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y will be encroached upon by neighboring stronger tribes, and driven to new surroundings if not subdued. Such we may believe was the influence which led the ancestors of the Pueblo tribes to adopt an almost waterless area for their habitat. It is apparent at least that they entered the country wherein their remains occur while comparatively a rude people, and worked out there almost wholly their incipient civilization. Of this there is important linguistic evidence. [Illustration: FIG. 490.--A Navajo hut.] A Navajo hogan, or hut, is a beehive-shaped or conical structure (see Fig. 490) of sticks and turf or earth, sometimes even of stones chinked with mud. Yet its modern Zuni name is _ham' pon ne_, from _ha we_, dried brush, sprigs or leaves; and _po an ne_, covering, shelter or roof (_po a_ to place over and _ne_ the nominal suffix); which, interpreted, signifies a "brush or leaf shelter." This leads to the inference that the temporary shelter with which the Zunis were acquainted when they formulated the name here given, presumably in their earliest condition, was in shape like the Navajo hogan, but in _material_, of brush or like perishable substance. The archaic name for a building or walled inclosure is _he sho ta_, a contraction of the now obsolete term, _he sho ta pon ne_, from _he sho_, gum, or resin-like; _sho tai e_, leaned or placed together convergingly; and _ta po an ne_, a roof of wood or a roof supported by wood. [Illustration: FIG. 491.--Perspective view of earliest or Round-house structure of lava.] The meaning of all this would be obscure did not the oldest remains of the Pueblos occur in the almost inaccessible lava wastes bordering the southwestern deserts and intersecting them and were not the houses of these ruins built on the plan of shelters, round (see Figs. 491, 492, 493), rather than rectangular. Furthermore, not only does the lava-rock of which their walls have been rudely constructed resemble natural asphaltum (_he sho_) and possess a cleavage exactly like that of pinon-gum and allied substances (also _he sho_), but some forms of lava are actually known as _a he sho_ or gum-rock. From these considerations inferring that the name _he sho ta pon ne_ derivatively signifies something like "a gum-rock shelter with roof supports of wood," we may also infer that the Pueblos on their coming into the desert regions dispossessed earlier inhabitants or that they chose the lava-wastes the be
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