{{Short description|Adobe-style housing structure}} [[File:Luna Jacal TX NPS.jpg|thumb|300px|Luna Jacal in Big Bend National Park.]] [[File:San Xavier del Bac, c1913.jpg|300px|thumb|Southern Arizona's San Xavier del Bac in 1913. Tohono O'odham jacals can be seen in front of the mission, many of which are still used today.]] The '''jacal''' ({{IPAc-en|h|ə|ˈ|k|ɑː|l}}; Mexican Spanish from Nahuatl ''xacalli'' contraction of ''xamitl calli''; literally "hut") is an adobe-style housing structure historically found throughout parts of the Southwestern United States and Mexico.<ref name ="TSHA">{{cite web | url = https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/cbtut | title = Texas-Mexican Vernacular Architecture | publisher = The Handbook of Texas online | access-date = 17 Jun 2017}}</ref> This type of structure was employed by some aboriginal people of the Americas prior to European colonization and was later employed by both Hispanic and non-Hispanic settlers in Texas and elsewhere.<ref name ="DeWitt">{{cite web | url = http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/Economy.htm | title = DeWitt Colony Life | publisher = Sons of DeWitt Colony Texas | access-date = 17 Jun 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101205113805/http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/Economy.htm | archive-date = 5 December 2010 | url-status = dead }}</ref>

Typically, a jacal consisted of slim close-set poles tied together and filled out with mud, clay and grasses. More sophisticated structures, such as those constructed by the Ancestral Pueblo people, incorporated adobe bricks—sun-baked mud and sandstone.

Jacal construction is similar to wattle and daub. However, the "wattle" portion of jacal structures consists mainly of vertical poles lashed together with cordage and sometimes supported by a pole framework, as in the pit-houses of the Basketmaker III period of the Ancestral Puebloan (a.k.a. Anasazi) people of the American Southwest. This is overlain with a layer of mud/adobe (the "daub"), sometimes applied over a middle layer of dry grasses or brush which functions as insulation.

==See also== * Luna Jacal in Big Bend National Park

==References== {{reflist}}

==External links== {{wiktionarypar|jacal}} *Sketch of a [http://texashistory.unt.edu/widgets/pager.php?object_id=meta-pth-5828&recno=287&path=meta-pth-5828.tkl Jacal] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070311044350/http://texashistory.unt.edu/widgets/pager.php?object_id=meta-pth-5828&recno=287&path=meta-pth-5828.tkl |date=2007-03-11 }} from [https://web.archive.org/web/20080723155832/http://texashistory.unt.edu/permalink/meta-pth-5828 ''A pictorial history of Texas, from the earliest visits of European adventurers, to A.D. 1879''], hosted by the [http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20021008225402/http://www.co.hidalgo.tx.us/ Portal to Texas History].

{{Prehistoric technology}} {{Huts}} {{Native american styles}} {{Architecture in the United States}} Category:House types Category:Dwellings of the Pueblo peoples Category:Adobe buildings and structures Category:Huts