The Columbus Dispatch

Turkey bones may help trace fate of ancient cliff dwellers

- By Dan Elliott

DENVER — Researcher­s say they have found a new clue into the mysterious exodus of ancient cliffdwell­ing people from the Mesa Verde area of Colorado more than 700 years ago: DNA from the bones of domesticat­ed turkeys.

The DNA shows the Mesa Verde people raised turkeys that had telltale similariti­es to turkeys kept by ancient people in the Rio Grande Valley of northern New Mexico — and that those birds became more common in New Mexico about the same time the Mesa Verde people were leaving their cliff dwellings, according to a paper published last month in the journal PLoS One.

That supports the hypothesis that when the cliff dwellers left the Mesa Verde region in the late 1200s, many migrated to northern New Mexico’s Rio Grande Valley, about 170 miles to the southeast, and that the Pueblo Indians who live there today are their descendant­s, the archaeolog­ists wrote.

The cliff dwellers would have taken some turkeys with them, accounting for the increase in numbers in New Mexico, the authors said.

Researcher­s have long debated what became of the people sometimes called Ancestral Puebloans, who lived in the elaborate Mesa Verde cliff dwellings and other communitie­s across the Four Corners region, where the states of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah meet.

Archaeolog­ists believe the Ancestral Puebloans were a flourishin­g population of about 30,000 in 1200, but by 1280 they were gone, driven off by a devastatin­g drought, social turbulence and warfare.

Because they left no written record, their paths are not known with certainty. Many archaeolog­ists and present-day Pueblo Indians believe the Ancestral Puebloans moved to villages across New Mexico and Arizona, and that their descendant­s live there today.

Scott Ortman, a University of Colorado archaeolog­ist and a co-author of the PLoS One paper, said the turkey DNA supports the explanatio­n that many migrated to an area along the Rio Grande north of present-day Santa Fe, New Mexico.

“The patterns that we found are consistent with several other studies and several other lines of evidence,” he said in an interview.

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