首页
登录
职称英语
The Chaco PhenomenonP1: Between about 900 to 1150 AD, a mysterious Stone Age cu
The Chaco PhenomenonP1: Between about 900 to 1150 AD, a mysterious Stone Age cu
游客
2025-02-04
26
管理
问题
The Chaco Phenomenon
P1: Between about 900 to 1150 AD, a mysterious Stone Age culture arose, flourished, and then vanished in the semi-desert region of the Southwestern United States. Named the Chaco culture after the canyon in which the principal ruins are found, nearly everything about this ancient society is shrouded in mystery. A truly remarkable transformation in settlement patterns occurred in the San Juan basin in northwestern New Mexico, with small household farmsteads giving way to aggregated communities centered on communal masonry buildings that are now called "great houses." These multi-level buildings of up to 800 rooms are scattered over thousands of square miles of the Four Corners area of the Southwest. The entire episode of great house construction in Chaco, the Bonito phase (A.D. 900-1140), was signifying an pronounced period of immense cooperative effort. Pueblo Chetro Ketl’s outer wall alone is calculated to be composed of 30 million stones which were brought to the canyon from distances between 80 and 150 kilometers away. Many of the stones had to be shaped before being positioned and built into a huge project. But by 1140 AD, the massive construction ceased abruptly, followed by a rapid decline in use of the great houses and apparent abandonment of the canyon in the thirteenth century.
P2: For more than a century archaeologists have struggled to understand the circumstances surrounding the rise and collapse of Chacoan society—dubbed the Chaco Phenomenon. Specifically, research has focused on determining why such an apparently inhospitable place as Chaco, which today is extremely arid and has very short growing seasons, should have been favored for the concentration of labor that must have been required for such massive construction projects over brief periods of time. Until the 1970s, scholars and the public alike had a long-shared notion that Chaco had been a forested oasis that attracted farmers who initially flourished but eventually fell victim to their own success and exuberance, as they employed unsustainable land-use practices to build their impressive communities. Yet there is no substantial evidence, archaeological or otherwise, to support such contention.
P3: However, recent geological field studies in Chaco have produced some table-turning evidence that may require a significant reassessment of the assumption that the canyon was not a favorable agricultural setting. It appears that during the extraordinary construction boom in the first half of the eleventh century, a devastating flood occurred, resulting in extreme difficulty irrigating the area. A large natural lake, near the biggest concentration of great houses, may have existed at the western end of Chaco and might have suspended sediment, which would then have flowed into the canyon. The presence of an abundance of water and, equally important, a source of sediment that replenished agricultural fields, presumably made the canyon an extremely attractive place for newly arriving people from the northern San Juan River basin. In fact, during the 1980s, this reconstruction was largely dismissed in response to evidence that there were only scattered trees along cliffs and escarpments above the canyon rather than woodlands in the first place, and that canyon soil was highly sensitive to increases in aridity and temperature and thus unsuitable for farming, regardless of the amount of trees. As long-standing scientific consensus was undergoing this transformation, the position of the canyon within a regional network of dispersed agricultural communities called up more academic attention. P4: The adoption of a regional perspective in explaining the Chaco Phenomenon was based in part on the discovery of formal trails. A combination of remote sensing techniques and ground verification defined a prehistoric road system which extended outward from Chaco Canyon into the surrounding San Juan Basin, later referred to as Chaco "outliers." These trails are densest around the concentration of great houses in the center, and the canyon itself is roughly at the center of the basin. Consequently, Chaco Canyon was intimately related to other settlements in a single cultural web flung across 30,000 square miles and which reached into Colorado and Utah, all tied together by a network of ancient roads. The current consensus view is that religion provided the fundamental explanation for this centrifugal pattern.
P5: After close study of great kivas (multipurpose rooms used for religious, political, and social functions), archeologists tend to depict Chaco as a location of high devotional expression and the pilgrimage center of a sacred landscape. The kiva structure itself, of whatever size, occupies a special and sacred place in Pueblo architecture. Excavation of some of these vaults suggests that they were once associated with ceremonies. Archaeological record presented some ritual artifacts, including caches of turquoise beads and pendants, unusual ceramic vessels and wooden objects, several rooms with multiple human burials, and especially the large number of kivas found in great houses. Most of these indicators occur only at Pueblo Bonito, but archaeologists generally assume that all the great houses had a similar ritual function. Some scholars have even argued that the great houses were temples instead of residences.
P4: ■ The adoption of a regional perspective in explaining the Chaco Phenomenon was based in part on the discovery of formal trails.
■ A combination of remote sensing techniques and ground verification defined a prehistoric road system which extended outward from Chaco Canyon into the surrounding San Juan Basin, later referred to as Chaco "outliers."
■ These trails are densest around the concentration of great houses in the center, and the canyon itself is roughly at the center of the basin. Consequently, Chaco Canyon was intimately related to other settlements in a single cultural web flung across 30,000 square miles and which reached into Colorado and Utah, all tied together by a network of ancient roads. ■ The current consensus view is that religion provided the fundamental explanation for this centrifugal pattern. [br] According to paragraph 1, all of the following provide evidence that the Bonito phase was a time of immense cooperative effort EXCEPT
选项
A、the large amounts of material needed
B、the size of the Pueblo Bonito complex
C、the unusual materials used in construction
D、the distance the materials needed to be transported
答案
C
解析
【否定事实信息题】其他三个选项文中均有对应信息,只有C文中未提及。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3943009.html
相关试题推荐
TheChacoPhenomenonP1:Betweenabout900to1150AD,amysteriousStoneAgecu
TheChacoPhenomenonP1:Betweenabout900to1150AD,amysteriousStoneAgecu
TheChacoPhenomenonP1:Betweenabout900to1150AD,amysteriousStoneAgecu
TheChacoPhenomenonP1:Betweenabout900to1150AD,amysteriousStoneAgecu
ABetween1914and1932,T.S.EliotBtaughtschool,wrotepoems,andCassistant
BetweenfiveandsixAthousandyearsago,humansBdevelopedthefirstwritingan
Ademonstrationofthelinkbetweenlonglifeandhealthpractices______studyin
Thereareseveraldifferencesbetweenthecompositionofriverwaterand______of
Thereisa______betweenincomeandwealth;peoplecanhavealargeincomeandno
1Communicationbetweenchildrenandparentsstartsveryearly.Ababy’scryis
随机试题
English______inManyschoolsinourcountry.A、istaughtB、taughtC、hastaughtA
Thedisclosureofsensitiveinformationrelatedtonationalsecuritywasreporte
()是消防联动控制系统的核心设备。A.火灾报警控制器 B.消防电气控制装置
零件图应包括以下()内容。A.一组图形 B.完整的尺寸 C.必要的技术要求
在DNS服务器中的()资源记录定义了区域的邮件服务器及其优先级。 A.S
有两个不透明的抽奖箱,里面都放有大小形状相同的红黑小球各2颗,小明和小白分别从两
2015年国家自然科学基金委全年共接收173017项各类申请,同比增长约10%,
下列戏剧中,节选出折子戏“苏三起解”的是()。 A.《望江亭》B.《牡丹亭
心理支持、情绪支持属于()。A.表达性支持 B.引导性支持 C.工具性支持
()是各国监管当局和商业银行广泛使用的流动性风险评估方法。A.流动性比率/指标法
最新回复
(
0
)