- Floyd Black-on-gray
This type of pottery (Floyd Black-on-gray) was made between A.D. 800 and 1025 and is associated with the Cohonina archaeological culture. - Floyd Black-on-gray, Close View
This photograph shows the broken edge of a piece of Floyd Black-on-gray pottery. The larger pieces that look like sand are called temper, which is used to strengthen ceramic vessels. Temper also helps archaeologists identify ceramic wares and types, and in some cases, can be used to determine where the vessel itself was made. - Floyd Black-on-gray
Description: Floyd Black-on-gray type sherds originally published in Colton, Harold S. (1958) Pottery Types of the Southwest: Wares 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18: Revised Descriptions, Alameda Brown Ware, Tizon Brown Ware, Lower Colorado Buff Ware, Prescott Gray Ware, San Francisco Mountain Gray Ware. Museum of Northern Arizona Ceramic Series No. 3D, Flagstaff. - Triangle
- Triangle with Pendent Dots
- Floyd Black-on-gray Sherds
Description: Floyd Black-on-gray sherds. Collection: Northern Arizona University Ceramic Laboratory Comparative Collection.