|  |     Archaeologists find evidence of cannibalism in early Southwest
    
    Associated Press, 04/04/97 07:42 
    
    NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - One spring around the year 1150, the people of
    what's now known as Cowboy Wash met a horrible end. 
    
    In a jumbled collection of bones, tools and pottery, archaeologists
    have uncovered grim evidence that attackers slaughtered, butchered and
    perhaps even cannibalized the long-ago inhabitants of the American
    Southwest. 
    
    The discovery adds to the growing debate over the possibility of
    cannibalism among the Anasazi Indians, whose spectacular,
    apartment-like cliff dwellings are now a major tourist attraction. 
    
    ``We feel very strongly that this is a case of cannibalism. If it's
    not, we don't know what else it could be that would produce this set of
    remains,'' said Brian Billman, part of a team of archaeologists who
    excavated the site from 1992 to 1996 in the Ute Mountains of
    southwestern Colorado. 
    
    Inside two of the three small dwellings they unearthed were the bones
    of at least seven people scattered amid the everyday pottery and tools
    of 12th century Southwestern life. Cut marks on the bones suggest that
    the bodies were butchered about the time of death, and darkened areas
    on some of them suggest cooking as well. 
    
    ``Certainly people were mutilated, and it seems to be the case that
    they were eaten,'' said Patricia Lambert, a Utah State University
    archaeologist. 
    
    Lambert, Billman and archaeologist Banks Leonard presented the results
    of the Cowboy Wash dig on Thursday in Nashville at the annual meeting
    of the Society for American Archaeology. 
    
    Hopi tribal archaeologist Kurt Dongoske said the evidence from Cowboy
    Wash and the 30-plus other Southwestern sites where dismembered remains
    have been found doesn't actually prove that human flesh was consumed.
    
    The bones could be the result of attacks in which people were hacked
    apart but not eaten, he said. They could also be those of people
    suspected of witchcraft, who in many cultures are dismembered or
    otherwise destroyed after death. In colonial New England, for example,
    suspected witches were executed. 
    
    The bones may even have a nonviolent origin, Dongoske suggested. The
    Anasazi may have left dismembered bodies in abandoned buildings for
    religious reasons. That wouldn't be too far removed from the practice
    of displaying holy relics consisting of saints' body parts at medieval
    cathedrals. 
    
    In addition to the bones, there are two stone cutting tools at Cowboy
    Wash bearing traces of human blood. And preserved human feces were
    found on the hearth in the middle of one dwelling. 
    
    ``It seems to me that that's a pretty universal symbol of contempt,''
    said David Wilcox of Arizona State University. 
    
    Arizona State University archaeologist Christy Turner, who spent three
    decades researching cannibalism among the Anasazi, hypothesized that
    raiders from Mexico, where cannibalism is known to have been practiced,
    committed the violence at Cowboy Wash and the other sites. 
    
    But Billman believes that the violence was more local, perhaps related
    to a drought that hit the Southwest during the middle and late 12th
    century. 
    
    The pottery at the Cowboy Wash site suggests that its inhabitants may
    have been immigrants from about 50 miles to the south, and the locals
    may have resented the newcomers' presence when things got bad, he said. 
    
    The apparent violence came on the heels of the abandonment of Chaco
    Canyon, a large collection of Anasazi dwellings in northwestern New
    Mexico, in about 1140. 
    
    ``It's not very common,'' Billman said. ``But for some reason probably
    having to do with the drought and probably the collapse of the Chaco
    system, there's this outbreak, so to speak, of cannibalism.'' 
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