Los Angeles Times

Signs of a lost city under a Kansas town

Artifacts found in the area seem to align with conquistad­ors’ texts and myths about original inhabitant­s.

- By David Kelly

ARKANSAS CITY, Kan. — Of all the places to discover a lost city, this pleasing little community seems an unlikely candidate.

There are no vine-covered temples or impenetrab­le jungles here — just an old-fashioned downtown, a drugstore that serves up root beer floats and rambling houses along shady brick lanes.

Yet there’s always been something — something just below the surface.

Locals have long scoured fields and riverbanks for arrowheads and bits of pottery, amassing huge collection­s. Then there were those murky tales of a sprawling city on the Great Plains and a chief who drank from a goblet of gold.

A few years ago, Donald Blakeslee, an anthropolo­gist and archaeolog­y professor at Wichita State University, began piecing things together. And what he’s found has spurred a rethinking of traditiona­l views on the early settlement of the Midwest, while potentiall­y filling a major gap in American history.

Using freshly translated documents written by the Spanish conquistad­ors more than 400 years ago and an array of high-tech equipment, Blakeslee located what he believes to be the lost city of Etzanoa, home to perhaps 20,000 people between 1450 and 1700.

They lived in thatched, beehive-shaped houses that ran for at least five miles along the bluffs and banks of

the Walnut and Arkansas rivers. Blakeslee says the site is the second-largest ancient settlement in the country after Cahokia in Illinois.

On a recent morning, Blakeslee supervised a group of Wichita State students excavating a series of rectangula­r pits in a local field.

Jeremiah Perkins, 21, brushed dirt from a halfburied black pot.

Others sifted soil over screened boxes, revealing arrowheads, pottery and stone scrapers used to thin buffalo hides.

Blakeslee, 75, became intrigued by Etzanoa after scholars at UC Berkeley retranslat­ed in 2013 the often muddled Spanish accounts of their forays into what is now Kansas. The new versions were more cogent, precise and vivid.

“I thought, wow, their eyewitness descriptio­ns are so clear it’s like you were there. I wanted to see if the archaeolog­y fit their descriptio­ns,” he said. “Every single detail matched this place.”

Conquistad­ors are often associated with Mexico, but a thirst for gold drove them into the Midwest as well.

Francisco Vazquez de Coronado came to central Kansas in 1541 chasing stories of a fabulously wealthy nobleman who napped beneath trees festooned with tinkling gold bells. He found no gold, but he did find Native Americans in a collection of settlement­s he dubbed Quivira.

In 1601, Juan de Oñate led about 70 conquistad­ors from the Spanish colony of New Mexico into south-central Kansas in search of Quivira in the hopes of finding gold, winning converts for the Roman Catholic Church and extracting tribute for the crown.

According to Spanish records, they ran into a tribe called the Escanxaque­s, who told of a large city nearby where a Spaniard was allegedly imprisoned. The locals called it Etzanoa.

As the Spaniards drew near, they spied numerous grass houses along the bluffs. A delegation of Etzanoans bearing round corn cakes met them on the riverbank. They were described as a sturdy people with gentle dispositio­ns and stripes tattooed from their eyes to their ears. It was a friendly encounter until the conquistad­ors decided to take hostages. That prompted the entire city to flee.

Oñate’s men wandered the empty settlement for two or three days, counting 2,000 houses that held eight to 10 people each. Gardens of pumpkins, corn and sunflowers lay between the homes.

The Spaniards could see more houses in the distance, but they feared an Etzanoan attack and turned back.

That’s when they were ambushed by 1,500 Escanxaque­s. The conquistad­ors battled them with guns and cannons before finally withdrawin­g back to New Mexico, never to return.

French explorers arrived a century later but found nothing. Disease probably wiped out Etzanoa, leaving it to recede into legend.

Blakeslee enlisted the help of the National Park Service, which used a magnetomet­er to detect variations in the Earth’s magnetic field and find features around town that looked like homes, storage pits and places where fires were started.

Then, relying on descriptio­ns from the conquistad­ors, he discovered what he believes was the battle site in an upscale neighborho­od of Arkansas City.

Volunteers using metal detectors found three halfinch iron balls under the field. Blakeslee said they were 17th century Spanish cartridge shot fired from a cannon. A Spanish horseshoe nail was also found.

It all lent credibilit­y to the detailed accounts left by the conquistad­ors.

The battlefiel­d sits in Warren “Hap” McLeod’s backyard.

“It’s a great story,” he said. “There was a lost city right under our noses.”

McLeod, 71, offered a quick tour of the area.

He started at Camp Quaker Haven overlookin­g the spot where Oñate would have encountere­d the Etzanoans. McLeod then drove up to the country club, the highest point in the city of roughly 12,500 people.

“Lots of artifacts have been taken from here,” McLeod said.

In 1994, thousands of relics were unearthed during road constructi­on. In 1959, the renowned archaeolog­ist Waldo Wedel wrote in his classic book, “An Introducti­on to Kansas Archeology,” that the valley floor and bluffs here “were littered with sherds, f lints, and other detritus” that went on for miles.

“Now we know why,” McLeod said. “There were 20,000 people living here for over 200 years.”

Local rancher Jason Smith, 47, said he had seen collection­s “that would blow your mind.”

“Truckloads of stuff,” he said. “Worked stone tools, flints. One guy had 100 boxes at his house.”

Russell Bishop, 66, worked at the country club as a kid.

“My boss had an entire basement full of pottery and all kinds of artifacts,” he recalled. “We’d be out there working and he would recognize a black spot on the ground as an ancient campfire site.”

Bishop, who now lives outside Denver, has coffee cans full of arrowheads. He spread some on his counter.

“I don’t think anyone knew how big this all was,” he said. “I’m glad they’re finally getting to the bottom of it.”

Robert Hoard, Kansas’ state archaeolog­ist, said that based on the Spanish accounts and the evidence of a large settlement, it’s “plausible” that Blakeslee has found Etzanoa.

Still, he would like more evidence.

The early Great Plains had long been imagined as a vast empty space populated by nomadic tribes following buffalo herds. But if Blakeslee is right, at least some of the tribes were urban. They built large towns, raised crops, made fine pottery, processed bison on a massive scale and led a settled existence. There were trade connection­s all the way to the Aztec capital of Tenochtitl­an in Mexico.

“So this was not some remote place. The people traded and lived in huge communitie­s,” Blakeslee said. “Everything we thought we knew turns out to be wrong. I think this needs a place in every schoolbook.”

And that may just be the beginning. Blakeslee has found archaeolog­ical evidence in Rice and McPherson counties for other large settlement­s extending for miles, which he believes existed around the same time as Etzanoa.

He has published his findings in the peerreview­ed journal Plains Anthropolo­gist, and next spring he will present his evidence for Etzanoa at the annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeolog­y. A bigger excavation is planned for next summer.

The Wichita Nation, based three hours south in Anadarko, Okla., is watching all of this carefully. Experts believe the Etzanoans were their ancestors.

“The accounts of Oñate and Coronado have been interprete­d for years,” said Gary McAdams, cultural program planner and historic preservati­on officer for the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes, which number about 3,300. “We had a suspicion it was settled like this, but now it’s starting to be documented, which makes it feel more real.”

In the meantime, Arkansas City is trying to determine how to promote its new claim to fame. Etzanoa remains mostly undergroun­d or on private land. Yet that hasn’t deterred interest.

“We get about 10 calls a day to see the lost city,” said Pamela Crain, director of the Convention & Visitors Bureau. “The vision is to have a visitors center. The other key is to persuade landowners to allow people onto their property.”

Limited tours began last spring, focusing on key historical and archaeolog­ical sites. Town leaders are hoping for a UNESCO World Heritage site designatio­n.

Back at the dig site, all eyes were on Jeremiah Perkins as he lifted the hefty black potsherd from the dirt.

Blakeslee dropped into the pit for a closer look. It was the largest artifact of the summer, perhaps 12 inches high.

“That’s a nice big cooking pot,” he exclaimed.

Yet many mysteries remain about the people of Etzanoa.

“How were they organized? How did they farm the bluffs? How did they maximize bison herds?” Blakeslee asked. “The questions go on and on and on.”

And the thought of that made him smile.

 ?? David Kelly For The Times ?? HIGH-TECH gear and reworked texts helped Wichita State’s Donald Blakeslee find possible remnants of Etzanoa, home to thousands, under Arkansas City, Kan.
David Kelly For The Times HIGH-TECH gear and reworked texts helped Wichita State’s Donald Blakeslee find possible remnants of Etzanoa, home to thousands, under Arkansas City, Kan.
 ?? Photograph­s by David Kelly For The Times ?? WICHITA STATE student Kacie Larsen shakes dirt through a screen in search of artifacts of Etzanoa at the university group’s dig in an Arkansas City, Kan., field.
Photograph­s by David Kelly For The Times WICHITA STATE student Kacie Larsen shakes dirt through a screen in search of artifacts of Etzanoa at the university group’s dig in an Arkansas City, Kan., field.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? “THIS WAS not some remote place .... Everything we thought we knew turns out to be wrong,” says anthropolo­gy and archaeolog­y professor Donald Blakeslee, shown examining Mary Mailler’s latest discoverie­s.
“THIS WAS not some remote place .... Everything we thought we knew turns out to be wrong,” says anthropolo­gy and archaeolog­y professor Donald Blakeslee, shown examining Mary Mailler’s latest discoverie­s.
 ??  ?? “I DON’T think anyone knew how big this all was,” says Russell Bishop, who still has the arrowheads he found around Arkansas City in his youth.
“I DON’T think anyone knew how big this all was,” says Russell Bishop, who still has the arrowheads he found around Arkansas City in his youth.

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