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- Fourmile Polychrome Bowl, Alternate View
Description: This bowl is currently identified as a Fourmile Polychrome vessel, but may actually be Heshotuathla Polychrome, or possibly Pinedale Polychrome. Collection: Museum of Northern Arizona. - Fourmile Polychrome Bowl
Description: This bowl is currently identified as a Fourmile Polychrome vessel, but may actually be Heshotuathla Polychrome, or possibly Pinedale Polychrome. Collection: Museum of Northern Arizona. - Pinedale Polychrome Spindle Whorl
Description: Pinedale Polychrome spindle whorl. Dimensions: Diam 5.0 cm. Provenience: Upper Ruin, Room 17, Subfloor, Floor B, E Wall. Collection: WACC, Tonto National Monument (Catalog No. 1441). - Heshotauthla/Pinedale Polychrome Bowl, Alternate View
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan, Atsinna Pueblo (A.D. 1275 – mid-1300s) Description: Pinedale Polychrome bowl with a black-on-red interior and black- and white-on-red exterior (catalog description). Barbara Mills, Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, says this is Pinedale-style, but locally made. She says she would need to see the exterior, whether the exterior designs are units or bands (a photo of the exterior was not available at the time Dr. Mills was consulted). According to Dr. Mills, it could be Pinedale Polychrome, although it’s unusual; it’s probably another Heshotauthla. Deborah Huntley, of the Center for Desert Archaeology, identified this bowl as Heshotauthla Polychrome, a type unique to the greater Zuni region, including the El Morro Valley. Dimensions: H 12.0, DIAM 29.0 CM. Provenience: LA 99 (Atsinna Pueblo), Rm 2, Lower Fill (3 sherds from upper fill). Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Worked Sherds and Vessel Fragments
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan, Atsinna Pueblo (A.D. 1275 – mid-1300s) Description: Collection of worked sherds and vessel fragments, including a reconstructed Pinedale Polychrome jar neck and shoulder with flaked and ground edges (10 sherds); a black-on red jar neck ground along the rim edge; a cream-slipped sherd with the curved edge ground; a grayware sherd with the curved edge ground, and a red-on-cream sherd with the curved edge ground. Provenience: LA 99 (Atsinna Pueblo), Rm 6, Upper fill. Collection: National Park Service, El Morro. - Cross Hatchures