Veracruz (State / Territory) (Geographic Keyword)

201-225 (293 Records)

Pottery images 3400-3499 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

This file includes pottery images (3400-3499). See Documentation of Image Archive and Palm Image Archive for descriptions of the variables in the archive and for information associated with the images.


Pottery images 3500-3699 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images have accession numbers between 3500-3699. See Documentation of Image Archive" for information on variables and "Palm Image Archive" for information about individual images.


Pottery images 3700-3799 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images are within accession numbers 3700-3799. See Documentation of Image Archive for variables and Palm Image Archive for information about images.


Pottery images 3800-3849 (2013)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images fall within accession numbers 3800-3849 in the image archive, Variables are described in the Documentation of Image Archive, and associated information about the image is contained in the access database Palm Image Archive.


Pottery images 3850-3899 (2013)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images have accession numbers between 3850-3899 in the image archive. Variables are described in the Documentation of Image Archive, and associated information about the image is contained in the access database Palm Image Archive.


Pottery images 3900-3999 (2013)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images have accession numbers 3900-3999 in the image archive. Variables are described in the Documentation of Image Archive, and associated information about the image is contained in the access database Palm Image Archive.


Pottery images 400-599 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 400-599, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 600-799 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 600-799, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 800-999 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 800-999, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


A Preliminary Chronology of Settlement and Subsistence Patterns in Cabo Pulmo National Park, Baja California Sur, Mexico (2023)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Christopher Jazwa. Amira Ainis. Ryan Anderson. Karim Bulhusen Muñoz. Harumi Fujita.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2023: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. We present the results of our preliminary analysis of the archaeological resources in Cabo Pulmo National Park (CPNP), Baja California Sur, Mexico. Since 1995, CPNP has yielded evidence for ecological recovery of marine resources, although long-term prospects are still in question. As important are the cultural resources in the park and surrounding area,...


Production related artifacts for ceramics from PALM survey (2012)
DATASET Barbara Stark.

This file tabulates artifacts related to ceramic production, such as molds, kiln debris, and so forth, for PALM survey. Items are tabulated by feature number.


PROYECTO ARQUEOLÓGICO MATACANELA (PAM), Informe Técnico de la Primera Temporada 2014 (2015)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Marcie Venter.

Report of the 2014 field and lab season submitted to, and approved by the Consejo de Arqueologia, INAH


REAP in El Tajin: Looking towards Social Participation in a World Heritage Site (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Amilcar Vargas. Álvaro Brizuela Absalón.

The Pre-Hispanic city of El Tajin (Mexico) was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1992. Late on in the same decade UNESCO encouraged State Parties to foster "informed awareness on the part of the population… whose active participation [in conservation]…is essential". Using the Rapid Ethnographic Assessment Procedures method (REAP) on fieldwork in Mexico, this paper aims to contrast global and local policies to improve participation of local communities generally and in particular of...


Reaping the Rewards of Incipient Agriculture from the Land to the Sea and the Mangroves In Between (2023)
DOCUMENT Citation Only James Daniels. Hector Neff. Heather Thakar.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2023: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. During the Archaic to Early Formative transition, the Soconusco populations began adopting more sedentary subsistence strategies and investing more in their local environments. Evidence from sediment cores demonstrates that during the Archaic, populations were burning inland landscapes and starting to grow maize. The environmental effects of incipient...


Reconstructing Population Histories in the Gulf Lowlands: Review and Prospect (2021)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Christopher Pool. Michael Loughlin.

This is an abstract from the "Ancient Mesoamerican Population History: Demography, Social Complexity, and Change" session, at the 86th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Over the past three decades the Gulf Lowlands of Mexico have witnessed an explosion of systematically collected archaeological survey data. The Gulf Lowlands, however, present particular challenges for the collection of data, reconstruction of local population histories, and comparison among datasets...


Rediscovering the San Martín Pajapan Volcano in the Gulf Coast of México: An Analysis of its Archaeological Context (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Alberto Ortiz Brito.

San Martín Pajapan is one of the most important and prominent volcanos that constitute Los Tuxtlas mountain system of the Gulf Coast of México. From the Preshipanic period to the present time the San Martín Pajapan volcano has been considered a natural place of the landscape with cultural significance, which is indicated by the presence of archaeological remains on its summit. The most remarkable archaeological element of this volcano is a monumental Olmec sculpture, which iconographic...


Reutilization of Olmec Monuments during the Classic Period in the Gulf Coast of México (2019)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Alberto Ortiz Brito.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2019: General Sessions" session, at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. After excavating Gulf Coast archaeological sites, Alfonso Medellin Zenil affirmed that Olmec monuments were carved during the Late Classic period (600-900 AD). He made this statement two decades after the second round table of the Mexican anthropology society, in which scholars agreed on placing the Olmec culture in the Preclassic period, based on...


Rim and non-rim sherds from PALM survey features (2012)
DATASET Barbara Stark.

This file combines rims and non-rims from the Proyecto Arqueologico La Mixtequilla survey features.


Rim sherds from PALM survey features (2012)
DATASET Barbara Stark.

The excel file has rim sherds according to the collection and pottery category for the Proyecto Arqueologico La Mixtequilla. Isolated Finds (IFs) rims are in a separate file from those from survey feature collections.


Rim sherds from Stuart Speaker survey project (2012)
DATASET Barbara Stark.

These rim sherds are from Stuart Speaker's dissertation research survey project in the Mixtequilla. An earlier version of the classification system was employed, so the categories are not entirely compatible with the PALM pottery classification, which was revised subsequent to 1988.


Ritual and Domestic Plant Use on the Southern Pacific Coast of Mexico: A Starch Grain Study of the Formative to Classic Period Transition at Izapa (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Rebecca Mendelsohn.

In southern Mesoamerica, the transition from the Formative period to Classic period (100 B.C.- A.D. 400) was a time of population decline, cessation of monumental construction, and the abandonment of many sites. Environmental explanations such as drought and volcanic activity have been proposed as potential trigger factors for the widespread collapse at the close of the Formative period. Current evidence suggests that residents of the early capital of Izapa, located on a piedmont environmental...


Salt and Plumbate: Late Classic Multi-crafting in Eastern Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico (2023)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Hector Neff.

This is an abstract from the "Ceramics and Archaeological Sciences" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Archaeological mounds within the mangrove zone west of the Rio Cahuacan, in far-southern Chiapas, Mexico, have dense surface remains of broken Plumbate pottery, solid ceramic cylinders, and various other kinds of pyro-technological evidence. Clays from the region match Tohil Plumbate chemical composition, thus solidifying the inference that the...


Seal images (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Images of ceramic roller and stamp seals. See "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive" concerning associated information.


Shell artifact images (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Images of worked shell and shell artifacts. See "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive" concerning associated information.


Situating a Cached Ballgame Yoke from Matacanela, Veracruz (2021)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Marcie Venter. Lacy Risner.

This is an abstract from the "Sculpture of the Ancient Mexican Gulf Coast, Part 2" session, at the 86th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. The ballgame complex was an important component of the Classic Veracruz style that spanned the Late or Epiclassic period (AD 600–900) and that was concentrated along the Mesoamerican Gulf lowlands and extended into adjacent regions. The ballgame, however, has early roots, both in Mesoamerica in general and in Veracruz in particular. In...