Hot Rocks in Hot Places: Investigating the 10,000-Year Record of Plant Baking across the US-Mexico Borderlands
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 84th Annual Meeting, Albuquerque, NM (2019)
This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "Hot Rocks in Hot Places: Investigating the 10,000-Year Record of Plant Baking across the US-Mexico Borderlands," at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
For over 10,000 years, earth ovens, also called roasting pits or burned rock middens, have played important economic and social roles for the indigenous peoples living across the US-Mexico Borderlands. The remains of these plant baking features, most notably massive accumulations of fire-cracked rock and charred earth, are common from Texas to California, and south into Mexico, and were used by hunter-gatherers, formative horticulturalists, sedentary farmers, as well as contemporary native groups to turn inedible plants into digestible food, fiber, and beverage. Despite the long-term ubiquity of earth ovens from the late Paleoindian until today, and their broad spatial and cultural distribution, these features have earned relatively little direct archaeological research. This symposium explores the longevity and diversity of plant baking along the Borderlands, and examines the subsistence strategies, technological organization, and social contexts within which earth ovens functioned.
Other Keywords
Subsistence and Foodways •
Archaic •
Material Culture and Technology •
Ethnography/Ethnoarchaeology •
Survey •
Mogollon •
Caves and Rockshelters •
Hunter-Gatherers/Foragers •
Political economy •
Geoarchaeology
Geographic Keywords
United States of America (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
New Mexico (State / Territory) •
Oklahoma (State / Territory) •
Arizona (State / Territory) •
Texas (State / Territory) •
Sonora (State / Territory) •
Chihuahua (State / Territory) •
Baja California (State / Territory) •
USA (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)
- Documents (14)
- Agave Bloom Stalk Ovens in the Southern Chihuahuan Desert (2019)
- Agave Roasting Pits of the Mescalero Apache (2019)
- Assessing Earth Oven Intensification in the Lower Pecos Canyonlands of Southwest Texas (2019)
- Central Texas Plant Baking (2019)
- Cholla Bud Roasting in St. George, Utah during the Early Pueblo II Period (2019)
- Fire on the Mountain: The Use of Earth Ovens for Agave and Pinyon Processing in the Sheep Range, NV (2019)
- Hot Rock Cooking of Desert Lily and Winding Mariposa (2019)
- Labor, Settlement, and Social Dimensions of Earth Oven Use in Southern New Mexico and West Texas (2019)
- Late Paleoindian Earth Ovens in the Texas Big Bend (2019)
- Looking under the Rocks: Geoarchaeological Investigations of Earth Oven Facilities in Various Settings of the Lower Pecos, Texas (2019)
- Macrobotanical Perspectives on Earth Oven Use in the Lower Pecos Canyonlands, Texas (2019)
- Power Cooking...Or Not (2019)
- Roasting Pit Mounds of the Verde Valley, Central Arizona: New Implications for Yavapai/Apache Archaeology (2019)
- Traditions and Community: Hornos and Communal Feasting among the Hohokam (2019)