The earliest humans reached the Southwest around 10,000 BC, but the Ancestral Puebloans first appeared as the Basketmakers , near the San Juan River, more like two thousand years ago. Named for their woven sandals and bowls, they lived in pits in the earth, roofed with logs and mud. Over time, the Ancestral Puebloans adopted an increasingly settled lifestyle, becoming expert farmers and potters. Their first freestanding houses on the plains were followed by multistoried pueblos , in which hundreds of families lived in complexes of contiguous "apartments." The astonishing cliff dwellings , perched on precarious ledges high above remote canyons, which they began to build around 1100 AD, were the first Ancestral Puebloan settlements to show signs of defensive fortifications. Competition for scarce resources became even fiercer toward the end of the thirteenth century, and recent research suggests that warfare and even cannibalism played a role in their ultimate dispersal. Moving eastward, they joined forces with other displaced groups in a coming-together that eventually produced the modern Pueblo Indians . Hence the recent change of name, away from "Anasazi," a Navajo word meaning "ancient enemies", in favor of "Ancestral Puebloan".
Among the most significant Ancestral Puebloan sites are:
Mesa Verde - Magnificent cliff palaces, high in the canyons of Colorado.
Bandelier National Monument - Large riverside pueblos, and cave-like homes hollowed from volcanic rock.
Chaco Canyon - The largest and most sophisticated freestanding pueblos, far out in the desert.
Wupatki - Several small pueblo communities, built by assorted tribal groups.
Walnut Canyon - Numerous canyon-wall houses above lush Walnut Creek.
Betatakin - Canyon-side community set in a vast rocky alcove in the Navajo National Monument.
Canyon de Chelly - Superbly dramatic cliff dwellings in glowing sandstone canyon; now owned and famed by the Navajo.
Hovenweep - Enigmatic towers poised above a canyon. -- location id = 42093 -->
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