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Pulltrouser Swamp

Coordinates: 18°10′00.0″N 88°34′00.0″W / 18.166667°N 88.566667°W / 18.166667; -88.566667
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18°10′00.0″N 88°34′00.0″W / 18.166667°N 88.566667°W / 18.166667; -88.566667

Pulltrouser Swamp is a wetland area located in northern Belize, between the New River (Belize) and Hondo River (Belize). This area contains numerous archaeological sites belonging to the Maya civilization, the most studied features of which are the raised field structures. Three of these sites, called Raised-Field Site I, Raised-Field Site 2, and Raised-Field site 3, were excavated by archaeologists B.L. Turner and Peter D. Harrison[1].

Settlements

Located north of Orange walk in Belize is a Y shaped settlement that makes up a series of complex elongated depressions. In Pulltrouser there were three different immediate settlements that surrounded the swamp equalling 8.5 km. In these settlements the key to organization was the utilization of hillsides and slopes for the raised fields. The people of Pulltrouser built their small living structures on terraces 2-3 meters above the swamp. There was also a hard platform composed of hard limestone and plaster built within the housing structure area. Within the settlement areas there was evidence of both ceramic and stone artifact production and use[2].

Environment

There are four different vegetation types that occur at pulltrouser swamp; botan forest, escoba forest, saw grass community and grass savannah. Each of these appears to be spatially related to fluctuations of water in the area [3].

  • Botan forest – This area is similar to the escoba forest but with the addition of some sabal species and nearly twice as many trees per square meter. Botan forest also has a greater range of tree sizes. The two types of forest are assocated with different moisture levels in the soil, the soil that supports escoba forest maintains its moisture content throughout the year while the soil beneath botan forest experiences a decrease during the dry season.
  • Escoba forest – This area is characterized by leguminous trees and shrubs as well as palms that can grow as tall as seventeen meters. Three vegetation layers have been identified; an upper tree layer (15-17m), a second layer of palms and saplings (8-10m) and a weakly developed herb layer (1-3m)
  • Saw grass – Dominated by dense grasses and sedges of the tussock variety. Grasses can reach a height of up to two meters near the escoba forest zone. The density of the vegetation allows the soil below to remain saturated despite being fully exposed to the sun.
  • Grass savannah – Vegetation consists of an herb cover of grasses and sedges with scattered savannah trees. The areas experiences a dramatic change in moisture content throughout the year and at its driest the vegetation can dry out. This area is used for cattle grazing during the dry season.

The botan and escoba forest have been expanded as a result of the construction of fields and canals. Logging that has taken place over the last three hundred years has also altered the landscape and vegetation of the depression. The saw grass zone occurs at the center surrounded by the escoba then botan forest respectively. The grass savannah occurs in the western portion of the swamp[4].

Agriculture

People likely settled around swamps because of the rich faunal, plant, soil and water resources this environment made available[5]. Maize appears at the site around 890 cal BP. Pollen records show mass forest disturbance around 2500 B.C., this coincides with the appearance of maize pollen, a decline in tree pollen and an increase in charcoal. This is evidence for a rapid and extensive expansion of agriculture with maize as an important crop[6]. Further charcoal indicates that agriculture was expanded in the area between 1500 and 1300 B.C. and squash and bottle gourd were cultivated as well as maize. Evidence of what was originally thought to be canals at the site were found to be natural hummocks with no evidence of excavation[7]. Pohl et al. (1996)[8] suggest that the adoption of wetland agriculture was not a response to increases in population growth that created the need for more resources[9] but instead a reaction to the changes in groundwater levels they believe to have occurred around 1500-1300 B.C.

Ceramics

Much of the sample ceramics recovered at Pulltrouser swamp are too small to clearly establish ceramic sequence or detailed understandings. However there is some useful information that can be gained from the ceramics that were found. There is a presence of Early and Moderate Classic sherds (pieces) that are mixed and disturbed. The pottery style of the few specimens (bowls and vessels) that could be identified is linked to coastal sites in Belize and sites from Becan to Lake Bakalar. The sites from Becan to Lake Bakalar are also sites where raised field agriculture is prevalent[10].

Stone Tools

The stone tools (or "lithics") at Pulltrouser Swamp suggest that their use was during occupation of the site from the Late Preclassic to Late Classic Period. The tools found at the site were mostly for agricultural use or manufacturing agricultural products. There is little evidence that any of the tools were manufactured at the site. The types of tools found consisted of oval bifaces, trunchet bits, celts, picks, beveled bits, blades, and hammers stones. The majority of the tools are made from chert with some of chalcedony, cherty-limestone and obsidian. The oval bifaces are made from chert sourced near the site of Colha, Belize; these tools have wear consistent with agricultural work and were most likely used as hoes. The tranchet bits arrived fully formed at Pulltrouser, although there is evidence of retouching at the site. There are also blades made of chalcedony, stemmed knives and battered tools, sixteen of them made from chalcedony and two of cherty-limestone[11]. Obsidian tools were mostly prismatic blades that were made from abraded surfaces and were sourced from Guatemala[12][13]. The lithics found at Pulltrouser suggest extensive trade with nearby sites, since there is little evidence of manufacturing at the site. In addition, many of the chert tools were recycled and reused suggesting that these items were highly valued.[14]

Molluscs

At the excavated sites within Pulltrouser Swamp there are many different species of mollusc shell types found. There were also many different uses; the most prominent shells being mixed terrestrial gastropods that were used in construction materials as fill in the raised fields[15]. Some of the different species and their uses include: Melongena melongena, used as a major food source. Pachychilus, used as a supplementary food source. The shells were a source of powdered lime used when cooking maize. Strombus gigas, used as a major food source. Larger shells were used for hoes as well as worked into ornaments or utensils[16].


Notes

  1. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  2. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  3. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  4. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  5. ^ Pohl, Mary D., Kevin O. Pope, John G. Jones, John S. Jacob, Dolores R. Piperno, Susan D. deFrance, David L. Lentz, John A. Gifford, Marie E. Danforth & J. Kathryn Josser, 1996. Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 7(4):355-372
  6. ^ Pohl, Mary D., Kevin O. Pope, John G. Jones, John S. Jacob, Dolores R. Piperno, Susan D. deFrance, David L. Lentz, John A. Gifford, Marie E. Danforth & J. Kathryn Josser, 1996. Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 7(4):355-372
  7. ^ Pohl, Mary D., Kevin O. Pope, John G. Jones, John S. Jacob, Dolores R. Piperno, Susan D. deFrance, David L. Lentz, John A. Gifford, Marie E. Danforth & J. Kathryn Josser, 1996. Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 7(4):355-372
  8. ^ Pohl, Mary D., Kevin O. Pope, John G. Jones, John S. Jacob, Dolores R. Piperno, Susan D. deFrance, David L. Lentz, John A. Gifford, Marie E. Danforth & J. Kathryn Josser, 1996. Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 7(4):355-372
  9. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  10. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  11. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  12. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  13. ^ McAnany, Patricia, 1989. Stone-Tool Production and Exchange in the Eastern Lowlands: The Consumer Perspective from Pulltrouser Swamp, Belize. American Antiquity, 54(2), p.332-346.
  14. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  15. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  16. ^ Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.

References

  • McAnany, Patricia, 1989. Stone-Tool Production and Exchange in the Eastern Lowlands: The Consumer Perspective from Pulltrouser Swamp, Belize. American Antiquity, 54(2):332-346.
  • Pohl, Mary D., Kevin O. Pope, John G. Jones, John S. Jacob, Dolores R. Piperno, Susan D. deFrance, David L. Lentz, John A. Gifford, Marie E. Danforth & J. Kathryn Josser, 1996. Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 7(4):355-372.
  • Turner, B.L. and Peter D. Harrison, 1983. Pulltrouser Swamp: ancient Maya habitat, agriculture, and settlement in northern Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press.