Early Pithouse Period (Temporal Keyword)

1-5 (5 Records)

1995 Ceramic Typology Analysis (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text PATRICIA FOURNIER.

Ceramic typological analysis completed by Patricia Fournier on the ceramic collection from Paraje San Diego.


Challenging the Village Concept: Bayesian Analysis and Chemical Characterization in the Mogollon Early Pithouse Period of the US Southwest
PROJECT Uploaded by: Lori Barkwill Love

The traditional view of the Mogollon Early Pithouse period (AD 200–700) in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona is that the introduction of ceramics, an increase in maize use, and pithouses equaled sedentary village formation. More recent research, however, has argued that mobility and foraging remained important strategies throughout the Early Pithouse period. Thus, there are many questions and debates regarding cultural changes that occurred during the Mogollon Early Pithouse...


Mogollon Early Pithouse NAA Data (2020)
DATASET Lori Barkwill Love. Darrell Creel. Jeffery Ferguson.

These data represent all of the new NAA ceramic compositional data and group assignments from Barkwill Love (2020) and Barkwill Love et al. 2022. Barkwill Love, Lori (2020) Challenging the Village Concept: Bayesian Analysis and Chemical Composition Characterization in the Mogollon Early Pithouse Period of the US Southwest. PhD Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at San Antonio. Barkwill Love, Lori, Jeffrey R. Ferguson, and Darrell Creel (2022) Movement of Pots (and...


Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in the Sapillo Creek Valley, Gila National Forest, New Mexico (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Robert Stokes.

The Sapillo Valley Survey Project was undertaken in 1993 by Robert Stokes as a M.A. thesis project. The valley was 20 percent sample surveyed using 320 m wide transects that crossed the valley from high landform to high landform, thus ensuring that a variety of landforms would be sampled. The survey resulted in recording 62 sites ranging from Late Archaic/Early Pithouse sites to Late Pithouse villages to Classic Mimbres pueblos and fieldhouses. The sites included many large ceremonial structures...


Sapillo Valley Survey Project
PROJECT Uploaded by: Robert Stokes

The Sapillo Vallley Survey Project was undertaken by Robert J. Stokes in 1993 and the results compiled in the author's M.A. thesis at Eastern New Mexico University in 1995. The Sapillo Valley is a large tributary of the Gila River in the Mimbres area of Southwestern New Mexico. Please note that the thesis .pdf document associated with this project has been reformatted from its original early 1990s Word Perfect file type to a 2010 Word document prior to saving it as a .pdf. As a consequence of...