Home / ID Guides / Pottery / Zuni Wares 40
- Interlocking Triangles with Hooks
- Zuni Bowl
Description: Zuni bowl from the Museum of Northern Arizona gift shop. Originally acquired from the CG Wallace Collection in the 1960s. Made circa 1925. Design is comprised of geometric shapes painted in brownish/orange and dark brown on white. Dimensions: 6 in (Diam), 2.5 in (H). Collection: On display at Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument (catalog card). - Pinnawa Red-on-white Bowl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan, North Atsinna (contemporaneous with Atsinna Pueblo, A.D. 1275 – mid-1300s) Description: Reconstructed Pinnawa (?) Red-on-white bowl. Provenience: LA 430 (North Ruin, also called North Atsinna), Test 1, 50-75 CM. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Pitcher, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: Plainware pitcher with a round base and vertical strap handle. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, describes this vessel as probably nineteenth or early twentieth century Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Zuni Bowl
Description: Zuni bowl from the Museum of Northern Arizona gift shop. Originally acquired from the CG Wallace Collection in the 1960s. Made circa 1925. Design is comprised of geometric shapes painted in brownish/orange and dark brown on white. Dimensions: 6 in (Diam), 2.5 in (H). Collection: On display at Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument (catalog card). - Pinnawa Red-on-white Bowl, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan, North Atsinna (contemporaneous with Atsinna Pueblo, A.D. 1275 – mid-1300s) Description: Reconstructed Pinnawa (?) Red-on-white bowl. Provenience: LA 430 (North Ruin, also called North Atsinna), Test 1, 50-75 CM. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Zuni Bowl
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: This bowl is described as a plainware “thunder-mug” with vertical strap handles in the artifact catalog, and listed as possibly historic. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this pot as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Zuni Bowl, Alternate View 3
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: This bowl is described as a plainware “thunder-mug” with vertical strap handles in the artifact catalog, and listed as possibly historic. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this pot as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Pitcher
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: Plainware pitcher with a round base and vertical strap handle. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, describes this vessel as probably nineteenth or early twentieth century Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Zuni Plainware Bowl, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: Red-colored plainware bowl with a flared rim. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this bowl as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Zuni Bowl, Alternate View 2
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: This bowl is described as a plainware “thunder-mug” with vertical strap handles in the artifact catalog, and listed as possibly historic. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this pot as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Historic Zuni Bowl, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: This bowl is described as a plainware “thunder-mug” with vertical strap handles in the artifact catalog, and listed as possibly historic. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this pot as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Kwakina Polychrome Ladle
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan, Atsinna Pueblo (A.D. 1275 – mid-1300s) Description: Kwakina Polychrome ladle with a snake design on the handle and a loop in the handle end (catalog description). Deborah Huntley, of the Center for Desert Archaeology, agrees this ladle as the early Zuni Glaze Ware type Kwakina Polychrome. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, also says this is Kwanika Polychrome, but suggests the paint may have been done by a child because the line execution is not very good. Provenience: LA 99 (Atsinna Pueblo), Rm 7, Lower fill. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Zuni Plainware Bowl
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: Red-colored plainware bowl with a flared rim. Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, identified this bowl as historic Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Zuni Bowl, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Historic, Native American Description: Plainware bowl with a polished exterior; identified by Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, as probably nineteenth or early twentieth century Zuni. Provenience: In or near El Morro National Monument. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro.