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       Chronology 
      by Kristin A. Kuckelman and Scott G. Ortman 
      1 
        The most important goal of Crow Canyon's testing at Yellow Jacket Pueblo 
        (Site 5MT5) was to reconstruct the occupational history of the site. The 
        site had been subject to nonprofessional excavations for more than 100 
        years, had been mapped numerous times (e.g., Ferguson 
        1996*1:106; Ferguson and Rohn 
        1986*1:129; Lange et al. 1986*1:Figure 
        1; Malville 1991*1:Figure 6), 
        and had been visited by many archaeologists over the years. In addition, 
        Yellow Jacket Pueblo was the location of an archaeological field school 
        conducted by the Museum of Western State College (Gunnison, Colorado) 
        in 1931 (Hurst and Lotrich 1932*1:195), 
        although no actual field documentation has ever been located for those 
        excavations (see Gleichman et al. 
        1982*1:63; Wilshusen 1996*1:3). 
        Speculation about the history of the site was fueled by all of these investigations, 
        as well as by the results of decades of excavation conducted at three 
        neighboring sites (Sites 5MT1, 5MT2, and 5MT3; see Database Map 335) 
        by the University of Colorado Museum field school, led by Joe Ben Wheat. 
        Because these nearby sites appear to be associated with Yellow Jacket 
        Pueblo (Site 5MT5) and because they have evidence of occupation relatively 
        early in the Pueblo sequence, some researchers have proposed that Yellow 
        Jacket Pueblo was occupied from A.D. 900 to 1300 (Lekson 
        1999*1:9), or even from A.D. 500 to 1300 (Lange 
        et al. 1986*1:14; Wheat 1984*1:61). 
        As the first institution to conduct professional, well-documented fieldwork 
        at Site 5MT5, Crow Canyon believed that establishing a basic chronology 
        derived from excavation data would be an important contribution, not only 
        to our understanding of the largest ancestral Pueblo site in the region, 
        but also to our understanding of the archaeology of the region as a whole. 
      2 
        Tree-ring and pottery dating, as well as stratigraphy and architectural 
        style, were used to establish the general occupational history of the 
        site. Archaeomagnetic dating was not used, because none of the hearths 
        found were suitable for this method. We found that cultural deposits were 
        much shallower than expected in most areas, that the most populous occupation 
        occurred after A.D. 1180, and that Site 5MT5 was a sizable village until 
        the depopulation of the region in the late A.D. 1200s. 
      3 
        The time periods used in this chapter and throughout this publication 
        are the following: Basketmaker III (A.D. 500750), Pueblo I (A.D. 
        750900), Early Pueblo II (A.D. 9001050), Late Pueblo II (A.D. 
        10501150), Early Pueblo III (A.D. 11501225), and Late Pueblo 
        III (A.D. 12251300). However, chronological inferences based on 
        Ortman's probability data for pottery types and design attributes use 
        the seven time spans listed in the discussion of pottery dating, below 
        (paragraph 17). 
      Tree-Ring Dating
      4 
        Few wood samples suitable for tree-ring dating were found during testing 
        at the site. The greatest number of tree-ring samples at ancient Pueblo 
        sites is typically found in kivas; however, our desire to disturb intact 
        deposits as little as possible, as well as the impracticality of testing 
        large numbers of these deeply buried structures in a short period of time, 
        led to the decision to not focus our efforts on kiva excavation (see "Research 
        Design"). Of the 70 tree-ring samples that we did collect and submit, 
        five were datable and yielded the following results (years A.D.): 974vv 
        (Structure 704, trash fill), 1095+vv (Structure 1213, disturbed fill), 
        1101B (Structure 1206, disturbed fill), 1235vv (Structure 1213, disturbed 
        fill), and 1254+vv (Structure 1201, disturbed fill).(1) 
      5 
        The samples that yielded the three earliest dates appear to be from reused 
        beams, because these dates predate the architectural style of the structures 
        in question and the pottery found within them. These beams could have 
        been salvaged from one or more late Pueblo II structures at this site 
        or from nearby sites within the community. The A.D. 1101 cutting date 
        could date the time of construction of the probable Chaco-era buildings 
        at the site. The latest date, 1254+vv, probably accurately reflects latePueblo 
        III construction of the great tower complex. 
      Architectural Dating
      6 
        Some characteristics of the architecture observed at Yellow Jacket Pueblo 
        indicate time of construction, including the presence of stone masonry, 
        the amount and type of dressing (shaping) of masonry stones, the type 
        of cross section of masonry walls, the presence and location of towers, 
        and the presence of a possible Chacoan great house. In the Mesa Verde 
        region in general, post-and-adobe aboveground structures and earth-walled 
        subterranean structures were built earlier than masonry aboveground structures 
        and masonry-lined subterranean structures. However, the transition from 
        earth construction to masonry construction did not occur at the same time 
        in all parts of the region, and it apparently occurred earlier on Mesa 
        Verde and in the Dolores River valley than elsewhere in the region. 
      7 
        For example, masonry roomblocks were common in the Dolores River valley 
        by the late A.D. 800s (Pueblo I period) even though numerous post-and-adobe 
        surface structures and earth-walled pit structures in the Pleasant View 
        area northwest of Yellow Jacket have been dated from approximately A.D. 
        1025 to 1100 (Harriman and Morris 
        1991*1:394395; Kuckelman 
        1988*2, 1988*3:388, 1988*4:227; 
        Morris 1988*4:193, 1988*5:149, 
        1991*1:Table 5.23; Wilson 
        1988*2). In the Sand Canyon locality, a few miles southwest of Site 
        5MT5, post-and-adobe structures have been tree-ring dated to the 1060s 
        (Kuckelman 1999*1:Table 2.2), 
        the 1070s (Varien 1999*6) and 
        as late as the 1200s (Huber and 
        Lipe 1992*1). At Site 5MT3, just southwest and across the canyon from 
        Site 5MT5, post-and-adobe structures built in the Pueblo II period were 
        razed and replaced by masonry structures sometime after A.D. 1050 (Mobley-Tanaka 
        1997*2:4). Thus, masonry apparently was not adopted as a construction 
        technique in this part of the region until late in the Pueblo II period 
        or into the Pueblo III period. 
      8 
        During our testing at Yellow Jacket Pueblo, we observed no evidence of 
        either post-and-adobe structures or even postholes; all aboveground walls 
        observed were of stone masonry. We also observed no masonry that was a 
        single course wide. The cross sections of all masonry walls exposed during 
        testing (except for blocked-in structures) were of double-stone or double-stone-with-core 
        construction (see the field manual 
        for definitions of architectural terms). Two-stone-wide wall-construction 
        techniques were adopted later than single-stone-wide techniques in this 
        region. 
      9 
        The earliest masonry walls with double-stone cross sections in the Mesa 
        Verde region occur in Chaco-style buildings of the very late A.D. 1000s 
        and early 1100s (Varien 1999*3). 
        Chaco-style great houses in this region were constructed primarily between 
        A.D. 1075 (Lipe and Varien 1999*2:256) 
        and 1135 (Lipe and Varien 1999*1:299). 
        For reasons stated in paragraph 
        15 in "Architecture," we believe that Architectural Block 1900 at 
        Yellow Jacket Pueblo probably was a Chacoan great house. If this interpretation 
        is correct, then Block 1900 was probably constructed between A.D. 1075 
        and 1135 (because we did not test excavate this block of structures, we 
        have no other means to date it). It is possible that the A.D. 1101 tree-ring 
        cutting date from a sample we collected in the great tower complex is 
        a reused beam from a structure built in this village during the Chaco 
        era, although it is equally likely that it was salvaged from some other 
        structure in the community. 
      10 
        The stones used for masonry at Yellow Jacket Pueblo tend to be blocky, 
        rather than tabular or irregular. In the segments of walls exposed during 
        our testing, there appeared to be no clear correlation between the percentage 
        of blocky stones used in a particular wall and the estimated time of construction 
        of that wall as indicated by pottery dating. Nearly all structure walls 
        observed contained some stones that had been dressed, either by pecking 
        or flaking; a few building stones that had been shaped by abrading were 
        also observed. 
      
      11 
        Nearly every section of structure wall exposed during our testing contained 
        some rocks that had been pecked. As a masonry technique in this region, 
        pecking was developed later than flaking. Pecked-block, or "McElmo" style, 
        masonry did not become common in the Mesa Verde region until after A.D. 
        1100 (Lipe and Varien 1999*2:262). 
        Our data from Yellow Jacket show no clear relationship, in a specific 
        wall segment, between the percentage of stones with pecked faces and the 
        estimated time of construction (as determined by the associated stratigraphic 
        location of specific pottery types and the results of probabilistic pottery 
        dating). This is not surprising, given the variability observed at Castle 
        Rock Pueblo, for example, in the amount of pecking on the walls of different 
        types of structures and on the inside vs. outside faces of the same walls, 
        even though all of those structures were built in the mid to lateA.D. 
        1200s (see The 
        Castle Rock Pueblo Database). Across the region, the exterior 
        faces of towers and curved-walled structures are generally much more intensively 
        pecked than the interior faces and, in general, are more intensively pecked 
        than either face of other types of structures. It is possible that, with 
        a finer construction chronology derived from tree-ring dates and a wider 
        exposure of roomblock walls, one could demonstrate an increase through 
        time in the amount of pecking on the exterior faces of roomblock walls 
        at Yellow Jacket Pueblo. 
      12 
        The presence of towers at Yellow Jacket Pueblo suggests the time of construction 
        of various areas of the village. Although towers were constructed in some 
        parts of the Mesa Verde region as early as the late Pueblo II period (Lancaster 
        and Pinkley 1954*1), they were more commonly constructed after A.D. 
        1150 (Lipe and Varien 1999*1:320). 
        Neily (1983*2:105) states that 
        towers were not constructed in the Hovenweep-Cross Canyon area, northwest 
        of Yellow Jacket, until after A.D. 1150 (Pueblo III period). Greubel 
        (1991*1:84) maintains that the earliest towers in the Hovenweep area 
        were constructed during the late Pueblo II period and were usually attached 
        to the ends of roomblocks, whereas numerous towers constructed during 
        the Pueblo III period were either detached or isolated (Greubel 
        1991*1:95). None of the towers identified at Site 5MT5 are attached 
        to the ends of roomblocks, and most are detached, suggesting that construction 
        occurred during the Pueblo III period. 
      13 
        In sum, on the basis of the times of construction of Chacoan great houses 
        in the region, we suggest that Blocks 1800 and 1900 (the great kiva and 
        great house, respectively) at Yellow Jacket Pueblo were most likely constructed 
        sometime between A.D. 1075 and 1135 and are probably the oldest masonry 
        structures visible on the modern ground surface. All aboveground architecture 
        noted during our testing at this site was of stone masonry more than one 
        stone wide and containing dressed stones. These construction methods, 
        along with the presence of towers, suggest that most structure walls exposed 
        during our testing were probably built during the Pueblo III period (A.D. 
        11501300). 
      Dating with Pottery
      14 
        Pottery was the primary dating source used to reconstruct the occupational 
        history of Yellow Jacket Pueblo. Several factors, however, adversely affected 
        our ability to produce a fine-grained chronology. First, our sample of 
        sherds is only a very small proportion of the entire population of sherds 
        at the site. Second, undocumented digging at the site in the past 100 
        years has resulted in significant mixing of deposits in many areas of 
        midden. Third, in some areas tested by Crow Canyon, the architectural 
        blocks are so closely spaced that the boundaries of the associated midden 
        areas were difficult to define; therefore, we cannot be certain that, 
        across the tested portion of the site, the pottery sample for each architectural 
        block accurately represents the time of occupation of the visible roomblock 
        as well as of any earlier structures that might not have been exposed 
        during our testing. And, finally, the Crow Canyon pottery-analysis protocol 
        for assigning a pottery type to a specific sherd requires relatively more 
        design elements to be present for a sherd to be typed as McElmo or Mesa 
        Verde black-on-white than for a sherd to be typed as Mancos Black-on-white. 
        Many sherds that have characteristics of white ware produced during the 
        Pueblo III period do not exhibit enough characteristics to be assigned 
        to either the McElmo or Mesa Verde type, so they are placed into a third, 
        more general, categoryPueblo III White Painted. Thus, unlike Mancos 
        Black-on-white sherds, many sherds that were actually from McElmo or Mesa 
        Verde vessels were assigned to this more general category during analysis. 
        So the counts, weights, and percentages of McElmo Black-on-white and Mesa 
        Verde Black-on-white are probably deflated compared to those of Mancos 
        Black-on-white. Despite these difficulties, we believe that our methods, 
        as described in the following paragraphs, allowed us to work around the 
        problems and reach meaningful conclusions that are supported by the data 
        set. 
      15 
        We used three types of pottery data to establish the use history of the 
        site. First, Kuckelman used the stratigraphic locations of typed sherds 
        as temporal indicators; the firmest dating inferences were drawn from 
        the presence and location of typed pottery sherds within undisturbed stratigraphic 
        sequences in the 1-x-2-m units outside the north walls of the roomblocks. 
        Stratigraphic locations of typed sherds indicated when architectural blocks 
        were constructed, inhabited, and abandoned. When sherds were found beneath 
        a surface on which a structure was built, the earliest known dates of 
        production of those pottery types were used to indicate the earliest possible 
        time of construction of that building. Time of abandonment of a block 
        was indicated by types of sherds that rested on use surfaces associated 
        with the habitation of that block. In midden deposits not disturbed by 
        looting or animal burrowing, the types of sherds in the bottommost deposits 
        were used as indicators of the earliest time of refuse deposition, and 
        all typed sherds in a midden were used as general indicators of the full 
        span of habitation of an architectural block. Only the most conservative 
        inferences were drawn from disturbed midden contexts. 
      16 
        Second, Kuckelman used typological data on curated pottery vessels (Wilshusen 
        1996*1) from nonprofessional excavations at the site to make some 
        general inferences about architectural blocks that we were not allowed 
        to test. Approximately 106 vessels in the Chappell Collection (currently 
        housed at the Anasazi Heritage Center, Dolores, Colorado) were removed 
        from Site 5MT5 during nonprofessional excavations between 1930 and 1960 
        and have been tentatively identified to traditional type (Wilshusen 
        1996*1:Table 2). Field notes and maps associated with those vessels 
        have allowed the approximate original locations of many of them to be 
        determined. 
      17 
        Third, to assess periods of sherd deposition in the specific areas of 
        the site tested by Crow Canyon, Ortman developed a probabilistic technique 
        that incorporates chronological information from both traditional pottery 
        types and specific design attributes. Using this method, Ortman examined 
        the probability that sherds were deposited in a given architectural block 
        during each of the following seven time spans (years A.D.): 10201060, 
        10601100, 11001140, 11401180, 11801225, 12251260, 
        and 12601280. Note that the time spans do not all encompass the 
        same number of years. The details of this model are discussed in the "Artifacts" 
        chapter. In this model, the likelihood of the observed sample of sherds 
        from a given roomblock having been deposited during each specific time 
        period can be calculated using (1) the probability of occurrence of various 
        pottery types and design attributes on decorated bowl rim sherds during 
        different time periods (derived from a calibration data set), (2) the 
        observed counts of the same types and attributes in the sample of decorated 
        bowl rim sherds in each roomblock, and (3) the mean weight of corrugated 
        gray cooking-pot sherds found in the midden test units excavated in each 
        roomblock. 
      18 
        The occupation span of each tested architectural block was estimated using 
        a regression equation developed from the Sand Canyon Project Site Testing 
        Program (Varien 1999*2) database. 
        This equation relates the mean weight of corrugated pottery found in midden 
        test units to occupation span estimates derived from total accumulations 
        of corrugated gray pottery. Using this equation, the mean weight of corrugated 
        pottery across midden test units in each architectural block at Yellow 
        Jacket could be translated into an estimated time span over which sherds 
        were deposited in that area. 
      19 
        A calibration data set of type and attribute proportions from assemblages 
        at tree-ring-dated sites with short occupation spans was used to calculate 
        the probability that a sherd of any given type or exhibiting any given 
        attribute was deposited during each of the seven temporal phases listed 
        in paragraph 17. These probabilities were combined 
        with type and attribute data from each tested architectural block at Yellow 
        Jacket to calculate, for each block, a composite probability distribution 
        that yielded the probability of the observed sample of sherds having been 
        deposited during each phase. Then, the occupation span estimate and probability 
        distribution for each architectural block were combined to estimate the 
        occupational history of each block area. 
      20 
        A total of 66,151 sherds was collected during Crow Canyon's excavations. 
        Few of these sherds date from the Basketmaker III (A.D. 500750), 
        Pueblo I (A.D. 750900), or early Pueblo II (A.D. 9001050) 
        periods. Sherds of the following types could be confidently dated to these 
        time periods: Chapin Gray (4), Moccasin Gray (4), Mancos Gray (5), Indeterminate 
        Neckbanded Gray (37), Chapin Black-on-white (4), Piedra Black-on-white 
        (1), Cortez Black-on-white (2), Early White Painted (12), Early White 
        Unpainted (41), Abajo Red-on-orange (5), Bluff Black-on-red (3), and Deadman's 
        Black-on-red (17). Thus, only 135 sherds (0.2 percent of the total assemblage) 
        date from before A.D. 1050. In addition, only one of the 106 Chappell 
        Collection vessels from Site 5MT5a possible Deadman's Black-on-red 
        pitcheris potentially one of the above-listed, early types. This 
        vessel was recovered from a human interment that also contained McElmo 
        and Mesa Verde black-on-white vessels, leading us to infer that if this 
        is indeed an early vessel, it was a curated item that was actually interred 
        sometime after A.D. 1180. The above evidence allows us to make a strong 
        case that the tested areas of the site (Database Map 264) were 
        not inhabited before A.D. 1050. The types of vessels in the Chappell Collection 
        suggest that this conclusion is also valid for some areas that we did 
        not test, such as Architectural Blocks 1600, 2900, and 3100. 
      21 
        The substantial number of Mancos Black-on-white sherds (1,123) indicates 
        that habitation of the site probably began before A.D. 1150. In the areas 
        of the site that we tested, however, Mancos Black-on-white sherds nearly 
        always cooccur with sherds of postA.D. 1100 types, which, along 
        with the relative frequencies of types and attributes, suggests that occupation 
        of this site was, at best, minimal until sometime after A.D. 1100. We 
        have no way of estimating the total number or exact locations of additional 
        structures at this site that could have been built between A.D. 1060 and 
        1100, but which are not visible on the modern ground surface and were 
        not exposed during testing. Field records for vessels in the Chappell 
        Collection list a few interments that contained only Mancos Black-on-white 
        vessels. For example, Architectural Blocks 1600 and 3100 contained graves 
        that included Mancos Black-on-white vessel(s) and no associated later 
        vessels, according to the field notes. Block 3100 contained the largest 
        number of grave-associated Mancos vessels and is near the possible Chacoan 
        great house (Architectural Block 1900). Three additional potentially early 
        interments are thought to have been located west of the roomblock in Architectural 
        Block 100, possibly just south of the large depression (Architectural 
        Block 2000). These interments might be associated with the earliest habitation 
        of the village, which is thought to have occurred in the midA.D. 
        1000s. 
      22 
        A substantial number of sherds typed as McElmo Black-on-white (410) and 
        Mesa Verde Black-on-white (621) were collected during our excavations, 
        and many vessels of these types have also been collected during undocumented 
        digging (Wilshusen 1996*1:Table 
        2). Many interments that contained one or more Mancos Black-on-white vessels 
        also contained pottery of later types (Wilshusen 
        1996*1:Table 2) such as McElmo and Mesa Verde black-on-white. Mixing 
        of vessel types was also noted in interments at the smaller sites across 
        the drainage to the west of Site 5MT5 (Yunker 
        2001*1:202, 208, 223). Interments containing McElmo or Mesa Verde 
        black-on-white vessels were found in virtually every architectural area 
        where undocumented digging occurred. Mesa Verde Black-on-white vessels 
        were present in most areas, which leads to the inference that most of 
        those middens were used for interment sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      23 
        The results of the probabilistic pottery dating study described above 
        suggest that, although some areas of Yellow Jacket Pueblo were inhabited 
        between A.D. 1060 and 1180, occupation of the site was most widespread 
        and intensive between A.D. 1180 and 1280, and reached its peak between 
        A.D. 1180 and 1225. Although it appears that the village contracted somewhat 
        after A.D. 1260, sherd deposition, and therefore occupation, continued 
        in several architectural blocks throughout the final decades of Pueblo 
        occupation of the central Mesa Verde region. In addition, it appears that 
        architectural blocks located along the central, north-south "spine" of 
        the village were occupied for longer periods than were architectural blocks 
        in more peripheral areas. 
      Dating by Architectural Block
      24 
        In this section, dating evidence is presented by architectural block 
        (structure-by-structure descriptions and dating arguments can be found 
        in The Yellow Jacket Pueblo Database). First, the time 
        of occupation of the block is estimated using field data (architectural 
        style of the section of roomblock wall exposed, and stratigraphic location 
        of traditional types of pottery). Tree-ring dates, if available for that 
        block, are also presented. Second, the time of occupation as indicated 
        by the probabilistic pottery-design data is presented, followed by an 
        estimate of the length of occupation as calculated using the accumulation 
        of corrugated gray cooking-pot sherds. These methods of dating did not 
        always produce identical estimated times or durations of occupation for 
        a given block, because none of the methods is precise or absolute. 
      Architectural Block 100
      25 
        The architectural style of the section of roomblock wall exposed during 
        our testing in Architectural Block 100 suggests that the roomblock was 
        constructed during the Pueblo III period (A.D. 11501300). Both late 
        Pueblo II and Pueblo III sherds were found during midden testing; however, 
        the stratigraphic location of Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds indicates 
        that most artifacts in the tested portion of the midden were deposited 
        sometime after A.D. 1180. It is possible that a firepit on a use surface 
        beneath the midden slightly predates 1180. No hiatus in the deposition 
        of cultural material was defined in the stratigraphy. The portion of roomblock 
        wall exposed during testing rested on a lens of calcium carbonate on top 
        of undisturbed native sediment, indicating that there are no earlier structures 
        or deposits in the location of this test pit. Overall, our field data 
        indicate that Block 100 was occupied sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      26 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a reasonable probability that 
        some pottery was deposited in the areas of our test pits between A.D. 
        1100 and 1140, but the greatest probability of deposition is for the period 
        11801280. The accumulation of corrugated gray jar sherds suggests 
        that this area was occupied for 158 years. 
      
      Architectural Block 200
      27 
        Two structures were defined in our test excavations in Architectural 
        Block 200. The architectural style of the observed portion of the lower, 
        earlier structure (Structure 204) suggests that this room was constructed 
        either very late in the Pueblo II period or, more likely, during the Pueblo 
        III period. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds in the collapsed 
        roofing material of this room suggests that the roof collapsed after A.D. 
        1180 and that the structure was therefore probably not built earlier than 
        about A.D. 1150 (the absence of a prepared floor surface or even a well-defined, 
        level surface indicates that the structure was probably used for only 
        a short time). The vertical location of Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds 
        also indicates that the roomblock containing Structure 205 (which rests 
        on a surface above the level of these sherds) was constructed sometime 
        after A.D. 1180. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds at or 
        near the bottom of the sampled midden deposits south of the roomblock 
        suggests that the refuse in the locations of our test pits was deposited 
        sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      28 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a low probability that pottery 
        was deposited in the locations of our test pits between A.D. 1060 and 
        1100, a reasonable probability that sherds were deposited between 1100 
        and 1180, and a high probability that refuse was deposited between 1180 
        and 1280. The accumulation of corrugated jar sherds in the sampled area 
        of midden suggests that pottery was deposited in this area for 230 years. 
      Architectural Block 300
      29 
        The architectural style of the masonry exposed during testing in Architectural 
        Block 300 is typical of the Pueblo III period. The lowermost stratum in 
        a series of cultural deposits within our 1-x-2-m unit at the north edge 
        of the roomblock contains Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds. This indicates 
        that both this shallow midden and Structure 305 (in the roomblock above 
        it) was constructed after A.D. 1180. Deposits in other midden areas that 
        we tested had been churned by recent looting, but they contained Mesa 
        Verde Black-on-white sherds, which indicates that those areas were used 
        for the deposition of refuse until sometime after A.D. 1180. Deposition 
        in the 1-x-2-m unit appeared to have been continuous, with no evidence 
        of an occupational hiatus. Thus, field data indicate that the area in 
        the immediate vicinity of our test pit was not inhabited until sometime 
        after A.D. 1180; after that date, it was occupied or used continuously 
        until this area of the village was abandoned sometime in the 1200s. 
      30 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate some possible sherd deposition 
        between A.D. 1140 and 1180 but the highest probability of deposition between 
        A.D. 1180 and 1280. The accumulation of corrugated jar sherds suggests 
        151 years of occupation. 
      Architectural Block 400
      31 
        In Architectural Block 400, the masonry style of the section of roomblock 
        wall exposed by our testing (Structure 405) is typical of the late Pueblo 
        II period and the Pueblo III period. This section of wall was constructed 
        sometime after A.D. 1180, as indicated by the presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery in the lowermost stratum of refuse beneath the surface on which 
        this wall was constructed. This type of pottery was also found in the 
        lowermost stratum of the midden area east of the roomblock. There was 
        no evidence of an occupational hiatus in any of our test units. Thus, 
        the stratigraphic locations of specific types of pottery sherds indicate 
        that construction of the roomblock and use and habitation of this area 
        of the village occurred sometime after A.D. 1180 and continued uninterrupted 
        until this area of the village was abandoned sometime in the 1200s. 
      32 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of sherd deposition occurred between A.D. 1180 and 1280, and the data 
        for corrugated jar sherds indicate 113 years of accumulation. 
      Architectural Block 500
      33 
        The section of roomblock wall exposed by our testing (Structure 507) 
        is typical of Pueblo III construction style. The inference that the wall 
        was constructed sometime after A.D. 1180 is based on the presence of Mesa 
        Verde Black-on-white pottery beneath the surface on which the structure 
        was built. A short section of wall (Structure 508) appears to have been 
        constructed earlier, sometime after A.D. 1100. This inference is based 
        on the presence of Pueblo III White Painted pottery beneath the surface 
        on which this wall rests. The depositional sequence does not show any 
        clear occupational hiatus between the construction of the early wall and 
        the construction of the main roomblock; nor was any break apparent between 
        the lowermost deposits in which we did not find Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        and the upper deposits in which we did. Pottery found during testing of 
        midden deposits includes Pueblo I, II, and III sherds. However, the earliest 
        refuse in the sampled portion of the midden contains Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery. Thus, the stratigraphy indicates that much or all of the refuse 
        in this architectural block was deposited after A.D. 1180. 
      34 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a reasonable probability that 
        some sherds were deposited between A.D. 1060 and 1100 and a higher probability 
        that sherds were deposited between 1100 and 1225. The data suggest a depositional 
        hiatus between A.D. 1225 and 1260 and then a reasonable probability of 
        additional deposition between 1260 and 1280. The quantity of corrugated 
        sherds suggests a total length of accumulation of 193 years. 
      Architectural Block 600
      35 
        The exposed portion of the roomblock in Architectural Block 600 (Structure 
        605) exhibits masonry typical of the late Pueblo II period and the Pueblo 
        III period. Two use surfaces were defined in our test pit at the north 
        edge of this roomblock. Both surfaces were used sometime after A.D. 1100, 
        as indicated by the presence of Pueblo III White Painted pottery beneath 
        the lower surface. The roomblock wall rests on the upper of these surfaces 
        and so it, too, was constructed sometime after 1100. However, the lowermost 
        stratum of undisturbed midden in this architectural block contains Mesa 
        Verde Black-on-white sherds, leading to the inference that occupation 
        of this block actually postdates A.D. 1180. 
      36 
        The probabilistic pottery data show a high probability that sherds were 
        deposited between A.D. 1180 and 1280, and the accumulation of corrugated 
        jar sherds suggests that this block was occupied for 106 years. 
      
      Architectural Block 700
      37 
        In Architectural Block 700, a subterranean structure of unknown type (Structure 
        704) yielded a tree-ring sample with a noncutting date of A.D. 974. We 
        infer, however, that Structure 704 was actually constructed sometime after 
        A.D. 1050, given the near-absence of Cortez Black-on-white pottery at 
        this site. This structure was located between the roomblocks in Architectural 
        Blocks 600 and 700 and was tested by a 1-x-1-m unit that was designed 
        to sample the midden in Architectural Block 700. The structure was abandoned 
        sometime after A.D. 1100, perhaps around A.D. 1180. The portion of the 
        roomblock exposed during testing (Structure 706) rests on undisturbed 
        native sediment; the masonry style suggests construction sometime during 
        the Pueblo III period, and postA.D. 1180 pottery was found just 
        above this surface. The refuse sampled in this architectural block was 
        also deposited sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      38 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a reasonable probability that 
        sherds were deposited between A.D. 1060 and 1100 and a much higher probability 
        that deposition occurred between A.D. 1100 and 1225. The accumulation 
        of corrugated gray jar sherds suggests 150 years of deposition. 
      Architectural Block 800
      39 
        The masonry style of the section of roomblock wall we exposed in Architectural 
        Block 800 (Structure 803) indicates construction during the Pueblo III 
        period. Mesa Verde Black-on-white pottery was found beneath the surface 
        on which the wall was built, indicating that construction occurred sometime 
        after A.D. 1180. The pottery data from the exposed use surfaces and the 
        sampled midden deposits confirm that this architectural block was inhabited 
        sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      40 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a reasonable probability that 
        sherds were deposited between A.D. 1180 and 1225, a high probability that 
        sherds were deposited between 1225 and 1260, and a reasonable probability 
        of deposition between 1260 and 1280. The accumulation of corrugated jar 
        sherds suggests 41 years of deposition. 
      Architectural Block 900
      41 
        An earth-walled pit structure just north of the roomblock predates the 
        masonry structures in Architectural Block 900. This structure was abandoned 
        sometime after A.D. 1100, as evidenced by the presence of Mesa Verde Corrugated 
        Gray sherds in the intentional fill of a feature inside the structure, 
        as well as by the presence of Pueblo III White Painted sherds on the floor 
        of the structure. The exposed portion of the roomblock wall (Structure 
        908) was built after A.D. 1150 and was probably abandoned sometime after 
        A.D. 1180. The refuse in the tested areas of the midden was deposited 
        sometime after 1180. Thus, the available data indicate that this architectural 
        block dates from sometime after A.D. 1180, with an earlier earth-walled 
        structure dating from sometime after A.D. 1050. No occupational hiatus 
        was noted in the stratigraphy in this block. 
      42 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of sherd deposition was between A.D. 1180 and 1260. The accumulation data 
        for corrugated jar sherds suggests 90 years of deposition. 
      Architectural Block 1000
      43 
        In Architectural Block 1000, the construction style of the exposed portion 
        of the roomblock wall (Structure 1001) is Pueblo III. Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        sherds were found in the shallow midden deposits. These data lead to the 
        inference that this architectural block was inhabited sometime after A.D. 
        1180. Only a few vertical courses were preserved in the exposed portion 
        of the north wall of the roomblock, and only a small quantity of rubble 
        was noted in the vicinity. Thus we suspect that this roomblock might have 
        been dismantled so that the building stones could be reused, possibly 
        for the construction of the great tower complex nearby (Architectural 
        Block 1200). 
      44 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the period of highest probability 
        of deposition was between A.D. 1225 and 1260. The accumulation of corrugated 
        jar sherds suggests that this area was occupied for 13 years. 
      Architectural Block 1100
      45 
        The construction style of the portions of roomblock walls exposed in 
        Architectural Block 1100 (Structures 1103 and 1104) is typical of Pueblo 
        III construction. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds within 
        and beneath the midden indicates that this architectural block was inhabited 
        sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      
      46 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of sherd deposition was between A.D. 1180 and 1260. The data for corrugated 
        jar sherds suggest 63 years of accumulation. 
      Architectural Block 1200
      47 
        The style of the masonry in Architectural Block 1200 indicates construction 
        during the Pueblo III period. The predominance of Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery among decorated pottery types indicates occupation sometime after 
        A.D. 1200. A noncutting tree-ring date of 1254+vv in Structure 1201 is 
        the best indication of the time of construction and occupation of this 
        architectural block and suggests that construction occurred an unknown 
        length of time after A.D. 1254. 
      48 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of deposition is between A.D. 1260 and 1280, with a lower probability 
        of deposition between 1225 and 1260. The accumulation of corrugated jar 
        sherds suggests that this block was occupied for 20 years. 
      Architectural Block 2000
      49 
        Architectural Block 2000 consists solely of a large, natural depression 
        and an associated north-south-trending berm; no buildings are included 
        within this block. The area was sampled with an east-west, 1-x-2-m unit 
        excavated through the berm, and a 1-x-1-m unit excavated within the depression 
        itself. Late Pueblo II and Pueblo III pottery (including Mesa Verde Black-on-white) 
        was found in use-associated refuse on bedrock within the depression and 
        was also found in the stratum that rested on the surface on which the 
        berm was constructed. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white pottery 
        in these contexts indicates that use of these areas occurred sometime 
        after A.D. 1180, although use actually could have begun any time after 
        A.D. 1050. 
      50 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of deposition was between A.D. 1180 and 1280. The data for corrugated 
        jar sherds suggest 131 years of accumulation. 
      Architectural Block 2100
      51 
        Pecked-block, double-stone-wide masonry construction of the exposed section 
        of roomblock wall (Structure 2103) and the presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery beneath the surface on which the roomblock was constructed lead 
        to the inference that Architectural Block 2100 was constructed sometime 
        after A.D. 1180. Only one vertical course was preserved in the exposed 
        portion of the north wall of the roomblock, and only a small quantity 
        of rubble was noted in the vicinity. This suggests that this roomblock 
        might have been dismantled so that the stones could be reused, possibly 
        for the construction of the nearby great tower complex (Architectural 
        Block 1200). 
      52 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of sherd deposition was between A.D. 1180 and 1225, but there is a reasonable 
        probability that sherds were also deposited between 1225 and 1260. The 
        accumulation of corrugated jar sherds suggests 13 years of deposition. 
     
      Architectural Block 2200
      53 
        The pecked-block and double-stone-wide masonry style of the exposed section 
        of roomblock wall (Structure 2203) suggests that the roomblock in Architectural 
        Block 2200 was constructed during the Pueblo III period. Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery was associated with the surface on which this structure rested, 
        indicating abandonment sometime after A.D. 1180. Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery associated with a use surface beneath the midden would have been 
        deposited sometime after this date as well. Thus, this architectural block 
        was inhabited sometime after A.D. 1180. Only a few vertical courses were 
        preserved in the exposed portion of the north wall of the roomblock, and 
        only a small quantity of rubble was noted in the vicinity. This suggests 
        that this roomblock might have been dismantled so that the stones could 
        be salvaged for use in the construction of the great tower complex nearby 
        (Architectural Block 1200). 
      54 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a high probability that sherds 
        were deposited between A.D. 1180 and 1225. The data for corrugated jar 
        sherds suggest 32 years of accumulation. 
      Architectural Block 2300
      55 
        The pecked-block and double-stone-wide masonry styles of the exposed 
        section of roomblock wall (Structure 2302) suggest that construction of 
        Architectural Block 2300 occurred during the Pueblo III period. Mesa Verde 
        Black-on-white pottery is contained within the midden, leading us to infer 
        that the architectural block was abandoned sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      56 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a high probability that sherds 
        were deposited between A.D. 1225 and 1260. The accumulation of corrugated 
        jar sherds suggests a 31-year occupation span. 
      Architectural Block 2400
      57 
        The pecked-block and double-stone-wide masonry styles of the exposed 
        section of roomblock wall (Structure 2404) in Architectural Block 2400 
        indicate construction during the Pueblo III period. The stratigraphy within 
        the sampled midden units had not been disturbed. Pueblo III White Painted 
        and Mesa Verde Corrugated Gray sherds were found in the lowermost strata 
        of these units, and Mesa Verde Black-on-white sherds were found in the 
        upper strata. These data indicate that refuse deposition began sometime 
        after A.D. 1100 and continued until sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      58 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a reasonable probability of sherd 
        deposition between A.D. 1100 and 1140, then a hiatus, then probably more 
        deposition between A.D. 1180 and 1225. The accumulation of corrugated 
        jar sherds suggests 59 years of deposition. 
      Architectural Block 2500
      59 
        In Architectural Block 2500, the presence of Pueblo III White Painted 
        pottery on the surface on which this structure was built indicates that 
        the roomblock was abandoned an unknown length of time after A.D. 1100. 
        The pecked-block masonry style indicates construction during the Pueblo 
        III period. Undisturbed midden rested on undisturbed native sediment containing 
        Mesa Verde Black-on-white pottery, leading to the inference that the roomblock 
        was occupied until sometime after A.D. 1180. 
      60 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a high probability that sherd 
        deposition occurred between A.D. 1180 and 1260 and slightly less probability 
        that it continued through 1280. The accumulation of corrugated jar sherds 
        suggests that this area was occupied for 53 years. 
      Architectural Block 2600
      61 
        Extramural surfaces beneath the level of the roomblock in Architectural 
        Block 2600 date from sometime after A.D. 1100. A mostly dismantled, masonry 
        structure (Structure 2607) north of the roomblock was constructed of double-stone-wide 
        masonry, indicating late Pueblo II or Pueblo III construction. The masonry 
        style of the exposed section of roomblock wall (Structure 2608) is pecked-block 
        and double-stone-with-core, which indicates construction during the Pueblo 
        III period. The 50-cm-thick midden deposits south of the roomblock contain 
        both late Pueblo II and Pueblo III sherds. The presence of Pueblo III 
        White Painted pottery in this refuse and beneath the extramural surfaces 
        that predate the roomblock indicates that this architectural block was 
        constructed sometime after A.D. 1100. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery on a use surface associated with the roomblock indicates that 
        occupation of the roomblock ended sometime after A.D. 1180. The pottery 
        in the tested portion of the midden suggests post-1100 deposition; the 
        large number of Mancos Black-on-white sherds indicates that this midden 
        could have originated from undetected late Pueblo II structures. 
      62 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a good probability of deposition 
        between A.D. 1100 and 1140 but the highest probability of deposition between 
        1140 and 1180. The accumulation of corrugated jar sherds suggests deposition 
        for 65 years. 
      63 
        The field data and the probabilistic data are somewhat at odds for this 
        architectural block. The masonry style of the exposed roomblock wall is 
        later than the time of occupation as indicated by the pottery data for 
        the midden. One possible reason for this discrepancy is that we excavated 
        our midden units in an area of early refuse deposition associated with 
        buildings that we did not expose, and we failed to sample the refuse that 
        was deposited by the inhabitants of the masonry roomblock. Alternatively, 
        this roomblock could have actually been built and occupied in the late 
        1000s or early 1100s and abandoned by 1140; this raises the possibility 
        that this compact, two-story structure with blocked-in kivas was a second 
        Chacoan great house. More data are needed to resolve this question. 
      Architectural Block 3200
      64 
        The double-stone-with-core masonry style of the exposed section of wall 
        (Structure 3201) in Architectural Block 3200 suggests construction during 
        the Pueblo III period. The earliest deposits in this talus-slope architectural 
        block contain Pueblo III White Painted and Mesa Verde Corrugated Gray 
        sherds, which leads to the inference that this architectural block was 
        constructed sometime after A.D. 1100. The large number of Mancos Black-on-white 
        sherds indicates that the tested portion of the midden could have originated 
        from undetected late Pueblo II structures. This is one of two tested areas 
        of the site (the other is in Architectural Block 2600) that appears to 
        contain refuse dating earlier than A.D. 1150. 
      65 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate a high probability that sherds 
        were deposited between A.D. 1100 and 1140. The data for corrugated jar 
        sherds suggest accumulation for 27 years. 
      Architectural Block 3300
      66 
        No masonry or extramural surfaces were exposed in this talus-slope architectural 
        block. The types of pottery found in the midden deposits lead to the inference 
        that much of the refuse was deposited sometime after A.D. 1180. A lower 
        stratum of refuse could slightly predate A.D. 1180, but Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery was found in the refuse just above this stratum and deposition 
        appears to have been continuous. The lower refuse probably does not predate 
        A.D. 1180 by very many years. 
      67 
        The probabilistic pottery data suggest a reasonable probability of sherd 
        deposition between A.D. 1100 and 1140, followed by a hiatus, then a higher 
        probability that sherd deposition occurred between A.D. 1180 and 1225. 
        The data for corrugated jar sherds suggest accumulation for 21 years. 
      Architectural Block 3400
      68 
        No masonry or surfaces were exposed in this talus-slope architectural 
        block. The cultural debris was very sparse, but included late Pueblo II 
        sherds and Pueblo III sherds. The presence of Mesa Verde Black-on-white 
        pottery deep in the midden leads to the inference that much of the refuse 
        was deposited after A.D. 1180. 
      69 
        The probabilistic pottery data indicate that the highest probability 
        of deposition occurred between A.D. 1225 and 1260 and that there was a 
        lower probability of deposition between 1260 and 1280. The accumulation 
        of corrugated jar sherds suggests deposition for two years. 
      Conclusions
      70 
        All available dating information indicates that Yellow Jacket Pueblo (Site 
        5MT5) was a large village beginning during the late Pueblo II period, 
        sometime between the middle A.D. 1000s and the early 1100s. The presence 
        of a few early pottery sherds and corn-grinding tools (see paragraph 
        148 in "Artifacts") suggests some occupation of the site area before 
        that time, as early as the Basketmaker III and/or Pueblo I periods, but 
        those earlier remains are believed to be buried beneath the Pueblo III 
        architectural blocks in locations other than where we excavated. It is 
        also possible that there are earlier, buried remains in areas of the site 
        that we were not granted permission to test. However, most of the roomblock 
        walls that we exposed rested either on undisturbed native sediment or 
        on shallow refuse deposits containing Pueblo III sherds. Given the spatial 
        distribution of our test pits (Database Map 264), it seems likely 
        that, had the site area been intensively occupied before A.D. 1060, we 
        would have found some evidence of earlier structures or more than a few 
        sherds dating from that time. 
      71 
        It is not unlikely that the possible Chacoan great house and the great 
        kiva were among the first structures to be built at the site. A few additional 
        architectural blocks were probably constructed during this same general 
        time, possibly in the vicinities of Blocks 500 and 2600 and in the untested 
        areas west and southwest of the great kiva. Frequencies of specific pottery-design 
        styles indicate that there is also a reasonable probability that sometime 
        between A.D. 1100 and 1140 sherds were deposited in the vicinity of Architectural 
        Blocks 100, 500, 700, 2400, 2600, 3200, and 3300, although construction 
        this early could be confirmed stratigraphically and architecturally only 
        for the areas of Blocks 700, 2400, and 3200. Although we could find no 
        clear evidence of an occupational hiatus in the stratigraphy of any of 
        the areas we tested, the probabilistic pottery-design data suggest that 
        three of these early architectural blocks (100, 2400, and 3300) might 
        have been abandoned between A.D. 1140 and 1180, during a drought that 
        appears elsewhere in the region to have caused a near-cessation of building 
        construction (Lipe and Varien 1999*1:299; 
        Petersen 1988*1; Van 
        West 1994*2). 
      72 
        During the Pueblo III period, more specifically beginning around A.D. 
        1180, construction at Yellow Jacket increased dramatically, and a large 
        village developed (also see "Population 
        Estimates"). This large village consisted of nearly all buildings 
        visible on the ground surface today, with the possible exception of Architectural 
        Block 3200. Yellow Jacket Pueblo appears to have been a sizable village 
        until the mid- to late 1200s; most of the residential architectural blocks 
        tested by Crow Canyon were occupied as late as 1260, and there is a reasonable 
        probability that many were still occupied after that date. The political, 
        economic, and social implications of as many as 35 architectural blocks 
        being constructed during one occupation are impressive, as are the implications 
        of this large community center enduring for perhaps three generations. 
        This village and its community must have played an important role in the 
        late prehistory of the Mesa Verde region. 
      1Date suffixes (Laboratory of Tree-Ring 
        Research, Tucson, Arizona): B = bark is present; vv = there is no way 
        of estimating how far the last ring is from the true outside; many rings 
        may be lost; + = one or a few rings may be missing near the outside whose 
        presence or absence cannot be determined because the series does not extend 
        far enough to provide adequate cross dating. Of the suffixes appended 
        to the dates for the Yellow Jacket samples, only "B" denotes a cutting 
        date. 
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