' term “Malpais” is revived and assigned to the earlier pluvial occupation, basal to “San Dieguito Phase I (SD I)” of the Pluvial. Diagnostic criteria which involve both archaeologic and geologic elements have been developed for both periods, and their extension to related areas is briefly discussed.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Begole, Robert S. 1973 An archeological survey in the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park: 1972 preliminary report. Pacific Coast Archeological Society Quarterly 9:3136.Google Scholar
Begole, Robert S. 1974 Archeological phenomena in the California desert. Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 10:5170.Google Scholar
Campbell, Elizabeth C., and others 1937 The archeology of Pleistocene Lake Mohave. Southwest Museum Papers 11. Google Scholar
Childers, W. M. 1974 Preliminary report on the Yuha Burial, California. Anthropological Journal of Canada 12:19.Google Scholar
Clements, Lydia 1954 A preliminary study of some Pleistocene cultures of the California desert. The Master Key 18(5):117–85.Google Scholar
Crabtree, Don E., and Davis, E. L. 1968 Experimental manufacture of wooden implements with tools of flaked stone. Science 154:426–28.Google Scholar
Davis, E. L. 1970 Archeology of the north basin of Panamint Valley, Inyo County, California. In Five papers on the archeology of the Desert West. Nevada State Museum Anthropological Papers 15:83142.Google Scholar
Davis, E. L. 1973 The Hord Site: A Paleo-Indian camp. Pacific Coast Archeological Society Quarterly 9:126.Google Scholar
Davis, E. L., and Winslow, Sylvia 1965 Giant ground figures of the prehistoric deserts. A merican Philosophical Society, Proceedings 109:821.Google Scholar
Engel, C. G., and Sharp, R. P. 1958 Chemical data on desert varnish. Geological Society of America, Bulletin 69:487518.Google Scholar
Gutmann, James T. 1972 Eruptive history and petrology of Crater Elegante, Sonora, Mexico. Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Haury, Emil W., and Hayden, Julian D. 1975 Preface to The stratigraphy and0 archeology of Ventana Cave, Arizona. Reissue. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Hayden, Julian D. 1966 Restoration of the San Dieguito type site to its proper place in the San Dieguito sequence. A merican Antiquity 31:439–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayden, Julian D. 1967 A summary prehistory and history of the Sierra Pinacate, Sonora. A merican Antiquity 32:335–44.Google Scholar
Hayden, Julian D. n.d. The archeology of the Sierra Pinacate, Sonora, Mexico. Proceedings of the First Reunion on Anthropology and History of Northwest Mexico, January, 1974. Instituto Nacional de Antropologia y Historia, Centro Regional del Noroeste, Hermosillo. (In press, ms. 1974.)Google Scholar
Hem, J. D., and Lind, C. J. 1974 Kaolinite synthesis at 25 degrees C. Science 184:1171–78.Google Scholar
Ives, R. L. 1949 Climate of the Sonoran Desert region. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 39:143–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ives, R. L. 1964 The Pinacate Region, Sonora, Mexico. California Academy of Sciences, Occasional Papers 47. San Francisco.Google Scholar
Kreiger, Alex D. 1964 Early man in the new world: In Prehistoric man in the new world, edited by Jennings, Jesse D. and Norbeck, Edward. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Musick, H. Brad 1975 Barrenness of desert pavement in Yuma County, Arizona. Journal of Arizona Academy of Science 10:2428.Google Scholar
Rogers, Malcolm J. 1938 Archeological and geological investigations of the cultural levels in an old channel of San Dieguito Valley. Carnegie Institution of Washington Year Book 37 (for years 1937-38):344–45.Google Scholar
Rogers, Malcolm J. 1939 Early lithic industries of the lower basin of the Colorado River and adjacent desert areas. San Diego Museum Papers 3. Google Scholar
Rogers, Malcolm J. 1958 San Dieguito implements from the terraces of the Rincon-Pantano and Rillito drainage systems. The Kiva 24:123. Tucson.Google Scholar
Rogers, Malcolm J. 1966 Ancient hunters of the far west. Union-Tribune Publishing, San Diego.Google Scholar
Sayles, E. B., and Antevs, Ernst 1941 The Cochise culture. Medallion Papers 29, Gila Pueblo, Globe.Google Scholar
Springer, M. E. 1958 Desert pavements and vesicular layer of some desert soils in the desert of the Lahontan Basin, Nevada. Soil Sciences Society of America, Proceedings 22:6366.Google Scholar
Warren, Claude N. 1967 The San Dieguito Complex: a review and hypothesis. American Antiquity 32:168–86.Google Scholar