Indians of a highly developed civilization lived throughout Moapa Valley from 300-1100 A.D. Several hundred ancient pithouses, campsites, rockshelters, salt mines and caves of Anasazi people make up what is commonly known as “Lost City.” These people cultivated corn, beans and squash in fields irrigated by river water. They also gathered wild seeds and fruits and hunted widely for deer, antelope, desert bighorn sheep, small mammals and birds. They wove fine cotton cloth, fired beautifully painted and textured pottery and mined and traded salt and turquoise to coastal tribes for seashells. Early dwellings were circular pithouses below ground; later dwellings above ground were single-story adobes having up to 100 rooms.
Lake Mead, created by Hoover Dam, flooded the most intensively developed portion of Lost City.
This is Nevada State Historical Marker #41, located on State Route 169 two miles south of Overton, Nevada.
Video
The Lost City
More than 1,000 years ago, Native Americans began migrating to the area that was to become Lake Mead. A native culture developed and flourished in the Moapa Valley of Southern Nevada. This culture's development paralleled the well-known Puebloan cultures of the Southwest in the Four Corners area of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona. The Native American groups shared technology and lifestyle, but they may or may not have shared language and kinship. The modern Hopi culture in Arizona claims all of these people as their ancestors. In the Hopi language these "ancient ones" are known as Hisatsinom. Archaeologists originally identified this fascinating culture as Anasazi. Today, they are known as the Ancestral Puebloan people.
History
The documented history of the area began in 1827 when Jebediah Smith found various artifacts while exploring Southern Nevada. Pueblo Grande de Nevada, a complex of villages, was first seen by whites in 1867. There was little interest in the area until 1924 when John and Fay Perkins, citizens of Overton, Nevada, stumbled across the ruins. The "Lost City" captured the imagination of Nevada and soon became a tourist spot.
In studying the ruins, archaeologist Mark Raymond Harrington and his team, learned that the Pueblo had only been one group in a string of Native American inhabitants living throughout the lower Moapa Valley, the location of Pueblo Grande de Nevada. Archaeological remains indicated that the first people to live in the area had been the Basketmakers, so-named for their intricate and prolific use of basketry. Eventually the Pueblo people moved into the area. The evidence suggests that the Pueblo and Basketmakers lived side by side, often combining their ways of life. Whether by peaceful means or through war, the cause for this melding of cultures is unknown.
Lost City historic map.
Before the Pueblo, the Basketmakers had constructed their homes underground in the pit-house form. But the Pueblo introduced adobe above ground structures. More than just simple one-room houses, the structures of the Lost City were often very elaborate, sometimes consisting of 20 rooms or more with one structure reaching more than 100 rooms. An interesting mix of living styles existed in the Lost City with surface houses being used in conjunction with the earlier pit houses.
Even though the last inhabitants of the Lost City had left hundreds of years earlier (the Paiute), the city was a remarkable find for archaeologists and historians. Unearthing walls, tools, weapons, food and even skeletal remains provided archaeologists the basis for studying and understanding an important part of Native American history. However as the Hoover Dam was nearing completion it became apparent that the reservoir that would be formed behind the dam, Lake Mead, would eventually cover the Lost City. The National Park Service, working with the state of Nevada, rushed to recover as much information as possible from the doomed sites. Archaelogists literally worked up until the last minute, recording information as water began to seep into the site.
Salt Caves
The Lost City ruins were just part of the exploration of the area. To the south of Overton Beach are prehistoric salt mines. The early inhabitants of the region mined these salt caves for food preparation and trading. The caves were excavated during Harrington's study of the area in 1925 and 1926. There were many items found in the caves -- pottery, stone clubs, sandals and other items.
Preservation
Initial excavations of the sites were carried out in the mid-1920s by archaeologist Mark Raymond Harrington. Harrington was later assisted by members of the Civilian Conservation Corps as they rushed to complete excavations in areas that were to be covered by Lake Mead when Hoover Dam was built in 1938.
Not all sites were drowned by the Lake, but the most representative, Pueblo Grande de Nevada (Lost City) was. Luckily, hundreds of sites remained above water and various artifacts were saved from the Lost City to be housed in the Lost City Museum of Archaeology in Overton, Nevada. But for every discovery saved, myriad others were lost. All future study of the area would be limited to the hastily assembled collections and notes of the pre-Lake Mead archaeologists. By the 1950s it was already obvious to historians, archaeologists and anthropologists that the surviving artifacts of Lost City raised more questions than answers. Answers that would remain lost at the bottom of Lake Mead.
Preservation continues today.
Links
Visit the Lost City Museum's website http://nevadaculture.org/museums/index2f4d.html?option=com_content&view=article&id=397&Itemid=435 |" href="http://nevadaculture.org/museums/index2f4d.html?option=com_content&view=article&id=397&Itemid=435" data-bs-toggle="modal" data-bs-target="#myModal" data-toggle="modal" data-target="#myModal" data-remote="/common/commonspot/customcf/modals/modal_intercept.cfm?targetURL=http%3A%2F%2Fnevadaculture.org%2Fmuseums%2Findex2f4d.html%3Foption%3Dcom_content%26view%3Darticle%26id%3D397%26Itemid%3D435">HERE.
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An aerial view of part of Ichkabal Archaeological Zone. (Photo Credit: INAH)
Quintana Roo is preparing to open a new archaeological zone, expected to be connected to the Bacalar Maya Train station following the conservation and research of the site in August, 2024.
Ichkabal Archaeological Zone, according to the MexicanNational Institute of Anthropology and History(INAH), is currently being researched by around seventy archaeologists, with help from Sedena, which is the Secretariat of National Defense.
When it opens to the public, it will connect to the Bacalar Maya Train station and offer a ticket booth and other public areas, such as a library and rest area. An access road is also being constructed to connect to the site. The Maya Train recentlyopened its final stretchat the end of February.
Ichkabal was a settlement inhabited from the Middle Preclassic period (around 400 B.C.) to the Late Postclassic period (A.D. 1500). Its rehabilitation is part of Promeza, Mexico’s Program for the Improvement of Archaeological Zones. Recent research has discovered dozens of structures.
“Until eight months ago, a maximum of four pre-Hispanic buildings were known, but now we will soon be able to appreciate dozens of structures that, without a doubt, will make Ichkabal one of the greatest cultural destinations in Quintana Roo and the Mayan world,” said Diego Prieto Hernández, INAH’s General Director.