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Some notes on ethnographic subsistence systems in Mojavean environments in the Great Basin PDF

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Preview Some notes on ethnographic subsistence systems in Mojavean environments in the Great Basin

Summer Ethnobiol 15(1):99-117 1995 /. ON SOME NOTES ETHNOGRAPHIC SUBSISTENCE SYSTEMS MOJAVEAN ENVIRONMENTS THE GREAT IN BASIN IN CATHERINE FOWLER S. Department Anthropolog}/ of Reno University Nevada, of NV 89557 Reno, — ABSTRACT. Subsistence resources utilized by Southern Paiute and Shoshone Moj discussed the ethnographic literature. In the 1930s, Isabel Kelly worked with a number of un some additional data, help to outline their subsistence systems. Recent studies among the Timbisha or Death Valley Shoshone also elucidate aspects of their number subsistence Although these groups share a of subsistence aspects cycles. with their linguistic kinsmen in the Great Basin Desert to the north, they also developed some unique based on certain locally occurring resources such as foci The legumes, agaves, and yuccas, as well as tortoises, and chuckwallas. spread of garden horticulture into the eastern part of the region prior to the mid-17005 mi dry this area. RESUMEN por Sureno y Shoshone del Desierto Mojave del occidente de Norteamerica hacia el perturbacion CO discutid( un niimero ayudan esbozar su de campo como algunos datos adicionales, a ineditas, asi Shoshone Timbisha, o de sistemas de subsistencia. Estudios recientes entre los VaUe de Muerte, esclarecen tambien algunos aspectos de sus ciclos de subsis la un buen numero de aspectos de subsis tencia. Si bien estos grupos comparten la Gran Cuenca de hacia e tencia con sus parientes lingiiisticos en el Desierto la en basados cierto tambien algunos focos particulares norte, desarrollaron como recursos de distribucion como leguminosas, agaves y yucas, asi tor local, de tugas La expansi6n de horticultura a la porcion oriental L y lagartijas. la un margen impor probablemente agrego region antes de mediar siglo XVIII el tante sistemas indigenas de subsistencia en esta area arida. a los Sud Shoshone RESUME.— de par peuples Paiute et Les ressources utilisees les aux abords des du Nord dans du Mojave d'Amerique occidentale, desert le de derangement de leurs moeurs, annees periode de contact important et 1840, Pendant annees 1830, Isabel figurent peu dans ethnographique. les literature la un nombre de groupes des recherches dans ?lly fit I que donnees ses notes nonoubliees, ainsi d'autres Death FOWLER No. 100 Vol. 15, 1 de Valley servent egalement a elucider certains aspects de leurs cycles subsis- de subsistance avec Bien que groupes partagent plusieurs aspects leur tance. ces du du Great Basin au Nord,ils ont egalement leurs parents linguistiques desert que developpe certaines specialisations d'apres les ressources locales telles les Le feculents, Tagave et le yucca, ainsi que les tortues et les chuckwallas, deploie- - « du ment de rhorticulure vers Test de region avant la moitie 18^ '"^ siecle la une marge importante aux moyens de subsistance indi- contribua certainement genes dans region cette aride. INTRODUCTION North western Ethnographic subsistence systems for the Great Basin of on America have been defined in the past largely as focused cold desert resources. much Great with groups the This because of the published field v^ork deals in is Chamber- and example, regime Basin Desert, a relatively high, arid, cold (see, for Un Fowler Smith Steward 1933, 1938, 1911; 1986, 1989, 1992; Kelly 1932, 1964; 1974; Zigmond However, Shimkin a signifi- Stewart 1941, 1943; 1941, 1942; 1947; 1981). and number cant of the native peoples of the Great Basin culture area lived in Mojave Desert depended upon the resources of hot deserts, particularly the and warmer groups in the (Fig. a lower, dryer, regime.^ In historic times, 1), Vegas, Mojave Desert included several subgroups of the Southern Paiute (Las (Death Val- Pahrump, Moapa, Shivwdts, George, Chemehuevi), the Timbisha St. Non- Panamint and Koso and some Kawaiisu. Shoshone, adjacent ley), Valley, whom and with Great Basin non-Numic-speaking) groups desert (or also in this Great Basin peoples shared much terms of subsistence and other features of in some and among Mohave, adaptation included, others, the Cahuilla, Serrano, Walapai subgroups. By focusing subsistence around floral and faunal species common on certain to both the Great Basin and the Mojave deserts, but also and key Mojavean and tortoises resources legumes, agaves, yuccas; desert (e.g., seeming chuckwallas), of these groups learned to cope with the Mojave's all natu- some supplemented these harshness. In historic times, of these groups also rally occurring products with several derived from garden horticulture. com- paper on and subsistence In this data the distribution character of the Great on the plexes focused the uniquely Mojavean resources are discussed for among What known gardening Basin groups. and importance of of the history is unpublished them also reviewed. Sources for these data include the extensive is data for notes of Isabel Kelly (1932-34) for the Southern Paiute,^ the author's field Tim- and the Southern Paiute in the Mojave Desert (Fowler 1986-1990) for 1968, mate- bisha or Death Valley Shoshone (Fowler 1992-1993), and certain published Irwin BeU and rials (e.g., Castetter 1937, 1941; Castetter et al 1938; Coville 1892; Zigmond 1980; Laird 1976; Schroth 1987; Steward 1938; Stuart 1945; Wallace 1980; Mojavean 1981). Unfortunately since of these data were gathered long after all more of subsistence systems ceased to function in their entirety, the data suggest use of the "what" and "how" than of the "how much" and "how often" of the occa- are these resources. Statements of consultants regarding these other aspects now sionally included, but cannot be verified. Summer JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY 1995 101 1.— Mojave Desert environments. FIG. Great Basin Tribes in FLORAL RESOURCES applied has been previously The com The term mesqu complex mesauite ite mem- making and edible certain to the procedures involved in gathering series'of glandulosa honey mesquite (Prosopis bers of the Fabaceae, includmg primarily and screwbean (P pubescens Benth.; Benson] M.C. Johnston) Torr. var. torreyana [L. see Bean and Saubel 1972: Fowler 1986:67; Schroth 1987). These, as well as certain FOWLER 102 No. Vol. 15, 1 members Other of the family Acacia spp.), are important components of the (e.g.. Mojavean flora as well as that of the adjacent Sonoran Desert. They were likewise important in the diets of Southern Paiute and Shoshone peoples (but not Kawaiisu [Zigmond some 1981:54]), in local areas replacing the all-important pinyon and /or acorn, or standing equal them. today at least to difficult to It is judge the former distribution, and especially the density and productivity of many mesquite groves properly as have succumbed drought brought on by the to tapping groundwater mod- of resources to salve the seemingly insatiable thirst of ern Mojave Desert dwellers. However, seem once have their focal distributions to been most of the drainage patterns throughout the Mojave (Benson and Darrow Screw beans were more where 1981). of limited occurrence, but equally favored found. mesquite Timbisha (called ohbi in Paiute) were used slightly differently by Shoshone and Southern Paiute people, Among with among additional differences probably occurring the Tim- families. was made when use pods were in the spring the were on with pit-roasted a laver of hot stones, bein 1934:LVI:99;M:44;CI:40;SG:23) did not report this use among the Southern Paiute. However, Moapa and Pahrump the Southern Timbisha Paiute as well as the — Shoshone ate the green pods raw as snacks at a slightly later stage after the had seeds formed. For this purpose people with several mesauite eroves or trees sam from from 1986-1990; 1992-1993). More elaborate processing attended the taking of mesquite later in the season, pods had begun after the to ripen or had dried. * Southern Paiute people collected ripened but green pods from pounded them pulp in still the trees, then into a stone mortars with They made pulp stone from pestles. a drink the resulting (Kelly 1932-1934:LVI:99;M:44;CI:40). The Timbisha and Panamint Shoshone peo- had ple apparently waited and a pods had turned yellow until the little later, begun to drop from the trees. They pounded the moist pods in large tree- still stump mortars made (Fig. 2)5 with cylindrical stone pestles and also a juice. from the remaining much mixture would make them drowsy (Fowler me made use of made from fully ripened As fruit. a first step, ^.^^^ „^.^ i..^ .... remove all remaining moisture. They were then pounded into a fine pov (principally the mesocarp), and a process that took considerable time strei given the toughness of the exocarp and the endocarp surrounding the ; within a pod. The meal was remove further sifted in an open-twined tray to ungroimd material, especially the endocarp and The Timbisha Shosl seeds.7 then set aside both types meal of material be used prepare cakej to to large storage. The Timbisha Shoshone apparently prepared storage in cakes their for winnowing while Moapa trays, bu] at least the Southern Paiute used conical Summer JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY 1995 103 — FIG. Mesquite bean mortar collected in 2. CA, Saline Valley, in 1959 (Eastern California Museum, Independence, A850; 32 cm). baskets The Tmibisha people lined a winnowing tray with the (Stuart 1945). first was The meal from pounding material called kahimbi. fiber retained the process, between then formed on with water being sprinkled the layers into a cake the tray, was much more then to help them pack more The cake, as as a foot or high, tightly. The covered with an additional layer of kahimbi, wetted to form a crust. cake, called removed from and cached in a grass-lined pigibi, could then be sun-dried, the h-ay, pit (Fowler 1992-1993). The Moapa Southern Paiute built their cakes either in coni- pod burden dug shape and lined with mesquite cal baskets, or in a small hole to much few After a pulp (Kelly 1932-1934:M:44). Their cakes were as as 2 feet thick. days, the baskets were inverted and the large cones of meal left to dry further; or same purpose. The cones and cakes the cakes were removed from the pits for the under- were or caves, or in then stored in grass- or bark-lined pits in rockshelters ground on Both groups kept a cone or cake in the pits bluffs or ridges (Stuart 1945). or house and removed and them without further preparation, people pieces ate meal added them water The Moapa people also stirred dried mesquite to for juice. were These into cooked agave and made the resulting mixture into small cakes. camp suitable for the or for meals in (Stuart 1945). trail FOWLER No. Vol. 104 15, 1 1^ -' ^^.xrjx n^^x^ ^— — UT. FIG. Screwbean near George, 3. {Prosopis pubescens Benth.) St. was consid- Dried pods were often stored and processed although there later, common danger damage was The predator erable of insect storage prolonged. if bruchid larvae that eat the seed and the mesocarp, and then pupate within the is pod emerge (some over- (Kingsolver et 1977:110f Processing before the larvae al. ). who winter in the pod) was favored by the Timbisha people, recognized their with arrow- value as food. They cached mesquite pods in subterranean pits lined near weed (Pluchea sericea [Nutt.] Coville) and capped with earth at valley sites A containing Furnace Creek before moving to the mountains for the summer.^ site 1992 such a cache was excavated Breakfast Canyon near Furnace Creek in in upon their (Yohe and Valdez 1993). The beans were then processed in the fall return (Fowler 1992-1993). some family Moapa Kelly (1932-1934:M:44) reports the Southern Paiute for mentioned ownership of mesquite groves near The same not cultivated fields. is knew that for Las Vegas, Pahrump, or Chemehuevi groups, although the latter it was Mohave family a custom (KeUy Steward reports 1932-1934:CI:40). (1938:183) and Shoshone ownership Ash Meadows, by of groves an occupied in area jointly mesquite Southern Paiute people. Tunbisha people more possessive about the felt home surplus. Furnace at Creek, their district, but were willing to trade their KeUy was was and utilized at St. (1932-1934:SG:23) mesquite told that rare little reviews George, and from absent the original Shivwits Schroth (1987) district. Basm concepts ownership among non-Great of as well as other distributions Mojave Desert dwellers. were Screwbeans common mesquite (Fig.* although not nearly as as 3), their important and by them in favored all of the people fortunate enough to have Summer JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY 1995 105 According Kelly Las Vegas and districts. to (1932-1934:LVI:100;CI:41X for the Pahrump Southern Paiute and the Chemehuevi, processing of these involved an — additional step pit ripening. Once the screwbeans had been obtained, they were placed in layers in an arrowweed-lined water being sprinkled between the pit, A man down tamp The was layers. stood in the pit to the pods. pit then covered When with more arrow weed and a clay cap and allowed to for about a month. sit — was the pit opened, the screwbeans had changed color from tan to red. They were then removed and placed in storage granaries or processed into meal using a stone mortar. Screwbeans have very hard seeds, most of which are not easily ground tiny, except by special attention. According to Kelly (1932-1934;LVI:100), the Las Vegas and Pahrump people removed the seeds from the mortared meal mixture by tapping them edge winnowing The seeds could then be ground on to the of a tray. a metate and made into additional meal. Most people apparently preferred to mix the ground seed with water make a drink. The pod meal of screwbeans could to made mes- be eaten prepared as a drink, or into dried cakes similar to those of Ripened screwbeans were widely traded, especially within Southern Paiute quite. "Many territory. Kelly (1932-1934:LVI 100) states: used to trade rabbitskin blanket. sheep anything hide, eagle feathers, sinew, Moj Kroeber universal the area (Bean and Saubel 1972) nor function fully understood. to is its Moapa and Tmibisha people, the Kelly (1932-1934:M:44) does not report for the it Shoshone have not heard that was necessary. In the tree-ripened state (usually it when by Perhaps pit-ripening hastens screwbeans have sweet raw.^ a flavor fall), may but fermentation, the process or enhances the flavor. also cause a slight It who had screwbeans within such Whatever those their not the reported. effect, is areas seem have made good use of them, and, they had enough to trade, they to if could good exact prices. — The agave complex. Like mesquite and screwbean, agaves are primarily con- but southern Great Basin, also fined the Mojave and Sonoran deserts in the to Common Mojave Desert have broader distributions south of that. species in the and Agave (Chemehuevi only) utahensis include Agave Engehn. territory deserti and Engelm. var nevadensis Engelm., A. utahensis ssp. A. utahensis ssp. utahensis, found scattered kaibabensis (McKelvey) Gentry. Agave utahensis varieties are in Southern Mojave Desert (principally distributions mid-level elevations in the at higher elevations occurring at Paiute with A. utahensis ssp. kaibabensis territory), Grand Canyon through the territory of and extending along the north rim of the many where found, shares the Kaibab Southern The agave complex, is Paiute. it features with complexes in the Southwest and Mexico (Castetter et al. 1938). like South- the According KeUy (1932-1934:LVI:94-5;CI:37-9;SH:30;SG:22), for to began in the early ern Paiute and Chemehuevi, processing of agave {yanti, nanti) with of plants just spring (February March, depending on elevation) collection or from roots as they were sending up flower The plants were severed their stalks. The were leaves using a chisel-shaped wooden wedge and a special knife (Fig. 4). and agaves the trimmed base with the knife often within or 2 inches of the to 1 A was pack frames. large pit returned to a central processing location in special FOWLER 106 No. Vol. 15, 1 4.—Agave FIG. knife with metal blade, collected Moapa, NV, at Museum American of the Indian, 16/ 4059; 29 cm). md a fire built in After the died down, rocks v it. fu-e family placed agaves More its in a section of the pit. time and singing dancing took place. Prohibitions were also in effect to insi baking. was After the pit opened, the sweet, dark mass, and any par still was removed by hearts, each family and pounded, and formed cooled, ii cakes drying and flat for storage. Portions were also eaten fresh out o Agave was mixed with made other types meal meats and of or into st€ According Kelly to (1932-1934:CI:38;LVI:94;M:34;SH:30), the spring and ing cooking of agave, especially by the Shivwits, Moapa, Las Ve Pahrump Southern and by Paiute the Chemehuevi, was under the direc male or female dpnpnHpH nn cnnprx specialist fsPX ar^a^ TViic T^^rcr«n sometimes There no are data indicating agave were family that collecting areas owned Timbisha Panamint seem (Zigmond The yucca complex .—There Mojave are several species of yuccas found in the one ert, of the most characteristic being the Joshua {Yucca brevifolia tree elm.). All groups with Timbisha Joshua trees (Southern Paiute tsoadtmpi; shone muupi) made the in their territories similar uses of them, especially in At ng. new that time the growth flowering tips containing what will be the and fruiting heads were (Fig. 5) carefully twisted from the ends of the stalks roasted in coals (CoviUe were cut 1892:355). sharp spines remained, these If and bud was the much flower y eaten Uke an to artichoke. Joshua trees left Summer JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY 1995 107 FIG. 5.—Joshua tree (Yucca hrevifoUa Engelm.) with growth tips ready to harvest. emerged— had blossoms harvested as they these, too, being pit-roasted. their and groups Those had although not people left to fruit the fruit collected, all paki) Paiute did not. commonly Roezl ex Ortgies including Yucca schidigera Ke and Tnrr favorpd for fruit stalks. n/^j \Mf^ri^ fllinn among Las Vegas Southern use the 1934:LVI:97) reports an interesting process in stem containmg the Paiute to hasten ripening of Yucca schidigera iuwimpi) fruits: be speeded them was from Ripening could also broken but not severed the plant. covered with pit under ashes or roasted removed. They were then buried ids ff mashed and were like being they boiled "jiist in storage, and sometimes and were seeded, dried, fruits split, was The product formed pounded resulting set baUs flattened sheets. into or into The sheets out on mats dry sun (KeUy 1932-1934:CI:44;SH:39;SG:21). to in the and with bark for caching in were covered later carefully folded for storage made and ground flour The were then into rockshelters or juniper sheets in trees. and mush The newly emerging stalks mto (KeUy Uke agave 1932-34). or loaves but were eaten, Engehn. ex blossoms of narrow-leafed yucca angustissima Trel.) (Y. Zigmond and dry (Fowler 1986-1990). not was the considered too bitter fruit. It much // // like hearts treated ceremony groups with treated agave, green The Kawaiisu roasted the spht, also sting of this species in the spring. seem have used but not stalks, to FOWLER No. Vol. 15, 1 108 most Although ethnobotanies are lacking for Other resources.— definitive floral Great Basin Mojave Desert dwellers, several combined sources document, in addi- among more food use these peoples for of already described, the tion to the plants than 20 genera produced seeds {Sporobolus, Descurainia, Suaeda, Poa, Atriplex, that Mentzelia Oryzopsis, Allenrolfea, greens among few roots/corms a M.E. several fruits {h/cium, Opuntia, others), Jones), Allium Dichelostemma pulchellum Heller, Calochortus kennedyi Porter, [Salisb.] (i.e., & Frem pinyon {Pinus monophylla Torr. Q and Engelm.) scrub oaks (Q ;M Irwin Zigmond 9;CI:30-2;SG25-6; Wilke et 1979). al. number non-Moja Kawaiisu, including a of among food ghly 75 species utilized for Mojave within the Desert.^^ oily Moja complexes the in their entirety, the floral of em more as those of the umes me some unique The Tlmbisha Shoshone rank features- Moapa The equal to pinyon in their plant subsistence system (Fowler 1992-1993). did much more and agave than they Southern Paiute stored as not mesquite if — 1986-1990; pine nuts and berries which were sometimes hard to get (Fowler agave went Whole camps Chemehuevi people after Kelly 1932-1934:M:47). of (1932- each year, so much so that the river camps were nearly deserted, Kelly mes- when people gathering "Could from 1934:ChI:38) great distance states: tell groups set could see on the mountains/' Thus, the use of these plant cal; fires all them somewhat kinsmen, giving the southern groups apart from their northern poor upon which depend good In years, all additional storable staples to in years. groups FAUNAL RESOURCES — faunal Mammals Mojave Desert and reptiles. Just as with floral resources, the (1932-1934. community According Kelly fostered certain specializations. to came protein LVI:108) for the Southern Paiute, more of the day-to-day animal or deer wood from from and chuckwallas than did rabbits, rats, tortoises, it nelsont bighorn Of sheep. the two, desert bighorns (Ovis canadensis ssp. latter Some Merriam) were the more common, being found most Mojavean areas. in of Southern Paiute groups, on the other hand, had to go into the adjacent territory an more than the Tunbisha (Death Valley) Shoshone or Cahuilla in order to take they wanted hides, occasional deer (Odocoileus hemionus Rafinesaue). thev If communal Tganized mountams Timbisha people considered deer rare in on surrounding central Death Valley, noting that they were taken only the side of the Panamint Range. Bighorn sheep and deer were more commonly hunted by individuals — men dreamer small groups of under the direction of a dreamer a different

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