NPS/Marge Post
Petroglyphs help archeologists understand the ancestral Puebloan people.
A somewhat later site indicates cultural change. Located on the floor of a broad valley, a Basketmaker III site, occupied from about A.D. 500 to A.D. 800, had 15 separate units scattered over almost one-half mile square. Within each unit, the pithouses were deeper and included several semi-subterranean storage structures, usually arranged in a crescent behind the pithouses. One of the houses excavated had mud-plastered walls while another had only the sandstone slab walls as in the Basketmaker II site. Other innovations were small storage pits in the floor and a ventilator shaft.
Cultural change is also shown in the styles of pottery, jewelry, and tools found. The style of projectile points changed and some of the pottery was decorated. Pottery from the Mogollon people to the south and shells of marine origin indicates that trade occurred. Artifacts such as shell and bone awls, needles, pendants, beads, and bracelets were also found.
Human burial sites were found in the village, with evidence that the people had ceremonial burial practices. Even without evidence of any source of water other than summer rainfall, farming must have been productive enough to support a year-round occupation. Low stone windbreaks, farmland on hillsides, the large food-storage structures, and the close-knit organization of the village support occupation all year.