Abstract
David R. Abbott, Scott E. Ingram, and Brent G. Kober
Hohokam Exchange and Early Classic Period Organization in Central Arizona: Focal Villages or Linear Communities?
Journal of Field Archaeology 31 (2006) 285--305
Settlement pattern data in the lower Salt River valley of central
Arizona, near Phoenix, have led to different models of Hohokam political
community organization during the early Classic period (ca. A.D.
1150--1300). The "focal village" model posits political communities
centered on a single large village with monumental architecture
surrounded by smaller settlements. The "linear community" model
envisions an elongated arrangement integrating populations distributed
along the routes of irrigation canals. Each model has implications for
the nature of cooperation within and between settlement clusters and the
degree to which large-scale irrigation management influenced the
development of Hohokam community organization. In this analysis, ceramic
sourcing studies are used to outline networks of interaction to examine
the different models. Our results provide some evidence for a
cross-cutting patchwork of geographically dispersed social groups which
fits most comfortably within the linear community model.
Volume 31 Number 3 (Fall 2006)
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