Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi, 30 Years Later
Keywords
Moapa Valley, Virgin Anasazi, pottery
Abstract
At the 1988 SAA annual meeting in Phoenix, Margaret Lyneis presented a paper with the title Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi. In that paper, she presented evidence that much of the pottery found on archaeological sites in the Moapa Valley of southeastern Nevada was in fact produced 70–100 km to the east. This pottery was made from dis- tinctive raw materials found near the north rim of the western Grand Canyon. That 1988 SAA paper inspired much subsequent research, including my doc- toral dissertation, which examined ceramic distributions across the western part of the Virgin region. In this paper, I update and expand on my earlier study. This analysis adds detail to Lyneis’s original arguments, but demon- strates that she was largely correct. From about AD. 1050–1125, small-scale Virgin region settlements were linked by intensive ceramic exchange networks that crossed long distances and rugged terrain.
Original Publication Citation
James R. Allison 2018 Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi, 30 Years Later. Paper presented at the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, D.C.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Allison, James R., "Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi, 30 Years Later" (2018). Faculty Publications. 6629.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/6629
Document Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
2018
Publisher
Kiva
Language
English
College
Family, Home, and Social Sciences
Department
Anthropology
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