The transition from Pinedale to Fourmile style on White Mountain Red Ware marks a critical shift in the production of prehistoric pottery in the American Southwest. As a decorative event, it involved the restructuring of both the painting process and symbolic presentation. As a record of past behavior, it evidences new patterns of social interaction among early Pueblo IV period (A.D. 1300-1400) potters at post-migration communities in east-central Arizona. Ultimately, these patterns reveal social differentiation among coresident groups, not integration as recent ceramic-based models imply. This study is predicated upon an analysis of painted whole vessels that uses measures of style behavior as it is expressed in brushstrokes and other micr...
The Hohokam culture thrived in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona from roughly 300 BCE to 1450 CE. Hohoka...
The advent of pottery about A.D. 400 among the ancestral Puebloans of Chaco Canyon marked a cultural...
In the northeastern United States--as elsewhere--an overemphasis on cultural-historical ceramic typo...
The role of material culture style in cultural systems, particularly small-scale agricultural societ...
Archaeological research on ceramic styles has become a mainstay of archaeological investigation wher...
Prehistoric social networks reveal paths of behavior that are vital to the understanding of past lif...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
The Pueblo IV period (AD 1275–1600) witnessed dramatic changes in regional settlement patterns and s...
Major social and demographic changes occurred during the Pueblo IV Period (AD 1300-1600) in the Amer...
The production and exchange of pottery plays a central role in evaluating economic systems and socia...
The research focuses on the Mogollon Mimbres region of the North American Southwest, and, in particu...
Along the Mogollon Rim of east-central Arizona changes in the technology of ceramic production, incl...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
This study illustrates the importance of finding out whether painted ceramics represent the total re...
Understanding the mechanisms structuring increasing aggregation during the late-thirteenth century i...
The Hohokam culture thrived in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona from roughly 300 BCE to 1450 CE. Hohoka...
The advent of pottery about A.D. 400 among the ancestral Puebloans of Chaco Canyon marked a cultural...
In the northeastern United States--as elsewhere--an overemphasis on cultural-historical ceramic typo...
The role of material culture style in cultural systems, particularly small-scale agricultural societ...
Archaeological research on ceramic styles has become a mainstay of archaeological investigation wher...
Prehistoric social networks reveal paths of behavior that are vital to the understanding of past lif...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
The Pueblo IV period (AD 1275–1600) witnessed dramatic changes in regional settlement patterns and s...
Major social and demographic changes occurred during the Pueblo IV Period (AD 1300-1600) in the Amer...
The production and exchange of pottery plays a central role in evaluating economic systems and socia...
The research focuses on the Mogollon Mimbres region of the North American Southwest, and, in particu...
Along the Mogollon Rim of east-central Arizona changes in the technology of ceramic production, incl...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
This study illustrates the importance of finding out whether painted ceramics represent the total re...
Understanding the mechanisms structuring increasing aggregation during the late-thirteenth century i...
The Hohokam culture thrived in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona from roughly 300 BCE to 1450 CE. Hohoka...
The advent of pottery about A.D. 400 among the ancestral Puebloans of Chaco Canyon marked a cultural...
In the northeastern United States--as elsewhere--an overemphasis on cultural-historical ceramic typo...