Tres Alamos (Site Name Keyword)

1-7 (7 Records)

#8112, Style II or Style III Bowl from Tres Alamos (2012)
IMAGE Uploaded by: Michelle Hegmon

This Bowl is an example of "Style II, Style III" from Tres Alamos.


#9669, Style I Bowl from Tres Alamos (2012)
IMAGE Uploaded by: Michelle Hegmon

This Bowl is an example of Style I from Tres Alamos.


#9670, Style III Bowl from Tres Alamos (2012)
IMAGE Uploaded by: Michelle Hegmon

This Bowl is an example of Style III from Tres Alamos.


Hohokam-Mogollon Burial Plateaus: Notes between 1965 and 1980 (1980)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Charles C. Di Peso.

A collection of brief notes from Hohokam-Mogollon burial plateaus with specific references to other publications.


Prehistoric Painted Pottery of Southeastern Arizona (2000)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Robert A. Heckman. Barbara K. Montgomery. Stephanie M. Whittlesey.

Statistical Research, Inc., was contracted in 1996 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to perform a variety of tasks pertinent to collections of prehistoric ceramics from archaeological work conducted on Fort Huachuca Military Reservation located in southeastern Arizona. The bulk of the contract consisted of two tasks—teaching a class on the ceramics and prehistory of southeastern Arizona and preparing a guide to prehistoric pottery found at sites in this region of the American Southwest. The...


A Survey of the Stone Comples of Southern Arizona: As Shown Through Material Excavated by the Los Angeles Museum (1988)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Owen Lindauer.

Stylistic analyses of sherds have formed the basis of some reconstructed patterns of prehistoric regional interaction without adequately addressing potential factors that affect stylistic variation. The archaeological problem of identifying factors that affect stylistic variation is addressed using the results of functional and stylistic analyses of Red-on-buff vessels. The attributes of vessel size and shape, thickness of painted lines, and design diversity are used to inform on the scale of...


The Tres Alamos Site on the San Pedro River, Southeastern Arizona (1947)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Carr Tuthill.

The ruins lie on the east bank of the San Pedro River some twelve miles by road north of the town of Benson. At this point the river has started to cut into an erosion terrace or bench on which the ruins are located. This bench rises about one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet above the bed of the river, and is eroded by relatively short but deep and steep-banked gullies or arroyos into several tongues of land fanning out toward the river. Evidences of prehistoric occupation are found on the...