The Coronado Project Archaeological Investigations: A Description of Ceramic Collections from the Railroad and Transmission Line Corridors
Autor: | Swarthout, Jeanne, Dulaney, Alan R. |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 1982 |
Předmět: |
St. Johns
Mogollon NA13 873 Pueblo II Dating Sample NA13 911 Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex NA13 831 Artifact Scatter Pueblo I Archaeological Overview NA14 670 Burial Pit NA14 277 NA14 674 NA14 675 NA14 676 NA14 677 NA14 679 NA14 637 Archaeological Feature Arizona Funerary and Burial Structures or Features Hohokam NA13 864 NA13 820 NA13 903 NA13 827 NA13 825 NA13 907 NA15 229 NA14 662 NA14 663 NA14 664 NA14 665 Collections Research NA14 666 NA14 667 NA14 865 NA14 669 NA14 868 Holbrook Pit House / Earth Lodge Fire Cracked Rock NA13 896 NA13 853 NA13 898 Domestic Structures NA14 650 NA14 211 NA14 654 NA14 656 NA14 216 NA14 217 NA14 658 Kayenta Anasazi Navajo County Resource Extraction / Production / Transportation Structure or Features Chipped Stone NA13 886 Quarry NA14 290 Ceramic NA14 292 Archaic Cibola Pueblo III NA14 680 NA14 681 NA14 682 NA14 683 NA14 684 Basketmaker III NA14 685 NA14 641 Pit NA14 642 NA14 204 NA14 644 Storage Pit NA14 645 NA14 646 Human Remains NA14 647 NA14 208 NA14 649 |
DOI: | 10.6067/xcv8kw5hxh |
Popis: | During 1974-1978, the Museum of Northern Arizona conducted an extensive archaeological mitigation program for the Salt River Project prior to the construction of the Coronado Generating Plant near St. Johns, Arizona, and its energy corridors, the Coronado-Silver King Transmission Line and the Coronado Coal-Haul Railroad. Ceramic material from those corridors was separated from remaining project data and reported on herein. Over 148 ceramic-bearing sites produced a wide range of decorated and undecorated whitewares, redwares, and brownwares from this area of the American Southwest that is pivotal between the Anasazi region to the north and the Mogollon region to the south. A discussion of cultural affiliation, exchange, and chronology of the study area through ceramic evidence from several sites is presented (human occupancy ca. Basketmaker III - Pueblo IV periods); and the larger problem of Southwestern ceramic typology is addressed, both in a narration of traditional problems, and in a typological consensus test employing Cibola whitewares. A thorough petrographic study of ceramic thin-sections was made to test specific hypotheses. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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