Why North America's Oldest Colony Split Up

Tornado Science, Facts and History

Some people point to 1906 as the year of the Great San Francisco Earthquake, but, for anthropologists who study American Indians, it is the year that split the Hopi community of Orayvi, the longest continually occupied settlement in North America.

The break-up — which came two mornings after the last complete Snake Dance ever performed in that pueblo and in which half of the pueblo's residents were forced to leave — has been the subject of anthropological debate for the century that followed. Hoping to resolve the debate, Peter Whiteley, an anthropologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, offers a new analysis in the book, "The Orayvi Split: A Hopi Transformation."

Live Science Staff
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