Everything about Dugout Shelter totally explained
A
dugout or
dug-out, also known as a pithouse,
pit-house,
earth-house,
mud hut, is a shelter for humans or domestic animals based on a hole or depression dug into the ground. These structures are one of the most ancient types of human housing known to
archeologists. Dugouts can be fully recessed into the earth, with a flat roof covered by ground, or dug into a hillside. They can also be semi-recessed, with a constructed wood or sod roof standing out. The same methods have evolved into modern "
earth sheltering" technology.
Dugouts may also be temporary shelters constructed as an aid to specific activities, for example, during
warfare or in
hunting. Also, due to the potential for concealment, they may serve as a hiding place for an
ambush.
Africa
Tunisia
First driven underground by enemies who invaded their country, the
Berbers of
Matmâta found underground homes the best defence against summer heat. This type of home served as the home of
Luke Skywalker on the planet
Tatooine in the
Star Wars movies.
Asia and the Pacific
Australia
Coober Pedy is a small town in northern
South Australia, 846 kilometres north of Adelaide on the Stuart Highway. Located in the Australian
outback, The harsh summer temperatures and the dominant industry mean that most residents live in caves bored into the hillsides and work
underground in mine shafts.
China
In north China, especially on the
Loess Plateau,
caves called
yaodongs dug into hillsides have been the traditional dwellings from early times. The advantage of a yaodong over an ordinary house is that it needs little heating in winter and no cooling at all in summer. An estimated 40 million people in northern China live in a yaodong.
Europe and the Middle East
Crimea
The well-preserved cave towns of
Crimea are
Mangup-Kale, Eski-Kermen,
Inkerman and
Chufut-Kale. The settlement of Mangup-Kale dates back to the
third century AD and was fortified by
Justinian I in the mid 500s. It was inhabited and governed primarily by
Crimean Goths, and became the center of their autonomous principality. The last inhabitants, a small community of
Karaims, abandoned the site in the 1790s.
Italy
Matera has gained international fame for its ancient town, the "Sassi di Matera" (meaning "stones of Matera"). The Sassi are houses dug into the rock itself, known locally as "
Tufo", which is characteristic of
Basilicata and
Puglia.
Scotland
In ancient
Scotland, earth houses, also known as
yird, Weems and Picts' houses, were underground dwellings, extant even after the
Roman evacuation of
Britain. Entry was effected by a passage not much wider than a
fox burrow, which sloped downwards 10 or 12 ft. to the floor of the house; the inside was
oval in shape, and was walled with overlapping rough
stone slabs; the roof frequently reached to within a foot of the earth's surface; they probably served as storehouses, winter quarters, and as places of refuge in times of
war. Similar dwellings are found in
Ireland.
Spain
The most famous feature of the town of
Guadix is the cave dwellings in the
Barrio Troglodyte where upwards of half the population live. Most people lived there because they were to poor to own any land like the rich people did. These caves are in no way primitive dwellings and are a solution to the fierce heat of the
Andalusian summer. More cave dwellings can be found in neighbouring
Baza,
Granada,
Almeria, City of
Valencia und sourroundings,
Murcia (
Crevilliente,
Rojales), Aragonia (
Saragossa, Valley of
Jalon), sourroundings of
Madrid, Castilia (
Albacete), Canary Islands (
Gran Canaria,
Teneriffe), Balearic Islands
Mallorca (SaCova near Felanitx, Cala Figuera) and
Ibiza). In some parts of Spain people are still actively involved in excavation of new cave houses or its expansion and modernisation with the help of old
maestros de pico.
Turkey
Cappadocia contains at least 36 historical underground cities, carved out of unusual geological formations formed via the eruptions of ancient volcanoes. The cities were initially inhabitted by the
Hittites, then later by early
Christians as hiding places. They are now archeological and tourist sites, but are not generally occupied (see
Kaymaklı Underground City). The latest large Turkish underground city was discovered in 2007 in Gaziemir, Güzelyurt. This city was a stopover on the Silk Road, allowing travelers and their camels to rest in safety, underground, in a 'fortress' hotel equivalent to a modern hotel.
North and South America
Many of the ancient peoples of the American continents built semi-permanent houses of poles and brush plastered with mud over a shallow pit in the earth. As these pithouses were very similar to those first built in northeastern Europe 25,000 years ago, pithouse technology may have been carried to the Americas by early nomadic settlers, traveling first through Siberia, and then across the ice bridge between Asia and North America about 12,000 to 14,000 years ago.
An individual pithouse was occupied for an average of about 15 years. By more modern standards, these dwellings were cramped and dark. The centralized hearth created a smoky, cold environment during the winter. Most pithouses are associated with an open air plaza or rooftop where inhabitants carried out most of their daily activities during good weather. In areas suitable for intensive agriculture, groups of pithouses clustered to create communities of varying sizes.
American Northwest
In the
Interior Plateau of the
British Columbia and in the
Columbia Plateau of the
Pacific Northwest the remains of a form of pit-house called a
quiggly hole or
kekuli are common, and come in large groups named quiggly towns, which are correspondingly the remains of ancient villages.
American Southwest
Pithouses were very common structures in the American Southwest during the
early and middle periods of the
Anasazi,
Mogollon and
Hohokam cultures, and were also found in cultures extending north and west of the Colorado plateau. The emergence of the pithouse marks the transition between a nomadic hunting-and-gathering livelihood and a settled agricultural way of life which also relied on wild plants and animals for food. Pithouse structures were probably the forerunners of the
kivas built later in the Pueblo periods, and share many characteristics with them.
Although the architectural styles used by these people evolved throughout their history, the pithouse remained a basic residential structure. Pithouses are found in isolated rural settings, in conjunction with above ground dwellings and adjacent to the large multi-room cliff dwellings characteristic of the region. Historian Linda Cordell notes that
...the late pithouses are often clues to relatively short-term changes in settlement location and adjustment to climatic fluctuations. (Cordell, p. 164) This appears to be true among the modern Pueblo peoples as well. When the
Hopi village of Bacavi was founded in 1909, some groups of people arrived in the late autumn. As there was a limited window of time for building, the new arrivals built pithouses as warm shelters for the winter. Some of these homes remained occupied until the 1970s.
Pithouses were built by excavating a well defined hole into the ground, usually around 6" to 18" deep but occasionally as deep as four to five feet, and creating walls and roof using a pole and adobe technology. The sunken floor of the dwelling is below the frost line and helps moderate both winter and summer temperatures, with the mass of the ground serving as an insulator. In addition, adobe walls gather heat during the day and release it when temperatures drop. The earliest pithouses were round, and varied in size between nine and twenty-five feet in diameter. Around AD 700, pithouse designs became more individualized. Excavations reveal examples based on squares, rectangles and shapes similar to the letter D.
These homes were also warmed by a centralized hearth, a fire pit with an air deflector, and side vents and a hole in the roof provided fresh air and evacuated smoke. The placement of the home's entrance varied by locality and archaeological period. Early homes utilized the ventilation stack as an egress by means of a ladder. Later homes expanded the pit into a keyhole shape to create a low sheltered entrance. Interior space was often loosely divided into two rooms, one for storing personal and dry goods and the other as living quarters. Many pithouses included an antechamber, containing storage bins or pits.
Pithouse construction was usually based on four corner posts positioned upright in the pit. These posts were carefully chosen and trimmed to create a branch or fork at the top as a structural support. They were joined by horizontal beams and crossed with ceiling joists. The interior sides of the pit were plastered with clay or lined with stone — either large slabs wedged upright in the soil or courses of smaller stones. The exterior of the pithouse was formed of branches, packed tree bark, or brush and grass. A thick layer of mud on the outside of the roof and walls protected the shelter from the weather. Often the initial mud layer was carefully plastered with a lighter colored clay.
A large number of pithouses have been archaeologicly excavated throughout the American Southwest. Reproductions of these basic family structures exist in museums and tourist information sites, such as the structure at the
Manitou Cliff Dwellings. National and state parks and monuments showcase pithouse ruins and may include authentic reconstructions such as the Ancient Pueblo structure at Step House ruin,
Mesa Verde National Park and a Hohokam structure at the Hardy Site in Fort Lowell,
Arizona.
North American frontier
During the
American Civil War, the federal United States government passed the
Homestead Act offering free land for those who could "prove up" their claims by living on the land and farming it for a prescribed number of years. Settlers on the newly opened
Great Plains found there were not enough trees to build familiar
log cabins. As shelter was essential, the frontier farmer utilized ribbons of the thick prairie
sod cut as they plowed their virgin land. The strip could be cut into two foot sections, four to six inches deep, to make an almost perfect building block with good insulating properties.
These first homes, often called
soddies, were simply small rooms dug into the side of a low rolling hill. The walls were built up with sod blocks to a height of seven or eight feet. Holes were left for purchased doors and windows hauled from the nearest town or railroad point. Cottonwood poles were laid side by side to form a support for a roof made of a thick layer of coarse prairie grass. Over this was carefully fitted a double layer of the sod building blocks. Rain helped the sod to grow and soon the dugout roof was covered with waving grass. Some frontier families found that their cows grazed on their roof, and occasionally had them "drop in" for dinner.
The floor of the dugout home was of dirt or rough wooden planks. Walls were lined with newspapers pasted or pinned up with small, sharpened sticks to keep dirt from flaking into the home's interior. Some families used fabric on their walls while others created a plaster coating from local
limestone and sand. The home's comfort and structural stability were maximized when the structure was located on the south side of a low hill, with adequate drainage to provide run-off for rain and melting snow. Most pioneer dugouts had a very short life, being replaced by plank or rock homes when farmers had both time and money to create larger, more traditional homes. However, even when a family did build a house of logs or boards, their domestic animals would often continue to be sheltered in a sod dugout.
In frontier Canada, dugout style shelters were also used by pioneers and settlers. In these cases, the shelter's construction closely reflected the cultures of the various settlers. They ranged from the
French-Canadian syle
caveux to the Ukrainian
burdei.
See also
Further Information
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