Chupadero black-on-white (Other Keyword)

1-3 (3 Records)

Cultural Resources on the Lincoln National Forest (1981)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Julio L. Betancourt. Jeff Boyer. Patricia M. Spoerl. Joseph A. Tainter.

The Cultural Resources on the Lincoln National Forest report is a compilation of six separate papers covering topics related to sites at and the history of the Lincoln National Forest and Greater Lincoln National forest area. These papers include: Test Excavations At A Small Site Along The Sacramento River.(tdar id: 25161) Analysis of Lithic Artifacts: Site AR-03-08-04-51.(tdar id: 37121) Survey of The Wright Spring Watershed.(tdar id: 37125) A Brief History of The Early Years on...


The Production and Exchange of Chupadero Black-on-white Pottery and Its Relationship to Social Identity (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Tiffany Clark.

Produced between A.D. 1150 and 1550, Chupadero Black‐on‐white pottery is found throughout central and southern New Mexico, and adjacent parts of Texas, Arizona, and Chihuahua, Mexico. Despite its widespread distribution, chemical and mineralogical compositional data indicate that the pottery was manufactured in only two areas of central New Mexico – the Jumanos portion of the Salinas province and Sierra Blanca region. Distributional studies indicate that the Chupadero pottery produced in the two...


Survey of the Wright Spring Watershed (1981)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Joseph A. Tainter.

In order to ensure that no cultural resources will be affected by the proposed Wright Spring (Snaky Canyon) watershed project, an archeological survey was conducted on 250 acres of the Cloudcroft District, Lincoln National Forest, New Mexico, in April 1978. The purpose of the Snaky Canyon watershed project is to alleviate the effects of an arroyo which is deeply entrenched within the valley. A variety of alternative plans for dealing with this arroyo have been formulated. These plans, and their...