The Coronado Project Archaeological Investigations: A Description of Ceramic Collections from the Railroad and Transmission Line Corridors

Autor: Swarthout, Jeanne, Dulaney, Alan R.
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