the cavern. What more natural than that this upper 
room should take a name most descriptive of its situation--as that 
portion built around the cavern-shelter or _ósh ten_--or that, when the 
intervention of peace made return to the abandoned farms of the plains 
or a change of condition possible, the idea of the second story should 
be carried along and the name first applied to it survive, even to the 
present day? That the upper story took its name from the rock-shelter 
may be further illustrated. The word _ósh ten_ comes from _ó sho nan 
te_, the condition of being dusky, dank, or mildewy; clearly descriptive 
of a cavern, but not of the most open, best lighted, and driest room in a 
Pueblo house.
To continue, we may see how the necessity for protection would drive 
the petty clans more and more to the cliffs, how the latter at every 
available point would ultimately come to be occupied, and thus how the 
"_Cliff-dwelling_" (see Fig. 498), was confined to no one section but 
was as universal as the farm-house type of architecture itself, so 
widespread, in fact, that it has been heretofore regarded as the 
monument of a great, now extinct race of people! 
COMMUNAL PUEBLOS DEVELOPED FROM CONGREGATION 
OF CLIFF-HOUSE TRIBES. 
[Illustration: FIG. 499.--Typical terraced communal pueblo.] 
We may see, finally, how at last the cañons proved too limited and in 
other ways undesirable for occupation, the result of which was the 
confederation of the scattered cliff-dwelling clans, and the construction, 
first on the overhanging cliff-tops, then on mesas, and farther and 
farther away, of great, many-storied towns, any one of which was 
named, in consequence of the bringing together in it of many houses 
and clans, _thlu él lon ne_, from thlu a, many springing up, and _él lon 
a_, that which stands, or those which stand; in other words, "many built 
standing together." This cannot be regarded as referring to the simple 
fact that a village is necessarily composed of many houses standing 
together. The name for any other village than a communal pueblo is _tí 
na kwïn ne_, from _tí na_--many sitting around, and _kwïn ne_, place 
of. This term is applied by the Zuñis to all villages save their own and 
those of ourselves, which latter they regard as Pueblos, in their 
acceptation of the above native word. 
Here, then, in strict accordance with, the teachings of myth, folk-lore 
and tradition, I have used the linguistic argument as briefest and most 
convincing in indicating the probable sequence of architectural types in 
the evolution of the Pueblo; from the brush lodge, of which only the 
name survives, to the recent and present terraced, many-storied, 
communal structures, which we may find throughout New Mexico, 
Arizona, and contiguous parts of the neighboring Territories.[1] 
[1] See for confirmation the last Annual Report to the Archæological
Institute of America, by Adolph F. Bandelier, one of the most 
indefatigable explorers and careful students of early Spanish history in 
America. 
 
POTTERY AFFECTED BY ENVIRONMENT. 
There is no other section of the United States where the potter's art was 
so extensively practiced, or where it reached such a degree of 
perfection, as within the limits of these ancient Pueblo regions. To this 
statement not even the prolific valleys of the Mississippi and its 
tributaries form an exception. 
On examining a large and varied collection of this pottery, one would 
naturally regard it either as the product of four distinct peoples or as 
belonging to four different eras, with an inclination to the chronologic 
division. 
When we see the reasonable probability that the architecture, the 
primeval arts and industries, and the culture of the Pueblos are mainly 
indigenous to the desert and semi-desert regions of North America, we 
are in the way towards an understanding of the origin and remarkable 
degree of development in the ceramic art. 
In these regions water not only occurs in small quantities, but is 
obtainable only at points separated by great distances, hence to the 
Pueblos the first necessity of life is the transportation and preservation 
of water. The skins and paunches of animals could be used in the effort 
to meet this want with but small success, as the heat and aridity of the 
atmosphere would in a short time render water thus kept unfit for use, 
and the membranes once empty would be liable to destruction by 
drying. So far as language indicates the character of the earliest water 
vessels which to any extent met the requirements of the Zuñi ancestry, 
they were tubes of wood or sections of canes. The latter, in ritualistic 
recitation, are said to have been the receptacles that the creation-priests 
filled with the sacred water from the ocean of the cave-wombs of earth, 
whence men and creatures were born, and the name for    
    
		
	
	
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