II and extending through Pueblo V (fig. 2). This is the way many archaeologists still use the term, though, personally, I prefer to call Anasazi only that period from Basketmaker III to the beginnings of historic times. It seems to me that Basketmaker IIIwith its new cultural inventory of pit-houses, pottery, bow and arrow, and the incorporation of beans into the agriculturerepresented a major cultural break. Of course, this was an ongoing process, and such things as pit-houses and an early brown pottery actually begin in Basketmaker II times; still, the complex as a whole characterizes Basketmaker III. At the other end of the sequence, Pueblo V was the period of Spanish intrusion into the Southwest, with its accompanying drastic changes in the Pueblo world.
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The word Anasazi is Navajo, and Kidder thought that it meant "Old People." Actually, Anasazi is a composite word meaning something like "non-Navajo ancestors," rather a contradiction in terms if used by a Navajo speaker. In any case, the name is now well embedded; in fact, it has entered the popular literature in the Southwest in a rather unfortunate way. A great deal is often made in magazine articles and especially on television about the "mysterious Anasazi" who disappeared from the Southwest, leaving only massive ruined towns. In reality, the direct descendants of the Anasazi, the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico and Arizona, are very much with us today.
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Basketmaker III and the early Pueblo period were marked by a large expansion of population in various parts of the San Juan Valley. The Rio Grande, which became a major heartland of the Anasazi from about A.D. 1300 on, seems to have had only a small population in the early Anasazi centuries. As time went on, the Basketmaker experiment led to new building forms: aboveground structures, usually a series of contiguous houses made by setting stone blocks in mud mortar. These are referred to as pueblos , the Spanish word for "village" or "town." In certain areas the pit-house type of construction maintained itself for some centuries after the appearance of pueblos.
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The early Pueblo period (what is sometimes called Developmental Pueblo in the Rio Grande Valley; see fig. 2) saw a gradual expansion in population, particularly in the region north of the San Juan River in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah. This area was, by Pueblo II times, heavily peopled. The turkey had joined the dog as an animal domesticate probably as early as Basketmaker III times, and a new food plant, cotton (its oil-rich seeds were eaten), had been established. Weaving of cotton was also presumably early, though a true loom may not have appeared until Pueblo III times. Fibers of yucca and, to some degree, apocynum (alternatively called black hemp or dog-bane) also were woven. The black-on-white painted pottery became technically more advanced and artistically more sophisticated as time went on.
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