Mexico (Other Keyword)

101-125 (167 Records)

Pottery images 2400-2499 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 2400-2499, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 2600-2699 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 2600-2699, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 2700-2799 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 2700-2799, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 2800-2899 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara L. Stark.

Pottery images 2800-2899, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 2900-2999 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 2900-2999, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 3000-3099 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 3000-3099, labeled by accession number, see "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive"


Pottery images 3100-3199 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

Pottery images 3100-3199, see "Documentation of Image Archive" for archive variables and "Palm Image Archive" database for information about images.


Pottery images 3300-3399 (2012)
IMAGE Barbara Stark.

These pottery images have accession numbers between 3300-3399, the majority taken by Thanet Skoglund in a study comparing Late Postclassic pottery from Cotaxtla (Cotaxtla Archaeological Project) and PALM. See "Documentation of Image Archive" and "Palm Image Archive".


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"


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 de la escritura temprana. Arte, cosmovisión, y símbolo en la evolución de la complejidad mesoaméricana
PROJECT Christopher von Nagy. Mary Pohl.

Este proyecto de documentación del arte rupestre y muralismo medio formativo en el estado de Guerrero, México tiene el objetivo de creer una serie de imágenes de alta resolución además de imágenes compuestas y computacionales para facilitar estudios sobre la iconografía y la escritura temprana durante este período clave mesoamericano. Enfocamos en los sitios Oxtotitlán (Cerro Quiotepec), Juxtlahuaca, y Cahuaziziqui. This middle formative muralism and rock art documentation project in the...


The Relationship between Violence and Geographic Origins at Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico: Preliminary Results from Strontium Isotope Analyses (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Adrianne Offenbecker. Jane H. Kelley. M. Anne Katzenberg.

Casas Grandes, also known as Paquimé, was one of the largest and most complex societies in prehistoric northern Mexico, with established trade networks and social influences from Mesoamerica, the American Southwest, and western Mexico. Analyses of the human skeletal remains from Casas Grandes have found evidence for interpersonal conflict, human sacrifice, and cannibalism during the Medio period (ca. 1200-1450 AD), which coincides with increasing sociopolitical complexity and emerging social...


Representations of the Devil and the Demonic in Sixteenth-Century Mexico (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Angela Rajagopalan.

As the influence of the Spanish Inquisition increased in the decades following the Spanish conquest of Mexico, it became increasingly common for indigenous artist-scribes, or tlacuiloque, to substitute pictographic images of pre-Hispanic deities with iconography related to the Christian devil. Drawing on examples from Mesoamerican painted manuscripts and murals produced in the sixteenth-century, this paper explores the nature of those representations. Distinctions occur between representations...


Resignification as a Way in and a Way Out: Power and the Colonial Religious Experience in Tula, Hidalgo (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Shannon Iverson.

Archaeological assemblages from two early colonial religious sites at Tula, Hidalgo, are nearly indistinguishable from pre-Columbian assemblages at the same sites. These findings indicate that colonial changes in material culture were much more gradual than we expected, and driven to a surprising degree by Indigenous traditions and aesthetic prerogatives. These data led us to reconsider various models of social change that would adequately account for the observations of material culture at...


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.