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Mogollon culture

Mogollon culture (/ˌmɡəˈjn/)[1] is an archaeological culture of Native American peoples from Southern New Mexico and Arizona, Northern Sonora and Chihuahua, and Western Texas. The northern part of this region is Oasisamerica,[2][3][4] while the southern span of the Mogollon culture is known as Aridoamerica.[5]

Map of major prehistoric archaeological cultures in the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico

The Mogollon culture is one of the most well known prehistoric Southwestern cultural divisions of the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico.[6] The culture flourished from the archaic period, c. 200 CE, to either 1450[7] or 1540 CE, when the Spanish arrived.[6]

Etymology edit

 
The rock wall of the canyon, the Cueva de las Ventanas cliff-dwelling is located left of center above a debris-covered cone.

The name Mogollon comes from the Mogollon Mountains,[7] which were named after Don Juan Ignacio Flores Mogollón, Spanish Governor of New Spain (including what is now New Mexico) from 1712 to 1715. The name was chosen and defined in 1936 by archaeologist Emil W. Haury.[6]

Cultural traits edit

 
Macaw Pens at Paquimé, Chihuahua

The distinct facets of Mogollon culture were recorded by Emil Haury, based on his excavations in 1931, 1933, and 1934 at the Harris Village in Mimbres, New Mexico, and the Mogollon Village on the upper San Francisco River in New Mexico[8] Haury recognized differences between architecture and artifacts from these sites as compared with sites in the Hohokam archaeological culture area and the Ancestral Pueblo archaeological culture area. Key differences included brown-paste, coil-and-scrape pottery, deeply excavated semi-subterranean pit-houses and different ceremonial architecture. Eight decades of subsequent research have confirmed Haury's initial findings.[9] Today, the distinctiveness of the Mogollon pottery manufacture, architectural construction, ground-stone tool design, habits and customs of residence location, and mortuary treatment is generally recognized.[10][11]

The earliest Mogollon pithouses were deep and either circular or oval-shaped. Over time, Mogollon people built rectangular houses with rounded corners with them not as deep. Their villages also had kivas, or round, semi-subterranean ceremonial structures.[12]

History edit

 
Man and crane, Mangas-Mimbres pot, c. 1000 CE, showing figure-ground reversal

Mogollon origins remain a matter of speculation. One theory is that the Mogollon emerged from a Desert Archaic tradition linked to the first (late Pleistocene) prehistoric human occupations of the area (around 9000 BC). In this theory, cultural distinctions emerged in the larger region when populations grew enough to establish villages and larger communities. An alternative theory is that the Mogollon descended from migrants from farming regions in central Mexico around 3500 BC, and displaced descendants of the Desert Archaic peoples. A third theory is that Mogollon descended from the Cochise culture[12] (the early pithouse, late Desert Archaic) who had arrived around 5000 BC, and were not linked to the earlier inhabitants, but adopted farming from Central Mexico.[citation needed]

Initially, the Mogollon were foragers who augmented their subsistence by farming. But during the first millennium CE, dependence on farming probably increased. Water control features are common among Mimbres branch sites from the 10th through 12th centuries CE.

The nature and density of Mogollon villages changed over time. The earliest villages consist of several pithouses—houses dug into the ground, with stick and thatch roofs supported by a network of posts and beams, and faced on the exterior with earth. Villages grew and by the 11th century surface pueblos became common. They had ground-level houses with walls of rock and earth and roofs supported by post and beam networks. In the 13th and 14th centuries, cliff-dwellings became common.

Research on Mogollon culture has led to the recognition of regional variants, of which the most widely recognized in popular media is the Mimbres culture (Mimbres Mogollon branch). Others include the Jornada, Forestdale, Reserve, Point of Pines (or "Black River"), San Simon, and Upper Gila branches. Although the Mimbres culture is the best-known subset of the Mogollon archaeological culture-area, the entire Mogollon occupation spans a greater interval of time (roughly one millennium) and a vastly larger area than is encompassed by the Mimbres culture.

Developmental periods edit

 
Kinishba Ruins near Fort Apache, Arizona

Mogollon culture is often divided into five periods proposed by Joe Ben Wheat in 1955:

  • Mogollon 1 (200 – c. 400 CE): Pine Lawn, Georgetown, Penasco, Circle Prairie, and Hilltop phases
  • Mogollon 2 (c. 400–650 CE): San Lorenzo, Dos Cabezas, Circle Prairie, and Cottonwood phases
  • Mogollon 3 (650–850 CE): San Francisco, Pinaleno, Galiuro, Forestdale, and San Marcial phases
  • Mogollon 4 (850–1000 CE): Three Circle, Cerros, Corduroy, Mesilla, and Capitan phases
  • Mogollon 5 (1000–1450 CE), including the Classic Mimbres phrase (1050–1200 CE): Mangus, Mimbres, Encinas, Reserve, Tularosa, Dona Anna, Three Rivers, El Paso, and San Anders phases.[7][13]

Another way to divide Mogollon history is in three periods of housing types:

  • Early Pithouse (200–550 CE)
  • Late Pithouse (550–1000 CE)
  • Mogollon Pueblo (1000–1450 CE).[14]

Sites edit

Archaeological sites attributed to the Mogollon culture are found in the Gila Wilderness, Mimbres River Valley, along the Upper Gila river, Paquime and Hueco Tanks, an area of low mountains between the Franklin Mountains to the west and the Hueco Mountains to the east, and Three Rivers Petroglyph Site, 17 miles north of Tularosa, New Mexico. Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in southwestern New Mexico was established as a national monument on 16 November 1907. It contains several archaeological sites attributed to the Mimbres branch. At the headwaters of the Gila, Mimbres populations adjoined another more northern branch of the Mogollon culture. The TJ Ruin, for example, is a Classic Mimbres phase pueblo, however the cliff dwellings are Tularosa phase. The Hueco Tanks State Historic Site is approximately 32 mi (51 km) northeast of El Paso, Texas.[15]

Mimbres branch edit

 
Looking out from one of the Gila Cliff cave dwellings

Mimbres may, depending on its context, refer to a tradition within a subregion of the Mogollon culture area (the Mimbres branch or the Mimbres Mogollon) or to an interval of time, the "Classic Mimbres phase" (also known as the "Mimbres culture"; 1000–1130 CE, roughly) within the Mimbres branch.

The Mimbres branch is a subset of the larger Mogollon culture area, centered in the Mimbres Valley and encompassing the upper Gila River and parts of the upper San Francisco River in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona as well as the Rio Grande Valley and its western tributaries in southwest New Mexico. Differentiation between the Mimbres branch and other areas of the Mogollon culture area is most apparent during the Three Circle (825–1000 CE roughly) and Classic Mimbres (1000–1150) phases, when architectural construction and black and white painted pottery assume locally distinctive forms and styles.[16] Classic Mimbres phase pottery is particularly famous pottery, and Classic Mimbres pottery designs (mainly drawn from the Swarts Ruin excavations of 1924–1927) were imitated on Santa Fe Railroad "Mimbreños" china dinnerware from 1936 to 1970.

 
Mimbres sub-group pot with geometric design

Three Circle phase (825/850–1000) pithouse villages within the Mimbres branch are distinctive. Houses are "quadrilateral", usually with sharply-angled corners; plastered floors and walls; and average about 17 m2 (180 sq ft) in floor surface area. Local pottery styles include early forms of Mimbres black and white ("boldface"), red-on-cream, and textured plainware. Large ceremonial structures (often called "kivas", a Hopi language term with specific meaning, has generally been applied to Northern Pueblo populations. It may be a poor term in discussing the Mogollon in their broadest contexts) are dug deeply into the ground and often include distinctive ceremonial features such as foot drums and log grooves.[17]

Classic Mimbres phase (AD 1000–1130) pueblos can be quite large, with some composed of clusters of communities, each containing up to 150 rooms and all grouped around an open plaza. Ceremonial structures were different from the previous pithouse periods. Most common were ceremonial rooms within roomblocks. Smaller square or rectangular semi-subterranean kivas with roof openings are also found.[17]) The largest Classic Mimbres sites are located near wide areas of well-watered floodplain suitable for maize agriculture, although smaller villages exist in upland areas

Mimbres pottery edit

 
Mimbres bowls at Stanford University

Ceramics, especially bowls, produced in the Mimbres region are distinct in style and painted with geometric designs and representational images of animals, people, and cultural icons in black paint on a white background. Some of these images suggest familiarity and relationships with cultures in northern and central Mexico. The elaborate decoration suggests the Mimbres Mogollons enjoyed a rich ceremonial life. Early Mimbres black-on-white pottery, called Mimbres Style I (formerly "Boldface Black-on-White"), is primarily characterized by bold geometric designs, although some early examples feature human and animal figures.

 
Mimbres black-on-white bowl, c. 1000–1150 CE at the California Academy of Sciences
 
Mountain lion effigy from 1300–1400, found in a protected cave in the general Mimbres area. Note the similarity to Zuni fetishes

Both geometric and figurative designs grew increasingly sophisticated and diverse over time. Classic Mimbres Black-on-White pottery (Style III) is characterized by elaborate geometric designs, refined brushwork, including very fine linework, and may include figures of one or more animals, humans, or other images bounded either by simple rim bands or by geometric decoration. Bird figures are common on Mimbres pots, including images such as turkeys feeding on insects and a man trapping birds in a garden. Fish figures are also depicted on Mimbres pottery, and some are marine species typically found in the Gulf of California.[18]

Mimbres bowls are often found associated with burials, typically with a hole punched out of the center, known as kill holes. Bowls with kill holes have been commonly found covering the face of the interred person. However, archaeological evidence suggests that most potteries were not buried with the dead.[19] Wear marks on the insides of bowls show they were actually used, not just produced as burial items. The distinctive style, which includes "diamond-shaped eyes and receding chins for human figures", created demand on the black market beginning in the 1960s, and vandalism and looting of gravesite took pace and has continued into the present day.[20]

Mimbres pottery is so distinctive that until fairly recently, the end of its production around 1130 to 1150 was equated with the "disappearance" of the people who made it. More recent research indicates that substantial depopulation did occur in the Mimbres Valley, but some remnant populations persisted there.[21] Both there and in surrounding areas, people changed their pottery styles to more closely resemble those of neighboring culture areas, and dispersed into other residential sites with different types of architecture.

Descendants edit

The area originally settled by the Mogollon culture was eventually filled by the unrelated Apache people, who moved in from the north. However, contemporary Pueblo people in the southwest claim descent from the Mogollon and other related cultures.[22][23] Archaeologists believe that the Western Pueblo villages of the Hopi and Zuni people are potentially related to the Mogollon.[24] Ceramics traditions and oral history link the Acoma, Hopi, and Zuni, to the Mogollon.[25]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Mogollon". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Flores Rangel, Juan Jose (2010). Historia de México I (in Spanish). Cengage Learning Editores. p. 81. ISBN 978-6074811667. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  3. ^ Brody et al. 23
  4. ^ Austin and Lujan 38
  5. ^ Serrano, Jesus (2019). Antologia de Historia de México I: Tercer Semestre Bachillerato General. p. 44.
  6. ^ a b c Peregine, Peter N.; et al. (2001). Encyclopedia of Prehistory: Volume 6: North America. Springer. p. 287. ISBN 978-0306462603. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  7. ^ a b c "Mogollon culture". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  8. ^ Haury, Emil W. The Mogollon Culture of Southwestern New Mexico. Medallion Papers No. XX. Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona, 1936.
  9. ^ Among others this research was conducted by teams based out of the Field Museum of Natural History, the Arizona State Museum at the University of Arizona, the Amerind Foundation, the Mimbres Foundation, and the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University. Recent or ongoing excavations have been conducted by teams from Arizona State University, the University of Arizona, University of Colorado Boulder, University of Texas Austin, University of Texas, San Antonio, University of New Mexico, New Mexico State University, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and University of Oklahoma.
  10. ^ Cordell, Linda, Archaeology of the Southwest, 2nd edition (San Diego: Academic Press, 1997), page number unknown
  11. ^ Fagan, Brian M. (2005). Ancient North America: The Archaeology of a Continent (4th ed.). New York: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28532-9. page number unknown
  12. ^ a b "Mogollon". Logan Museum of Anthropology. Beloit College. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  13. ^ Wheat, Joe Ben (1955). "Mogollon Culture Prior to A. D. 1000". Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology (10): 11: Table 1. JSTOR 25146631.
  14. ^ "Who or What Is Mogollon". Archaeology Southwest. May 2013. p. 1. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  15. ^ "Hueco Tanks State Park & Historic Site". Texas Parks & Wildlife. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  16. ^ Brody, et al.[page needed]
  17. ^ a b Lekson, Stephen H. Archaeology of the Mimbres Region, Southwestern New Mexico. BAR International Series 1466. Archaeopress, Oxford, 2006.
  18. ^ Jett, Stephen C.; Moyle, Peter B. (1986). "The Exotic Origins of Fishes Depicted on Prehistoric Mimbres Pottery from New Mexico". American Antiquity. 51 (4): 688–720. doi:10.2307/280860. ISSN 0002-7316. JSTOR 280860. S2CID 163873374.
  19. ^ Brody, J. J. (2005). Mimbres Painted Pottery. School of American Research. ISBN 9781930618664. OCLC 150349890.
  20. ^ Roberts, David. "Tracking a Vanished People Through the Sierra Madre". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2020-03-23.
  21. ^ Nelson, Margaret C. Abandonment, Continuity, and Reorganization: Mimbres During the 12th Century. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1999.
  22. ^ Skibo et al. 234
  23. ^ Kelly, Shannon. "Mogollon Rim, Arizona." 2007-12-13 at the Wayback Machine. Land Use History of North America: Colorado Plateau. Retrieved 29 jan 2013.
  24. ^ Gregory, David A., and David A. Willcox, eds. Zuni Origins: Toward a New Synthesis of Southwestern Archaeology. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 2007. ISBN 978-0816524860
  25. ^ Hutt, Sherry (25 October 2005). "Notice of Intent to Repatriate a Cultural Item: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Gila National Forest, Silver City, NM, and Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL". National NAGRA. Federal Register 70, no. 206. pp. 61, 837–61, 838. Retrieved 16 November 2015.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Brody, J. J. Mimbres Painted Pottery: Ancient Art of the American Southwest. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, 2005. ISBN 978-1-9306-1866-4.
  • Diehl, Michael W., and Steven A. LeBlanc. Early Pithouse Villages of the Mimbres Valley and Beyond: The McAnally and Thompson Sites in their Cultural and Ecological Contexts. Papers No. 83. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 2001. ISBN 0-87365-211-8.
  • Reid, Jefferson and Stephanie M. Whittlesey. Prehistory, Personality, and Place: Emil W. Haury and the Mogollon Controversy (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2010). Examines the controversy occasioned by the American archaeologist's identification of the Mogollon as a people distinct from their Pueblo and Hohokam neighbors.
  • Shafer, Harry J. Mimbres Archaeology at the NAN Ranch Ruin. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2004. ISBN 978-082632204-3.

External links edit

  • Firecracker Pueblo, a Jornada Mogollon pueblo in West Texas
  • Mogollan artwork, collection of the National Museum of the American Indian
  • Mimbres Pottery at the Weisman Art Museum
  • Mimbres pottery at Arizona State University

mogollon, culture, archaeological, culture, native, american, peoples, from, southern, mexico, arizona, northern, sonora, chihuahua, western, texas, northern, part, this, region, oasisamerica, while, southern, span, known, aridoamerica, major, prehistoric, arc. Mogollon culture ˌ m oʊ ɡ e ˈ j oʊ n 1 is an archaeological culture of Native American peoples from Southern New Mexico and Arizona Northern Sonora and Chihuahua and Western Texas The northern part of this region is Oasisamerica 2 3 4 while the southern span of the Mogollon culture is known as Aridoamerica 5 Map of major prehistoric archaeological cultures in the southwestern United States and northwestern MexicoThe Mogollon culture is one of the most well known prehistoric Southwestern cultural divisions of the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico 6 The culture flourished from the archaic period c 200 CE to either 1450 7 or 1540 CE when the Spanish arrived 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Cultural traits 3 History 3 1 Developmental periods 4 Sites 5 Mimbres branch 5 1 Mimbres pottery 6 Descendants 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology edit nbsp The rock wall of the canyon the Cueva de las Ventanas cliff dwelling is located left of center above a debris covered cone The name Mogollon comes from the Mogollon Mountains 7 which were named after Don Juan Ignacio Flores Mogollon Spanish Governor of New Spain including what is now New Mexico from 1712 to 1715 The name was chosen and defined in 1936 by archaeologist Emil W Haury 6 Cultural traits edit nbsp Macaw Pens at Paquime ChihuahuaThe distinct facets of Mogollon culture were recorded by Emil Haury based on his excavations in 1931 1933 and 1934 at the Harris Village in Mimbres New Mexico and the Mogollon Village on the upper San Francisco River in New Mexico 8 Haury recognized differences between architecture and artifacts from these sites as compared with sites in the Hohokam archaeological culture area and the Ancestral Pueblo archaeological culture area Key differences included brown paste coil and scrape pottery deeply excavated semi subterranean pit houses and different ceremonial architecture Eight decades of subsequent research have confirmed Haury s initial findings 9 Today the distinctiveness of the Mogollon pottery manufacture architectural construction ground stone tool design habits and customs of residence location and mortuary treatment is generally recognized 10 11 The earliest Mogollon pithouses were deep and either circular or oval shaped Over time Mogollon people built rectangular houses with rounded corners with them not as deep Their villages also had kivas or round semi subterranean ceremonial structures 12 History edit nbsp Man and crane Mangas Mimbres pot c 1000 CE showing figure ground reversalMogollon origins remain a matter of speculation One theory is that the Mogollon emerged from a Desert Archaic tradition linked to the first late Pleistocene prehistoric human occupations of the area around 9000 BC In this theory cultural distinctions emerged in the larger region when populations grew enough to establish villages and larger communities An alternative theory is that the Mogollon descended from migrants from farming regions in central Mexico around 3500 BC and displaced descendants of the Desert Archaic peoples A third theory is that Mogollon descended from the Cochise culture 12 the early pithouse late Desert Archaic who had arrived around 5000 BC and were not linked to the earlier inhabitants but adopted farming from Central Mexico citation needed Initially the Mogollon were foragers who augmented their subsistence by farming But during the first millennium CE dependence on farming probably increased Water control features are common among Mimbres branch sites from the 10th through 12th centuries CE The nature and density of Mogollon villages changed over time The earliest villages consist of several pithouses houses dug into the ground with stick and thatch roofs supported by a network of posts and beams and faced on the exterior with earth Villages grew and by the 11th century surface pueblos became common They had ground level houses with walls of rock and earth and roofs supported by post and beam networks In the 13th and 14th centuries cliff dwellings became common Research on Mogollon culture has led to the recognition of regional variants of which the most widely recognized in popular media is the Mimbres culture Mimbres Mogollon branch Others include the Jornada Forestdale Reserve Point of Pines or Black River San Simon and Upper Gila branches Although the Mimbres culture is the best known subset of the Mogollon archaeological culture area the entire Mogollon occupation spans a greater interval of time roughly one millennium and a vastly larger area than is encompassed by the Mimbres culture Developmental periods edit nbsp Kinishba Ruins near Fort Apache ArizonaMogollon culture is often divided into five periods proposed by Joe Ben Wheat in 1955 Mogollon 1 200 c 400 CE Pine Lawn Georgetown Penasco Circle Prairie and Hilltop phases Mogollon 2 c 400 650 CE San Lorenzo Dos Cabezas Circle Prairie and Cottonwood phases Mogollon 3 650 850 CE San Francisco Pinaleno Galiuro Forestdale and San Marcial phases Mogollon 4 850 1000 CE Three Circle Cerros Corduroy Mesilla and Capitan phases Mogollon 5 1000 1450 CE including the Classic Mimbres phrase 1050 1200 CE Mangus Mimbres Encinas Reserve Tularosa Dona Anna Three Rivers El Paso and San Anders phases 7 13 Another way to divide Mogollon history is in three periods of housing types Early Pithouse 200 550 CE Late Pithouse 550 1000 CE Mogollon Pueblo 1000 1450 CE 14 Sites editArchaeological sites attributed to the Mogollon culture are found in the Gila Wilderness Mimbres River Valley along the Upper Gila river Paquime and Hueco Tanks an area of low mountains between the Franklin Mountains to the west and the Hueco Mountains to the east and Three Rivers Petroglyph Site 17 miles north of Tularosa New Mexico Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in southwestern New Mexico was established as a national monument on 16 November 1907 It contains several archaeological sites attributed to the Mimbres branch At the headwaters of the Gila Mimbres populations adjoined another more northern branch of the Mogollon culture The TJ Ruin for example is a Classic Mimbres phase pueblo however the cliff dwellings are Tularosa phase The Hueco Tanks State Historic Site is approximately 32 mi 51 km northeast of El Paso Texas 15 Mimbres branch edit nbsp Looking out from one of the Gila Cliff cave dwellingsMimbres may depending on its context refer to a tradition within a subregion of the Mogollon culture area the Mimbres branch or the Mimbres Mogollon or to an interval of time the Classic Mimbres phase also known as the Mimbres culture 1000 1130 CE roughly within the Mimbres branch The Mimbres branch is a subset of the larger Mogollon culture area centered in the Mimbres Valley and encompassing the upper Gila River and parts of the upper San Francisco River in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona as well as the Rio Grande Valley and its western tributaries in southwest New Mexico Differentiation between the Mimbres branch and other areas of the Mogollon culture area is most apparent during the Three Circle 825 1000 CE roughly and Classic Mimbres 1000 1150 phases when architectural construction and black and white painted pottery assume locally distinctive forms and styles 16 Classic Mimbres phase pottery is particularly famous pottery and Classic Mimbres pottery designs mainly drawn from the Swarts Ruin excavations of 1924 1927 were imitated on Santa Fe Railroad Mimbrenos china dinnerware from 1936 to 1970 nbsp Mimbres sub group pot with geometric designThree Circle phase 825 850 1000 pithouse villages within the Mimbres branch are distinctive Houses are quadrilateral usually with sharply angled corners plastered floors and walls and average about 17 m2 180 sq ft in floor surface area Local pottery styles include early forms of Mimbres black and white boldface red on cream and textured plainware Large ceremonial structures often called kivas a Hopi language term with specific meaning has generally been applied to Northern Pueblo populations It may be a poor term in discussing the Mogollon in their broadest contexts are dug deeply into the ground and often include distinctive ceremonial features such as foot drums and log grooves 17 Classic Mimbres phase AD 1000 1130 pueblos can be quite large with some composed of clusters of communities each containing up to 150 rooms and all grouped around an open plaza Ceremonial structures were different from the previous pithouse periods Most common were ceremonial rooms within roomblocks Smaller square or rectangular semi subterranean kivas with roof openings are also found 17 The largest Classic Mimbres sites are located near wide areas of well watered floodplain suitable for maize agriculture although smaller villages exist in upland areas Mimbres pottery edit nbsp Mimbres bowls at Stanford UniversityCeramics especially bowls produced in the Mimbres region are distinct in style and painted with geometric designs and representational images of animals people and cultural icons in black paint on a white background Some of these images suggest familiarity and relationships with cultures in northern and central Mexico The elaborate decoration suggests the Mimbres Mogollons enjoyed a rich ceremonial life Early Mimbres black on white pottery called Mimbres Style I formerly Boldface Black on White is primarily characterized by bold geometric designs although some early examples feature human and animal figures nbsp Mimbres black on white bowl c 1000 1150 CE at the California Academy of Sciences nbsp Mountain lion effigy from 1300 1400 found in a protected cave in the general Mimbres area Note the similarity to Zuni fetishesBoth geometric and figurative designs grew increasingly sophisticated and diverse over time Classic Mimbres Black on White pottery Style III is characterized by elaborate geometric designs refined brushwork including very fine linework and may include figures of one or more animals humans or other images bounded either by simple rim bands or by geometric decoration Bird figures are common on Mimbres pots including images such as turkeys feeding on insects and a man trapping birds in a garden Fish figures are also depicted on Mimbres pottery and some are marine species typically found in the Gulf of California 18 Mimbres bowls are often found associated with burials typically with a hole punched out of the center known as kill holes Bowls with kill holes have been commonly found covering the face of the interred person However archaeological evidence suggests that most potteries were not buried with the dead 19 Wear marks on the insides of bowls show they were actually used not just produced as burial items The distinctive style which includes diamond shaped eyes and receding chins for human figures created demand on the black market beginning in the 1960s and vandalism and looting of gravesite took pace and has continued into the present day 20 Mimbres pottery is so distinctive that until fairly recently the end of its production around 1130 to 1150 was equated with the disappearance of the people who made it More recent research indicates that substantial depopulation did occur in the Mimbres Valley but some remnant populations persisted there 21 Both there and in surrounding areas people changed their pottery styles to more closely resemble those of neighboring culture areas and dispersed into other residential sites with different types of architecture Descendants editThe area originally settled by the Mogollon culture was eventually filled by the unrelated Apache people who moved in from the north However contemporary Pueblo people in the southwest claim descent from the Mogollon and other related cultures 22 23 Archaeologists believe that the Western Pueblo villages of the Hopi and Zuni people are potentially related to the Mogollon 24 Ceramics traditions and oral history link the Acoma Hopi and Zuni to the Mogollon 25 See also editList of dwellings of Pueblo peoples La Junta Indians Mogollon Rim Patayan Prehistoric Southwestern cultural divisions Swarts Ruin Cuarenta Casas Casas Grandes or Paquime Chihuahua Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument Kinishba Ruins a National Historic Landmark in the Fort Apache Indian ReservationNotes edit Mogollon Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Flores Rangel Juan Jose 2010 Historia de Mexico I in Spanish Cengage Learning Editores p 81 ISBN 978 6074811667 Retrieved 16 November 2015 Brody et al 23 Austin and Lujan 38 Serrano Jesus 2019 Antologia de Historia de Mexico I Tercer Semestre Bachillerato General p 44 a b c Peregine Peter N et al 2001 Encyclopedia of Prehistory Volume 6 North America Springer p 287 ISBN 978 0306462603 Retrieved 16 November 2015 a b c Mogollon culture Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 16 November 2015 Haury Emil W The Mogollon Culture of Southwestern New Mexico Medallion Papers No XX Gila Pueblo Globe Arizona 1936 Among others this research was conducted by teams based out of the Field Museum of Natural History the Arizona State Museum at the University of Arizona the Amerind Foundation the Mimbres Foundation and the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University Recent or ongoing excavations have been conducted by teams from Arizona State University the University of Arizona University of Colorado Boulder University of Texas Austin University of Texas San Antonio University of New Mexico New Mexico State University University of Nevada Las Vegas and University of Oklahoma Cordell Linda Archaeology of the Southwest 2nd edition San Diego Academic Press 1997 page number unknown Fagan Brian M 2005 Ancient North America The Archaeology of a Continent 4th ed New York Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28532 9 page number unknown a b Mogollon Logan Museum of Anthropology Beloit College Retrieved 16 November 2015 Wheat Joe Ben 1955 Mogollon Culture Prior to A D 1000 Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology 10 11 Table 1 JSTOR 25146631 Who or What Is Mogollon Archaeology Southwest May 2013 p 1 Retrieved 16 November 2015 Hueco Tanks State Park amp Historic Site Texas Parks amp Wildlife Retrieved 16 November 2015 Brody et al page needed a b Lekson Stephen H Archaeology of the Mimbres Region Southwestern New Mexico BAR International Series 1466 Archaeopress Oxford 2006 Jett Stephen C Moyle Peter B 1986 The Exotic Origins of Fishes Depicted on Prehistoric Mimbres Pottery from New Mexico American Antiquity 51 4 688 720 doi 10 2307 280860 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 280860 S2CID 163873374 Brody J J 2005 Mimbres Painted Pottery School of American Research ISBN 9781930618664 OCLC 150349890 Roberts David Tracking a Vanished People Through the Sierra Madre Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 2020 03 23 Nelson Margaret C Abandonment Continuity and Reorganization Mimbres During the 12th Century University of Arizona Press Tucson 1999 Skibo et al 234 Kelly Shannon Mogollon Rim Arizona Archived 2007 12 13 at the Wayback Machine Land Use History of North America Colorado Plateau Retrieved 29 jan 2013 Gregory David A and David A Willcox eds Zuni Origins Toward a New Synthesis of Southwestern Archaeology University of Arizona Press Tucson 2007 ISBN 978 0816524860 Hutt Sherry 25 October 2005 Notice of Intent to Repatriate a Cultural Item U S Department of Agriculture Forest Service Gila National Forest Silver City NM and Field Museum of Natural History Chicago IL National NAGRA Federal Register 70 no 206 pp 61 837 61 838 Retrieved 16 November 2015 References editAlfredo Lopez Austin and Leonardo Lopez Lujan Mexico s Indigenous Past Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 8061 3214 3 Fewkes J Walter The Mimbres Art and Archaeology Avanyu Publishing Albuquerque New Mexico republished 1993 ISBN 0 936755 10 5 Brody J J Steven Le Blanc and Catherine J Scott Mimbres Pottery Ancient Art of the American Southwest Essays New York Hudson Hills 1983 ISBN 978 0 9339 2046 0 Noble David Grant Ancient Ruins of the Southwest Northland Publishing Company Flagstaff Arizona 1995 ISBN 0 87358 530 5 Powell Marti Valli S and Patricia A Gilman Mimbres Society University of Arizona Press Tucson 2006 Plog Stephen Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest Thames and Hudson London England 1997 ISBN 0 500 27939 X Skibo James M Michael W Graves Miriam T Stark Archaeological Anthropology Perspectives on Method and Theory Tucson University of Arizona Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 8165 2517 1 Woosley Anne I and Allan J McIntyre Mimbres Mogollon Archaeology Charles C Di Peso s Excavations at Wind Mountain University of New Mexico Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 8263 1674 5Further reading editBrody J J Mimbres Painted Pottery Ancient Art of the American Southwest Santa Fe NM School of American Research Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 9306 1866 4 Diehl Michael W and Steven A LeBlanc Early Pithouse Villages of the Mimbres Valley and Beyond The McAnally and Thompson Sites in their Cultural and Ecological Contexts Papers No 83 Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts 2001 ISBN 0 87365 211 8 Reid Jefferson and Stephanie M Whittlesey Prehistory Personality and Place Emil W Haury and the Mogollon Controversy Tucson University of Arizona Press 2010 Examines the controversy occasioned by the American archaeologist s identification of the Mogollon as a people distinct from their Pueblo and Hohokam neighbors Shafer Harry J Mimbres Archaeology at the NAN Ranch Ruin Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2004 ISBN 978 082632204 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mogollon culture People of the Colorado Plateau Firecracker Pueblo a Jornada Mogollon pueblo in West Texas Mogollan artwork collection of the National Museum of the American Indian Mimbres Pottery at the Weisman Art Museum Mimbres pottery at Arizona State University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mogollon culture amp oldid 1208969779 Mimbres pottery, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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