Generated by GPT-5-mini| Jornada Mogollón | |
|---|---|
| Name | Jornada Mogollón |
| Region | Southwestern United States |
| Period | ca. 200–1450 CE |
| Cultures | Ancestral Puebloans, Hohokam, Mogollon culture, Patayan culture |
| Major sites | Mimbres, Chaco Canyon, Casa Grande, Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument |
| Notable artifacts | pottery, lithic tools, architecture |
Jornada Mogollón The Jornada Mogollón tradition refers to a prehistoric cultural expression in the southern Rio Grande valley and adjacent basins of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico incorporating material links to the Mogollon culture, Ancestral Puebloans, Hohokam, Sierra Madre Occidental, and the Mimbres phenomenon. Scholars situate it within debates involving the Southwest Archaeology frameworks advanced by researchers associated with institutions such as the Peabody Museum and the Smithsonian Institution, and compare ceramic sequences with assemblages from Chaco Culture National Historical Park and Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.
The Jornada Mogollón tradition is characterized by ceramic styles, architectural forms, and lithic industries that align with contemporaneous developments at Mimbres, Casa Grandes, Salado, Hohokam Pima, and contacts with populations in the Sonoran Desert, Chihuahua, and the Sierra de Juárez. Excavations by teams from the University of Arizona, University of New Mexico, Arizona State University, and the Museum of New Mexico have produced chronological frameworks tied to dendrochronology used at Cedar Mesa and stratigraphic correlations with sites like Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument.
The tradition occupied the Jornada del Muerto and surrounding basins within the southern Rio Grande watershed, extending toward the Mimbres River drainage, parts of the Chihuahuan Desert, and foothill ecotones of the Sacramento Mountains and Organ Mountains. Environmental reconstructions use palaeoclimatic proxies from Tree-ring dating at El Malpais, pollen cores from Bosque del Apache, and sediment studies near Elephant Butte Reservoir to model precipitation variability, seasonal runoff, and vegetation zones that influenced settlement distribution and agricultural potential.
Material culture includes ceramic wares with relationships to Mimbres pottery, decorated bowls, plainware, and slipped ceramics that parallel assemblages from La Plata County contexts, with lithic suites comprising obsidian from sources linked via geochemical sourcing to highland deposits in Jalisco and procurement patterns observed in collections compared at the American Museum of Natural History. Architectural remains include pit houses, masonry roomblocks, and surface features analogous to structures at Chaco Canyon and rock-shelter deposits studied in comparative surveys by the National Park Service.
Scholars define early, middle, and late phases within the tradition using seriation tied to ceramics and radiocarbon determinations similar to sequences developed for Mimbres culture and the Tularosa Phase; key comparative markers reference periods used in the Four Corners chronology and the Pecos Classification. Ceramic typologies show shifts paralleling regional transitions documented in publications from the School of American Research and excavation reports from Gila National Forest.
Subsistence combined dryland maize agriculture, encouraged by alluvial soils in floodplain settings near Rio Grande tributaries, with foraging for wild resources such as piñon and agave found across the Chihuahuan Desert and riverine wetlands of Bosque del Apache. Settlement evidence ranges from dispersed hamlets to nucleated village sites comparable to those in the Mimbres Valley and seasonal encampments discussed in analyses by researchers affiliated with the Pecos Conference and fieldwork conducted under grants from the National Science Foundation.
Technological adaptations include painted and incised pottery techniques related to the Mimbres black-on-white tradition and ceramic tempering methods resembling those in Hohokam contexts; lithic toolkits display projectile point types comparable to the En Medio and small triangular forms, groundstone implements including manos and metates, and occasional copper ornamentation reflecting long-distance exchange networks documented in studies by the Society for American Archaeology.
The tradition contributed to trajectories that influenced later populations and ethnohistoric groups encountered by Spanish colonists and recorded in colonial documents associated with missions and presidios in Nuevo México and New Spain. Interaction spheres encompassed trade and stylistic exchange with the Mimbres, Hohokam, and northern Mesoamerican linkages, as inferred from exotic materials, ceramic parallels, and stylistic motifs discussed in syntheses by the School for Advanced Research and regional monographs housed in the Library of Congress and university presses. Contemporary descendant communities and tribal nations connected to the broader Southwestern Native American cultural landscape engage with heritage management, site stewardship, and repatriation processes coordinated with the National Park Service and tribal historic preservation offices.
Category:Archaeological cultures of North America Category:Pre-Columbian cultures