Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mesa Verde National Park' has mentioned 'Hunting' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
The Mesa Verdeans survived using a combination of hunting, gathering, and subsistence farming of crops such as corn, beans, and squash. | WIKI |
Contents 1 Inhabitants 1.1 Paleo-Indians 1.2 Archaic 1.3 Basketmaker culture 1.4 Ancestral Puebloans 1.4.1 Pueblo I: 750 to 900 1.4.2 Pueblo II: 900 to 1150 1.4.3 Pueblo III: 1150 to 1300 1.4.4 Warfare 1.4.5 Migration 1.4.6 Organization 1.4.7 Architecture 1.4.8 Astronomy 1.4.9 Agriculture and water-control systems 1.4.10 Hunting and foraging 1.4.11 Pottery 1.4.12 Rock art and murals 2 Climate 3 Anthropogenic ecology and geography 4 Geology 5 Rediscovery 5.1 Wetherills 5.2 Gustaf Nordenskixc3xb6ld 6 National park 6.1 Excavation and protection 6.2 Conflicts with local tribes 6.3 Services 6.4 Wildfires and culturally modified trees 6.5 Ute Mountain Tribal Park 7 Key sites 7.1 Balcony House 7.2 Cliff Palace 7.3 Long House 7.4 Mug, Oak Tree, Spruce Tree, and Square Tower houses 8 See also 9 References 10 External links | WIKI |
Paleo-Indians hunting a glyptodont, by Heinrich Harder c.xe2x80x891920 | WIKI |
As local populations grew, Puebloans found it difficult to survive on hunting, foraging, and gardening, which made them increasingly reliant on domesticated corn. | WIKI |
[45] Warfare was conducted using the same tools the Mesa Verdeans used for hunting game, including bows and arrows, stone axes, and wooden clubs and spears. | WIKI |
This provided a high quality protein that reduced reliance on hunting. | WIKI |
Hunting and foraging[edit] | WIKI |
Mesa Verdeans typically harvested local small game, but sometimes organized hunting parties that traveled long distances. | WIKI |
Common motifs in the rock art of the region include anthropomorphic figures in procession and during copulation or childbirth, handprints, animal and people tracks, wavy lines, spirals, concentric circles, animals, and hunting scenes. | WIKI |
[84] A shift from medium and large game animals, such as deer, bighorn sheep, and antelope, to smaller ones like rabbits and turkey during the mid-10th to mid-13th centuries might indicate that Mesa Verdean subsistence hunting had dramatically altered faunal populations on the mesa. | WIKI |