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Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado

Chapter 29: HISTORIC REMAINS
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About This Book

A systematic archaeological survey documents prehistoric masonry sites across southwestern Colorado and nearby canyons, cataloguing village plans, cliff dwellings, towers, and defensive works. The author classifies ruins by layout and construction, supplies measured ground plans and photographic plates, and examines masonry techniques, tower construction, reservoirs, cemeteries, pictographs, and minor artifacts. Individual groups receive detailed descriptions and maps, and comparisons emphasize architectural variation—rectangular room blocks, circular ritual or storage compartments, peripheral chambers, and isolated towers. The account concludes by synthesizing site distribution, building practices, and functional interpretations to illuminate past settlement patterns and material culture.

HISTORIC REMAINS

The various objects found in the ruins or on the surface of the ground as a rule are characteristic of a people in the stone-age culture, ignorant of metals, and therefore prehistoric, but here and there on the surface have been picked up iron weapons which belonged to the historic period. The old “Spanish Trail” mentioned in preceding pages was the early highway from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Great Salt Lake, and followed approximately an old Indian trail that was probably used by the prehistoric inhabitants or the builders of the towers. Not far from the head of Yellow Jacket Canyon a ranchman discovered on his farm a few years ago the blades of two Spanish iron lance heads or knives, still well preserved, the hilts, however, being destroyed. These objects, now in Mr. Williamson’s collection at Dolores, may have belonged to a party of Spanish soldiers who explored this region, but their form, in addition to the material, is so characteristic that no one would assign them to aboriginal manufacture. Fragments of a stirrup of metal, parts of the harness or saddle, also belonging to the Spanish epoch, have also been found. The indications are that these objects are historic, but their owners may have been Indians who obtained them from Europeans. They probably do not antedate the middle of the eighteenth century, when two Catholic fathers, with an escort of soldiers, made their trip of discovery from Santa Fe into what is now Utah. They shed no light on the epoch of the aborigines who constructed the castles and towers considered in this paper.