2019
DOI: 10.5334/jcaa.36
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A Least Cost Analysis: Correlative Modeling of the Chaco Regional Road System

Abstract: Introduction People move to maintain relationships, to flee natural disasters, escape violence, fulfill spiritual callings, access resources, and for a host of other reasons. At times, human movement patterns reflect culturally defined values. Landscape archaeologists have embraced this line of inquiry, attempting to track movement patterns in ancestral contexts as a means of illuminating social dynamics. To facilitate movement-oriented analyses, archaeologists are capitalizing on new technologies and developi… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The second quantitative method used to compare the actual trails to the LCPs was through an assessment of correlation factors [ 21 ]. The correlation factor is defined as the percentage that the modelled LCPs overlap with the buffered trails, as mapped with the Fitbit® Surge.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The second quantitative method used to compare the actual trails to the LCPs was through an assessment of correlation factors [ 21 ]. The correlation factor is defined as the percentage that the modelled LCPs overlap with the buffered trails, as mapped with the Fitbit® Surge.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research utilizing this approach has commonly produced low interaction overlaps, such as a study in the Chaco Canyon area using 500 m buffers resulted in an intersection overlap as low as 25% [ 21 ]. In comparison, our high interaction overlaps at smaller buffer zones, such as approximately 45% overlap at a 20m buffer as seen in Fig 6 , points to the strength of our model, as our model deviates less than 75m away from the recorded trails.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Judge (1989:243) proposed that “the sites of the Chacoan system were physically integrated by a road system that may have comprised five major segments, linking all but the northeast quadrant of the Basin.” Nevertheless, researchers have speculated earnestly about road functions without much resolution (Clark and Fritschle 2011; Judd 1964:141–142; Kantner and Hobgood 2003; Kantner and Kintigh 2006; Lekson 2009; Roney 1992; Snygg and Windes 1998; Sofaer et al 1989; Vivian 1997; Weinig 2017). And despite the persistent influence of popular assumptions about a Chacoan road “system” (see reviews in Ebert and Hitchcock 1980; Kantner 2003; Snead 2017), physical evidence for roads or trunk routes other than the North and South Roads remains elusive (e.g., Marshall 1994; Marshall et al 1979; Field et al 2019).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other roads likely served local purposes, given that they extend only a short distance away from a community and do not articulate with any other roads (Stein 1983). Local and regional Chaco roads were probably used for many reasons—from pilgrimage routes (Judge 1989; Van Dyke 2007) to long-range transportation paths (Betancourt et al 1986; Field et al 2019) and as symbolic connections with important geographic features, directions, and/or noncontemporaneous sites (Fowler and Stein 1992; Kantner 1997; Kincaid 1983; Lekson 2015; Mills 2002; Roney 1992; Sofaer et al 1989; Vivian 1997).
Figure 1.Location of major or well-studied Chaco roads within the San Juan Basin.
…”
Section: Chaco Roadsmentioning
confidence: 99%