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Zuani Potsherds
Zuani Potsherds
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Zuani Potsherds

by A. L. Kroeber. 41 pgs.

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publication details

Contributors:

   A. L. Kroeber

Publisher:

   American Museum of Natural History

Place of Publication:

  New York  

Publication Year:

  1916
Subjects:   Zuni Indians--Antiquities, Indians Of North America--Pottery
Table of contents
CONTENTS.
PREFACE 3
ZUÑI POTSHERDS 7
NOTES ON INDIVIDUAL SITES 22
PINNAWA 22
MATTSAKYA 22
KYAKKIMA 22
KOLLIWA 24
SITE W 28
TOWWAYALLANNA 28
WIMMAYAWA 30
SHOPTLUWWAYALA OR SHOPTLUWWALAWA 31
HE'I'TLI'ANNANNA 32
SITE Y 33
SITE X 33
SHUNNTEKKYA 34
"HAWWIKKU B" 34
POSTSCRIPT 35
1. West Kolliwa ........... 26
2. East Kolliwa ........... 27
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books on: (Zuni Indians Antiquities) OR (Indians Of North America Pottery)  - 4593 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...of "Linguistic Families of American Indians North of Mexico" has proved of the widest...severely in the MAP 2 --Northwestern North America section 1of map 1 epidemic of 1617, but in 1630 they are said to...about 30 villages. In 1700 the Sakonnet Indians, including most of the Wampanoag remnants...
...cannot locate this site exactly. It is three or more miles from Zuni, to the east of Kolliwa. Our first attempt to find the latter...the ruin is, except that it lies perhaps ten miles, as the Indians vaguely count them, to the southeast, somewhere behind Towwayallanna...
...cloth)-ISBN 0-19-513771-X (pbk.) 1. Indians of North America-First contact with Europeans. 2. Indians of North America-History-Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775. 3. Indians of North America-Cultural assimilation. 4. North America...
...paper) isbn 0-8032-9310-0 (pbk.: alk. paper) 1. Indians of North America Folklore. 2. Folk literature...Native American studies. 5 Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William C. Sturtevant, vol. 17, Languages...
...Smithsonian Institutions Handbook of North American Indians (Fogelson zoo4b). One of twenty...ed. Pp. 337- 353. Handbook of North American Indians. William C. Sturtevant, gen. ed...Vol. 14: Southeast. Handbook of North American Indians. William C. Sturtevant, gen...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: (Zuni Indians Antiquities) OR (Indians Of North America Pottery)  - 123 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Part of the attraction of North America was the perceived absence of Catholics and Episcopalians, and one of the fears of...than ten thousand Mohawks or the most savage Indians in this quarter of the globe (BNL 5...frontier or in an area where there was peace with the Indians. Indeed, one report outlined the good treatment received by a group of settlers from a native population, countering the dominance...br/ The landscape of North America is presented not just as being uncultivated, but unused...
...his source material. Parts relating to Sioux and Ojibway Indians are identified as numbers 6:5, 6:6 and 18:1. Where else...Erland was famous for his research among South American Indians. References to North American Indians are made in letters...
...1936 Navaho Rites for Dispelling Insanity and Delirium. El Palacio 41 (14-15-16): 71-74. 1937 "Navajo Pottery Manufacture". The University of New Mexico Bulletin 317 , Anthropological Series 2 (3):1-23. 1938a "Navajo Use of Jimsonweed". New Anthropologist 3 (2):19-21. 1938b The Agricultural and Hunting Methods of the Navajo Indians. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 18 . 1940 "Navaho Salt Gathering". University of New Mexico...1943 Navaho Humor. General Studies in Anthropology 9. 1944 The Navaho Indians and the Ghost Dance of 1890. American Anthropologist 46 (4):523-527. 1948 "Navaho Trading and Trading Ritual:" A Study in Cultural Dynamics . South...
...of southern Arizona were relatively isolated from American contact. They looked toward Mexico as the source of alien goods and ideas, tending to seek things as they...is an Indian story told to satisfy whites rather than Indians. (PW33) In the opening pages Underhill also explains...and corn for gruel while her mother made baskets and pottery. Since her father, "The Gambler," was the tribal chief...similar to one made by Plenty-Coups in Linderman American , where he too declines to speaks about the period of time when the Indians were adjusting to the disappearance of the buffalo...
...the center of the Good . He has also contributed to Indian Artist magazine and to The St. James Guide to Native North American Artists . what Indian art is supposed to be. Indian art is not a monolithic entity, contemporary artists insist, but...that is valid for them, the supposed distinction between traditional and modern art (which existed mainly in the minds of non-Indian critics) appears to be put to rest. There is heightened recognition that placing Native art in categories...Patrick DesJarlait and the Ojibwe Tradition . St. Paul, MN: The Minnesota Museum of American Art, 1994 . Pottery by American Indian Women: The Legacy of Generations . Washington, D.C.: The National Museum of Women in the Arts...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

magazine articles on: (Zuni Indians Antiquities) OR (Indians Of North America Pottery)  - 43 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-43 >>  
 
...is burgeoning, and a lot is going on, some of which will bear fruit. Researchers are creating cyber-models of ancient Indians of Colorados Mesa Verde and Mexicos Oaxaca Valley; they are creating virtual Polynesian societies and digital mesolithic...envision a time, not long from now, when many of those same analysts will test policy changes not on paper but on artificial Americas that live and grow within computers all over the country, like so many bacterial cultures or fruit-fly populations. The...
...except to recycle the familiar claim that the ancestors of todays Indians didnt do these things, because theres no mention of cannibalism...blame the descendants of the Anasazi-todays Hopi, Pueblo, and Zuni peoples-for wishing the cannibalism stories werent true? The...
...just about lost it and said, `Do you know how long and hard weve fought to get members of this profession to admit that Indians could have done some of these things? And now youre saying it was Europeans!" Beyond Dirt Archaeology IN the end, the...
...tradition contemporary with the Clovis tradition but more than five thousand miles to the south does not fit the notion that North American big-game hunters were the sole source of migration into South America. Clovis evidently is just one of several regional traditions," Roosevelt and her colleagues...excavating sites of Amazonian ceramic-age cultures, Roosevelt made an important discovery near the town of Santarem. The pottery she excavated from a prehistoric shell midden dated to about 8,000 to 7,000 years before present, making it the earliest...
...were "outbreak populations--always a symptom of an extraordinarily disrupted ecological system." Throughout eastern North America the open landscape seen by the first Europeans quickly filled in with forest. According to William Cronon, of the University of Wisconsin, later colonists began complaining about how hard it was to get around. (Eventually, of...there was much more of it in the late eighteenth century than in the early sixteenth. Cronons Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England (1983) belongs on the same shelf as works by Crosby and Dobyns. But it was...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-43 >>

 

newspaper articles on: (Zuni Indians Antiquities) OR (Indians Of North America Pottery)  - 14 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-14 >>  
 
...the grave crisis in 1644 when relations with the Powhatan Indians grew dire. They sought to make war and drive us from these...Service and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities work together to run programs at Jamestown. The visitors...
...England - needed Indian allies to have any sort of control of North American territories," Mr. Merrill says. The American Indians, too, needed allies, such as the colonial powers, in their territorial disputes with other tribes, he says. In the case...
...Massachusetts native John Lee Williams explores the Myakka Basin, describing in his journal a friendly population of Indians mixed with Spanish and a breed of Spanish cattle that has "become very fat on the wild grass of the country." 1837-1842 The U.S. Army begins its war of removal against Native Americans in the state of Florida. To avoid capture, murder or expulsion to reservations west of the Mississippi, many Seminoles...Jesse Knight and Shad Hancock drive their cattle south along the river, blazing a trail that would remain a principal north-south route for 50 years from the coast to the Manatee County seat at Pine Level. 1902 Although the Florida Department...
...cliff dwellings in the entire Southwest. Archeologists believe that the inhabitants, who were ancestors of todays Hopi Indians, lived in the village for only 50 years, around A.D. 1250. The 135 buildings in the village are mostly dwellings and granaries...
...to his sheep ranch, where the students learn to live as the Indians do. Mr. Peshlakai also is the founder of the Peshlakai Dancers...annual Native American Heritage program featuring Hopi, Navajo, Zuni and Pai marketplaces, which include working craftspeople and...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-14 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: (Zuni Indians Antiquities) OR (Indians Of North America Pottery)  - 4 results

 
 
...cent., when Spaniards entered the Rio Grande area. The seven Zuni towns were reported by the Franciscan Marcos de Niza to be...and Acoma. Bibliography See E. P. Dozier, The Pueblo Indians of North America (1970); R. Silverberg, The Pueblo Revolt...
...close to 1,000 Catawba in the United States. The last speaker of Catawba died in 1996. See D. S. Brown, The Catawba Indians (1966); C. M. Hudson, The Catawba Nation (1970). ____________________ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright...
...problem in Mexicos relations with the United States. In 1992, Mexico, the United States, and Canada negotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which erased many trade barriers and created a trading bloc of 370 million people. However, in 1994 a Mayan-based uprising in the southern state of Chiapas provided a reminder of the poverty in which many Mexicans still lived. After protracted negotiations, accords providing limited autonomy for the Indians of the region were agreed to in early 1996, but the accords were not acted on by the government until 2001, when a version...
...cultures of such sedentary farming peoples as the Hopi and the Zuni then came into being. They cultivated corn, beans, squash, cotton...Spencer et al., The Native Americans (1965); C. Wissler, Indians of the United States (rev. ed. 1966); W. Haberland, The Art...


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