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Articles 241 - 256 of 256

Full-Text Articles in Anthropology

The Identification And Distribution Of The Ceramic Types In The Rio Puerco Area, Central New Mexico, Dorothy Louise Luhrs Jun 1937

The Identification And Distribution Of The Ceramic Types In The Rio Puerco Area, Central New Mexico, Dorothy Louise Luhrs

Anthropology ETDs

The Rio Puerco valley of the East has had a small proportion of human occupants with recent years and by the ceramic evidence available it is supposed that there was a small number of occupants living in the valley in prehistoric times. The earliest inhabitants probably entered the valley prior to channel trenching and surface denudation and possibly maintained small fields through flood water farming.

The ceramic evidence implies that there have been frequent group movements through the Rio Puerco area, thereby revealing the valley to be a migration route through which many different groups passed from early to late …


The Pueblo Land Grants Of The Rio Abajo, New Mexico, Herbert Brayer May 1937

The Pueblo Land Grants Of The Rio Abajo, New Mexico, Herbert Brayer

New Mexico Anthropologist

No abstract provided.


The Calcanea Of Kuaua Pueblo, New Mexico, Donovan Senter Jan 1936

The Calcanea Of Kuaua Pueblo, New Mexico, Donovan Senter

Anthropology ETDs

The present paper is an anthropometric study of the calcanea or heel bones taken from burials at the Pueblo IV site of Kuaua in the middle Rio Grande district of New Mexico, with an analysis of variations within the group and a comparison with other racial groups in order to determine racial characters, differences and affinities.


Erosion Control In Chaco Canyon, New Mexico For The Preservation Of Archaeological Sites, William Chauvenet Jun 1935

Erosion Control In Chaco Canyon, New Mexico For The Preservation Of Archaeological Sites, William Chauvenet

Anthropology ETDs

No accurate maps have been made of the whole region covered by this report. A very excellent aerial survey has been made of the Navajo Reservation, but this does not extend more than eight miles east of Wijiji, and does not show quite all of the Chaco canyon. No profile or cross-section of Chaco Canyon exists, except for the maps made by the National Parks Service. As these cover only about three-quarters of a mile, they are not of great assistance in matters concerned with the grade of the stream bed. They are a valuable start, however, and they have …


Preservation Of The Murals Of Kiva Iii, Kuaua Pueblo Ruins, Wesley Lloyd Bliss May 1935

Preservation Of The Murals Of Kiva Iii, Kuaua Pueblo Ruins, Wesley Lloyd Bliss

Anthropology ETDs

A workman uncovered a small fragment of painted adobe plaster in the course of the excavating of the Kuaua (Tiguex) pueblo ruins, on Tuesday, February 12, 1935. These ruins are located on the west bank of the Rio Grande, one and one-half miles northwest of Bernalillo, Sandoval County, New Mexico. Gordon Vivian, in charge of the excavations, told me of this find and the following day we started to uncover paintings on a wall of what turned out to be an underground kiva. Part of the north wall and about one-half of the west wall were excavated, paintings were found …


The Excavation And Repair Of The Quarai Mission, Albert Grim Ely Jan 1935

The Excavation And Repair Of The Quarai Mission, Albert Grim Ely

Anthropology ETDs

The ruins of Quarai are owned by the University of New Mexico. The fifteen acres of property contain the mission and mounds of the early Tiwa Pueblo. The mission--church and monastery--which stands northeast of the pueblo houses was constructed during early Spanish times.

From May, 1934 to May, 1935, a project of the Civilian Construction Corps has been in progress, excavating and repairing this mission. The program, at the present time, is not complete, but it is expected that this phase of the project will be finished by late summer this year.

All the work was purely for the purpose …


A Stratigraphic Study Of The Pottery Of Alameda Pueblo, J. W. Hendron Jan 1935

A Stratigraphic Study Of The Pottery Of Alameda Pueblo, J. W. Hendron

Anthropology ETDs

The objective of this paper is to record and present the results of stratigraphic studies made on pottery at Alameda. Before this is attempted, it is necessary to have a clear picture of the most important previous investigations of pottery of the Rio Grande pueblos and related sites.


Sanctuaries In The Ancient Pueblo Of Chetro Ketl, Alice Leinau Jan 1934

Sanctuaries In The Ancient Pueblo Of Chetro Ketl, Alice Leinau

Anthropology ETDs

This paper is intended to a a detailed description of the sanctuaries of Chetro Ketl. It also includes Casa Rinconada and the sanctuary at Pueblo Bonito for comparison with the great sanctuary at Chetro Ketl.


Personal Adornment Of The Ancient Pueblo Indians, Winifred Stamm Reiter Jan 1933

Personal Adornment Of The Ancient Pueblo Indians, Winifred Stamm Reiter

Anthropology ETDs

When man first struck stone with other stone in conscious effort to change its shape, he first gave expression to the creative impulse that was instinct within him. During the ages that followed he, forced by necessity, directed that impulse into purely utilitarian channels. His need were food and shelter and he was so preoccupied with obtaining them and with devising objects which would help in their attainment that he had no time or need for anything else…


The Ancient Pueblo Of Chetro Ketl, Paul Reiter Jan 1933

The Ancient Pueblo Of Chetro Ketl, Paul Reiter

Anthropology ETDs

The study herewith presented is on the excavation of Chetro Ketl, an ancient pueblo ruin in southern San Juan County, New Mexico. It is limited to the excavation and to architectural data derived therefrom. Discussion of such matters as the refuse heap, tree ring calendar, specimens, pottery types, etc., is omitted.


A Study Of The Water-Color Paintings Of Modern Pueblo Indians, Margaret Dorman Jan 1932

A Study Of The Water-Color Paintings Of Modern Pueblo Indians, Margaret Dorman

Anthropology ETDs

The Pueblo Indians of North America developed various forms of painting during the pre-Columbian period. They had to prepare all necessary tools and pigments from the sources which were available. The art of painting on paper is new only to the extent of transferring a previously developed form of expression on paper.


A Re-Study Of The Province Of Tiguex, Gordon Vivian Jan 1932

A Re-Study Of The Province Of Tiguex, Gordon Vivian

Anthropology ETDs

This thesis is undertaken in order to clear up, as far as possible, the tangled threads of the history of the old Spanish province of Tiguex. It aims to correlate the written history of the various sites with the archaeological evidence to be found in the field today.


The Ethnobotany Of The Isleta Indians, Volney H. Jones Jun 1931

The Ethnobotany Of The Isleta Indians, Volney H. Jones

Anthropology ETDs

This study is an outgrowth of the increasing interest in the history, ethnology, and archaeology of the Pueblo Indians of the Southwest. Although much research has been done in this very fertile field, new and fascinating problems are constantly pre­senting themselves.

When one states that the environment greatly influences a people he speaks truisms and common knowledge. The arid South­west with its distinctive flora offers an unusual environment to which the Indian had adapted himself remarkably well. The object in general of this problem has been to study the reciprocal re­lation between the Isleta Indian and his plant environment; speci­fically, …


The Ethnobotany Of Jemez Indians, Sarah Louise Cook Jan 1930

The Ethnobotany Of Jemez Indians, Sarah Louise Cook

Anthropology ETDs

The Indians in New Mexico may be divided into two general types — wandering and pueblo. The Athapascan, or wandering Indians, constitute a group which has drifted from the far north into New Mexico, They are more or less nomadic and war-like, and not agriculturally inclined, therefore to a large extent dependent upon their neighbors. The remaining Indians in New Mexico are the pueblos. These groups are independent, peaceful, and industrious, particularly along their respective lines of weaving, basketry, pottery, and agriculture.


Notes From The Documentary History, The Language, And The Rituals And Customs Of Jemez Pueblo, Blanche Wurdeck Harper Jan 1929

Notes From The Documentary History, The Language, And The Rituals And Customs Of Jemez Pueblo, Blanche Wurdeck Harper

Anthropology ETDs

The documentary history of the pueblo of Jemez begins with the Coronado expedition of 1954, the events of which were chronicled by Pedro de Castaneda. This first visit of the Spanish to Jemez was under the command of Captain Francisco Barrionuevo, and took place in the fall of the year. Barrionuevo was sent northward up the Jemez Valley for the purpose of exploring the Jemez province, which was already so named. Castaneda, who accompanied Barrionuevo, says that there were seven towns in the Jemez province, and three others in the province of Aguas Callentes. The latter province, according to Simpson, …


A Plan For An Archaeological Survey Of The Pueblo Plateau, Reginald G. Fisher Jan 1929

A Plan For An Archaeological Survey Of The Pueblo Plateau, Reginald G. Fisher

Anthropology ETDs

In referring to that area in the southwestern part of the United States and the northern part of Mexico over which is spread the remains of a once prolific and virile civilization, that of the Pueblo Indian, many names have been used. Some of these are very indefinite, and of little descriptive value, when one looks into the exact meaning of them. To those who know what was meant to be conveyed by these names, they no doubt are sufficient, but one ignorant of these denotations would probably be lead into misunderstandings. Such names as "The Great American Desert", the …