Santa Fe New Mexican

Arizona archaeolog­ist: Found artifacts linked to Coronado Expedition

- By Harry Brean

TUCSON, Ariz. — A Tucson archaeolog­ist has unveiled a discovery in Santa Cruz County that she thinks could rewrite the history of the Coronado Expedition.

Deni Seymour said she has unearthed hundreds of artifacts linked to the 16th-century Spanish expedition, including pieces of iron and copper crossbow bolts, distinctiv­e caret-headed nails, a medieval horseshoe and spur, a sword point and bits of chain mail armor.

The “trophy artifact” is a bronze wall gun — more than 3 feet long and weighing roughly 40 pounds — found sitting on the floor of a structure that she said could be proof of the oldest European settlement in the continenta­l United States.

“This is a history-changing site,” said Seymour, who touts herself as the Sherlock Holmes of history. “It’s unquestion­ably Coronado.”

The independen­t researcher revealed her find Jan. 29 in a sold-out lecture to more than 100 people at Tubac Presidio State Historic Park.

Seymour is not disclosing the exact location of the archaeolog­ical site, but her general descriptio­n in the Santa Cruz Valley places it at least 40 miles west of Coronado National Memorial, which overlooks the San Pedro River and the U.S.-Mexico border south of Sierra Vista.

In 1540, Spanish conquistad­or Francisco Vázquez de Coronado led an armed expedition of more than 2,500 Europeans and Mexican-Indian allies through what is now Mexico and the American Southwest in search of riches.

The two-year journey took them as far north and east as present-day Kansas and brought them into contact — and often conflict — with centuries-old Indigenous cultures along the way.

Though profession­al archeologi­sts and amateur sleuths have puzzled over it for close to 150 years, Coronado’s exact route through Arizona to the elaborate Zuni pueblos of Northern New Mexico remains a mystery.

The consensus among scholars is that the expedition most likely followed the Rio Sonora through northern Mexico and the San Pedro River into what is now Arizona.

Seymour believes her discovery proves once and for all that Coronado and company actually entered Arizona along the Santa Cruz River before eventually heading east.

That puts her at odds with most researcher­s.

Bill Hartmann is an accomplish­ed Tucson astronomer, who has also been investigat­ing and writing about Coronado for more than 20 years. In 2014, the University of Arizona Press published his book on the subject, Searching for Golden Empires.

“It sure sounds like she has a really exciting site,” Hartmann said after attending Seymour’s first lecture in Tubac. “The big question in my mind is whether it disagrees with the earlier interpreta­tion of where the Coronado Expedition went. I don’t think it undermines earlier thoughts that they came up the San Pedro.”

New Mexico historian Richard Flint had a similar reaction: excited by Seymour’s discovery, skeptical about her conclusion­s.

Flint and his historian wife, Shirley Cushing Flint, are among the world’s leading experts on the expedition. In more than 40 years of research, they’ve written eight books and countless academic papers on the topic.

“I think Deni’s finds are certainly fascinatin­g and probably indicate the presence of the Coronado expedition,” Flint said. “I don’t think that that means the usual reconstruc­tion of the route going north has to be abandoned. The evidence is very strong that they came up through the Rio Sonora.”

Seymour said she once favored the San Pedro route, too. But that was before all these artifacts turned up in an entirely different river valley.

She said she first visited the site in Santa Cruz County in July 2020 and immediatel­y found several caret-headed nails, “which in this area means without question you have Coronado.”

She has been uncovering artifacts there ever since with the help of metal detectors and a crew of up to 18 volunteers, including several members of the Tohono O’odham tribe.

“The site keeps giving and giving,” she said.

Relics have been unearthed across an area that stretches for well over half a mile. At minimum, Seymour said, it is the remains of a large encampment, but she suspects it is something more.

“What we have is a named place,” she said, “a place named in the Coronado papers.”

Seymour believes she has found the remains of Suya, also known as San Geronimo III because it was the third and northernmo­st location of a Spanish outpost establishe­d to support the expedition.

Along with the central structure where the wall gun was found, she said she has identified what appear to be six surroundin­g lookout stations, three of which show “clear evidence of being attacked.”

The Spanish “had a major presence here, and they had major conflicts with the Natives here,” Seymour said. “And it’s different Natives than previously thought.”

Based on the site’s location and the items she has found, she is convinced the outpost was routed not by the Opata people who once dominated what is now Sonora but by the Sobaipuri, whose direct descendant­s include the Tohono O’odham at San Xavier.

Clusters of lead shot and distinctiv­e Sobaipuri arrowheads tell the story of their final confrontat­ion, which sent the Spaniards retreating back to the south.

“We have clear evidence of battle,” said Seymour, who has written dozens of academic books and papers about the region and its early native inhabitant­s. “There’s no question.”

Excavation at the site has yielded more than 120 caret-headed nails and more than 60 crossbow bolts so far.

Those are the most “diagnostic” artifacts from the Coronado Expedition, Flint said, and to find so many crossbow bolts in particular is convincing evidence of a significan­t skirmish.

According to Flint, there are a number of written accounts by members of the expedition that reference Suya and the battle that led to it being abandoned. He said the loss of the outpost “sort of put the nail in the coffin” of Coronado’s journey because it cut him off from his main resupply and communicat­ion route.

The question of whether it qualifies as the first European settlement in the U.S. seems to depend on how you define the word settlement.

To Hartmann, Suya was “more like a struggling military garrison than a town,” he said.

And it wasn’t the first regardless, Flint added. By the time San Geronimo III was establishe­d, Coronado had already traveled deep into present-day New Mexico, where the expedition clashed with native people and lived for months in some of their captured pueblos.

“Everyone wants to be first. [This discovery] is important, even if it’s not the first,” Flint said. “Virtually anything that is found about the Coronado Expedition has the chance to shed new light on something that was not known.”

Seymour is far less measured. As far as she is concerned, this discovery is so important, so game-changing that it could wind up as a national monument or a World Heritage Site someday.

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