This project involved instrumental neutron activation analysis of 428 ceramic vessels and clays, typological analysis of 1135 vessels, and stylistic analysis of more than 400 bowls. Most of the items analyzed were recovered from the Homol'ovi villages, a group of eight Pueblo III--Pueblo IV (circa A.D. 1250--1400) sites located near Winslow, Arizona. These studies were conducted in order to address the question of the origin(s), geographically speaking, of the ancient inhabitants of the Homol'ovi villages. The results of the compositional analysis indicate local production of Winslow Orange Ware at Homol'ovi and in the Petrified Forest. Circulation of Winslow Orange Ware to the Anderson Mesa area, the Tonto Basin, and the Verde Valley is al...
This paper has been primarily concerned with Tizon Brown Ware and Lower Colorado Buff Ware, but Grea...
During more than 20 years excavating in five of the seven ancestral Hopi villages comprising the Hom...
According to this publication, "the more we know of the sociological evolution of the Pueblos, the m...
Homol'ovi II is a fourteenth-century, ancestral Hopi pueblo with over 700 rooms. Although known by a...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
This study explores aspects of the development and organization of a mid-thirteenth through fourteen...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Along the Mogollon Rim of east-central Arizona changes in the technology of ceramic production, incl...
The production and exchange of pottery plays a central role in evaluating economic systems and socia...
The Homol'ovi region of northeastern Arizona was home to a dense prehistoric population with strong,...
The transition from Pinedale to Fourmile style on White Mountain Red Ware marks a critical shift in ...
The Pueblo IV period (AD 1275–1600) witnessed dramatic changes in regional settlement patterns and s...
The Hohokam culture thrived in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona from roughly 300 BCE to 1450 CE. Hohoka...
In this thesis, historic Hopi ethnographic data are employed to model ancestral Hopi agricultural la...
The Arizona Strip and adjacent areas in Utah and Nevada are in a very marginal environment. This di...
This paper has been primarily concerned with Tizon Brown Ware and Lower Colorado Buff Ware, but Grea...
During more than 20 years excavating in five of the seven ancestral Hopi villages comprising the Hom...
According to this publication, "the more we know of the sociological evolution of the Pueblos, the m...
Homol'ovi II is a fourteenth-century, ancestral Hopi pueblo with over 700 rooms. Although known by a...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
This study explores aspects of the development and organization of a mid-thirteenth through fourteen...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Along the Mogollon Rim of east-central Arizona changes in the technology of ceramic production, incl...
The production and exchange of pottery plays a central role in evaluating economic systems and socia...
The Homol'ovi region of northeastern Arizona was home to a dense prehistoric population with strong,...
The transition from Pinedale to Fourmile style on White Mountain Red Ware marks a critical shift in ...
The Pueblo IV period (AD 1275–1600) witnessed dramatic changes in regional settlement patterns and s...
The Hohokam culture thrived in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona from roughly 300 BCE to 1450 CE. Hohoka...
In this thesis, historic Hopi ethnographic data are employed to model ancestral Hopi agricultural la...
The Arizona Strip and adjacent areas in Utah and Nevada are in a very marginal environment. This di...
This paper has been primarily concerned with Tizon Brown Ware and Lower Colorado Buff Ware, but Grea...
During more than 20 years excavating in five of the seven ancestral Hopi villages comprising the Hom...
According to this publication, "the more we know of the sociological evolution of the Pueblos, the m...