By Published: June 19, 2020

Ancestral cliff dwellingsAncestral Pueblo peoples lived in the Puye Cliff Dwellings near modern-day Los Alamos, New Mexico, from about 900 to 1580 AD. (Credit: via )

Today鈥檚 modern cities, from Denver to Dubai, could learn a thing or two from the ancestral Pueblo communities that once stretched across the southwestern United States. For starters, the more people live together, the better the living standards.

That finding comes from a study and led by Scott Ortman, an archaeologist at the 麻豆影院. He鈥檚 one of a growing number of antiquarians who argue that the world鈥檚 past may hold the key to its future. What lessons can people living today take from the successes and failures of civilizations hundreds or thousands of years ago?

Recently, Ortman and Jose Lobo from Arizona State University took a deep dive into data from the farming towns that dotted the Rio Grande Valley between the 14th and 16th centuries. Modern metropolises should take note: As the Pueblo villages grew bigger and denser, their per capita production of food and other goods seemed to go up, too.

Busy streets, in other words, may lead to better-off citizens.听

鈥淲e see an increasing return to scale,鈥 said Ortman, an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology who is also affiliated with the 听in New Mexico. 鈥淭he more people work together, the more they produce per person.鈥

Graduate students sort fragments of pottery at the site of an ancestral Pueblo village.Fragments of centuries-old pottery in the dirt.

Top: CU 麻豆影院 graduate students (from left to right)听Lindsay Johansson, Sarah Cullen听and Kaitlyn Davis sift through fragments of pottery at the site of an ancestral Pueblo village in New Mexico; bottom: ancestral Pueblo potter fragments. (Credits: Scott Ortman)

Whether the same thing is true today remains an open question, especially amid the unprecedented impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on cities and human proximity. But the results from the sunny Southwest suggest that it鈥檚 an idea worth exploring.

鈥淭he archaeological record can help us to learn about issues we care about today in ways that we can鈥檛 do using the data available to us from modern societies,鈥 Ortman said.听

The good dishes

The research is an offshoot of an effort that Ortman leads called the Social Reactors Project, which has explored patterns of growth in civilizations from ancient Rome to the Incan world.

It鈥檚 an attempt to chase down an idea first proposed in the 18th century by Adam Smith, often known as the father of modern economics. In The Wealth of Nations, Smith made the case for the fundamental benefits of market size鈥攖hat if you make it easier for more people to trade, the economy will grow.听

Just look at any city in the U.S. where you might find a hair salon next to a bakery next to a doggie daycare.

鈥淎s people interact more frequently, a person can make and do fewer things themselves and get more of what they need from their social contacts,鈥 Ortman said.

The problem, he explained, is that such 鈥渁gglomeration-driven鈥 growth is difficult to isolate in today鈥檚 big and complex cities. The same isn鈥檛 true for the Rio Grande Valley.

Before the arrival of the Spaniards in the 16th century, hundreds of villages spanned the region near what is now Santa Fe. These settlements ranged in size from a few dozen residents to as many as 3,000 people, most of whom made their living by growing crops like maize and cotton.

Such a subsistence lifestyle didn鈥檛 mean that these communities were simple.

鈥淭he traditional view in ancient history was that economic growth didn鈥檛 happen until the onset of the industrial revolution,鈥 Ortman said.

He and Lobo decided to put that assumption to the test. The duo pored through an exhaustive database of archaeological finds from the region鈥攃apturing everything from the number and size of rooms in Pueblo communities to the pottery from rubbish heaps.

They unearthed a clear trend: When villages got more populous, their residents seemed to get better off on average鈥攅xactly as Smith predicted. Living spaces grew in size and families collected more painted pottery.

鈥淵ou might think of it as more sets of dishes for sharing meals together,鈥 Ortman said.

Social connection

That growth, the team discovered, also seemed to follow a pattern that researchers on the Social Reactors Project have seen in a range of civilizations throughout history. Every time villages doubled in size, markers of economic growth increased by about 16% on average.听

Ortman said that the effect doesn鈥檛 happen in the same way everywhere. Factors like inequality and racism, for example, can keep urban residents from working together even when they live in cramped spaces.

But, Ortman added, these Pueblo communities hold an important lesson for modern-day societies: the more people can connect with others, the more prosperous they become.

鈥淎ll other things being equal, urbanization should lead to improvements in the material conditions of life for people everywhere,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e suspect this is why the world continues to urbanize, despite all of the associated problems.鈥