Tuesday, August 15, 2023

HUMAN BEINGS WALKED THIS LAND 1,000S OF YEARS AGO

 By Juan Montoya

No one knows who they were, where they were going, or how they died, but a 1976 excavation of a secondary burial site of the remains of three distinct individuals found at the Laguna Atascosa federal reserve yielded some unique discoveries.

The Texas Historical Commission was alerted that summer that  a grader operator doing work on a road in the federal reserve had uncovered human remains and stopped worked on the road. Unfortunately, the top layer of a shallow grave and some of the remains interred there were destroyed before the operator saw the bones and told refuge personnel of his find.

Refuge personnel contacted the THC and they in turn hired archaeologist Robert J. Mallouf with the assistance of Texas Southmost College Anthropologist Dr. Anthony Zavaleta to study the site.

Because of the damage done to the site, the findings were inconclusive. But the researchers, aided by a team of assistants, gave an insight into the pre-European existence of human beings in the coastal South Texas region.

Their work was published in the Office of the State Archaeologist Special Report 25 in 1979 and titled "The Unland Site: A Prehistoric Group Burial From Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge Cameron County, Texas. (We thank Dr. Marie Theresa Hernandez Ramirez, Professor World Cultures and Literatures at the University of Houston for digging up the study which is no longer available in print.)

The researches found that the remains belonged to three males – one estimated to have been from 17-21 years of age – and two others in their mid-40s or 50s. All three were buried in a small hole atop a small ridge facing Los Cuates resaca, a favorite  aborigine burial site.

The grave did not contain the entire skeletons of the three males, and researchers were unable to determine the cause of death. They theorized that since many parts were missing, they were buried by their band or group who came upon them after they had died.

But it was what was found buried with them in the shallow grave that made the findings unique among those that have been found in Cameron County. 

At least five projectile points (arrowheads) were found with the remains, including a Fresno type which up to then had never been found in Cameron County burial sites. The other four were identified as the more common Matamoros type projectile and Cameron projectile points.

The use of the projectiles made of chert – from deposits that are only available in Central Texas – is thought to have been dated as far back as A.D. 800, predating the arrival of Europeans by hundreds of years. At the time, no carbon dating was done at the Unland site to determine their exact age and none has not been done up to now.

In at least one local excavation prior to the Unland site, intrusive Huastecan pottery had been found in one site, although none was found here. In others, ornaments of jade, found only in Central America, were discovered, indicating trade relations with people from there. In this site, the researchers think that the burial was performed without social or cultural rites or preparation due to the scarcity of cultural artifacts aside from the arrowheads. In other words, they think that the band came upon the disarticulated remains and that predators had carried off some of the limbs and other body parts, including some of the cranial bone.

They did find a hairpin or weaving implement made out of a sliver of human bone that could have been a decorative ornament. And they also found turtle shells – one with a hole bored as if to wear as an ornament, the first time turtle shells had been found in local digs. The remains of other marine shells in the grave was thought to have been used to dig the shallow grave by the group who buried them.

Who were they? What cultural  or social rites did they follow? And what was the length of time that they preceded the European presence in the Rio Grande delta?

The paucity of answers to these questions illustrates the gap in knowledge of the original dwellers of the Rio Grande delta. These hunters/gatherers obviously roamed the area that is now Cameron County long before Europeans set foot on this land. We can only hope that further research on other local sites will shed light on the people who were here before us.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Earth is much older than it is said to be. It was a hub of activity many many years ago and is evident by all the things that are being discovered.

Anonymous said...

They, or their ancestors, crossed the Bering Strait from the Altai region in Siberia. They weren't native. It doesn't matter how many thousands of years they wandered around making little use of the land or resources. It was the Europeans who finally put the land to good use.

Anonymous said...

No one is Native.

Anonymous said...

calcasia is a very small area in cockroach europe and did nothing but screw each other. It was the other races that make the imporovements not the white cockroach... fact

Anonymous said...

It was the Europeans who finally put the land to good use.

August 15, 2023 at 7:19 AM

NOT. It was the Europeans that established a system of abuse, corruption, nad slavery.

Plus the lack of respect for the forests, the rivers and the land.

Anonymous said...

...and Cleopatra was black. Yeah right! Who cares? Some posters here could have inspired the movie, Idiocracy. Valley of the pendejos.

Anonymous said...

August 16, 2023 at 8:21 AM

she really was black but in reality she was meskin
das where da woid puti** came from

Anonymous said...

August 16, 2023 at 8:21 AM
starting with you moron

rita