Cerámica sin Fronteras: Defining Cultural Phenomena at the Intersection of Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
This session brings together archaeologists from three Central American nations, the United States, and Canada to present new data and review the evidence for regional and interregional interaction in the southeast Mesoamerican periphery and northern Central America. Themes include defining a new ceramic sphere or a cultural sub-region in the southern Mesoamerican periphery, possibly around the Gulf of Chorotega (Fonseca); interregional interactions as seen in ceramics and other artifact classes; ethnic groups, migration, and boundaries in this cultural mosaic.
Other Keywords
Ceramics •
Honduras •
Ceramic •
Nicaragua •
Ethnicity •
Ethnic Identity •
Migrations •
Foodways •
Ceramic Analysis •
Late Preclassic
Geographic Keywords
Central America •
Mesoamerica
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-9 of 9)
- Documents (9)
- The Ceramics of San Antonio, a Site on the Pacific Coastal Plain of Chinandega, Nicaragua (2016)
- Ceramics, Migrations and Ethnic Identity at the site of Cosmapa Oriental, Department of Chinandega, Nicaragua (2016)
- Change and Continuity in the Greater Nicoya Region of Pacific Central America: A Comparison of Two Bagaces to Sapoa Transitional Areas (2016)
- Chichicaste Ceramics and Regional Interactions in Eastern Honduras (2016)
- In Defense of Plainware Ceramics: Form, Function, and Foodways in Sapoa Period Pacific Nicaragua (2016)
- The Lower Central American Influences on Honduran Polychromy (2016)
- "Nicoya Polychromes" Beyond Greater Nicoya (2016)
- Pottery of the Department of Chinandega, Nicaragua: Sequence, External Connections, Ethnicity, and Migration. (2016)
- Rethinking Ceramics as Evidence of Regional Interaction (2016)