- Plainweave Cloth
Description: Plainweave cloth with nuts, seeds, bone, hair, and fiber resting on a large plainware sherd. Dimensions: Unknown. Provenience: Unknown. Collection: WACC, Tonto National Monument (Catalog No. TONT 2562). - Plainweave Cloth, Alternate View
Description: Plainweave cloth with nuts, seeds, bone, hair, and fiber resting on a large plainware sherd. Dimensions: Unknown. Provenience: Unknown. Collection: WACC, Tonto National Monument (Catalog No. TONT 2562). - Tonto Polychrome Jar Neck
Description: Tonto Polychrome jar neck. Dimensions: Diam 17.0 cm. Provenience: Upper Ruin. Collection: WACC, Tonto National Monument (Catalog No. TONT 1332). - Pinto Polychrome Bowl Fragment
Description: Pinto Polychrome bowl fragment. Dimensions: H 12.0, Diam 26.0 cm. Provenience: Unknown. Collection: WACC, Tonto National Monument (Catalog No. TONT 1280). - Cochiti/Santo Domingo Pot
View 3D Model Description: Polychrome pot with elk/deer design, probably from Cochiti Pueblo or Santa Domingo, ca. 1890. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. 17423). - Cochiti/Santo Domingo Pot, Alternate View
View 3D Model Description: Polychrome pot with elk/deer design, probably from Cochiti Pueblo or Santa Domingo, ca. 1890. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. 17423). - Cochiti/Santa Domingo Pot, Alternate View
View 3D Model Description: Polychrome pot with elk/deer design, probably from Cochiti Pueblo or Santa Domingo, ca. 1890. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. 17423). - Cochiti/Santa Domingo Pot, Detail
View 3D Model Description: Polychrome pot with elk/deer design, probably from Cochiti Pueblo or Santa Domingo, ca. 1890. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. 17423). - Hopi Bowl, Alternate View
View 3D Model Description: Hopi polychrome bowl made in the 1960s. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. GRCA 15560). - Cochiti Pueblo Dough Bowl
View 3D model Description: Large Cochiti Pueblo polychrome dough bowl, ca. late 1800s or early 1900s; reconstructed. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. GRCA 82410). - Tusayan Corrugated Jar
Description: Tusayan Corrugated cooking jar. Fully restored with plaster replacing missing sherds. Dimensions: Unknown Collection: Grand Canyon National Park (Catalog No. GRCA 15262). - San Carlos Red-on-brown jar
This jar bears the color scheme and a painted decoration characteristic of Hohokam pottery found throughout southern Arizona, but clues indicating how it was made and the raw materials used to make it reveal that it was produced in the Safford Basin during the 1300s. - Gila Polychrome Eccentric Jar
This jar is especially interesting, as both its shape and its painted decoration indicate a strong connection between its maker and the ancient people who inhabited the Kayenta area of northeastern Arizona. Archaeologists refer to this vessel form a “submarine pot” or a “football pot” and assume that such objects were used as canteens. Vessels of this shape were absent from central and southern Arizona before the depopulation of parts of northeastern Arizona by the people archaeologists refer to as the Kayenta culture. When Kayenta groups moved southward, they contributed much to the ceramic tradition associated with the Salado archaeological phenomenon. The northerners brought their native vessel shapes, vessel manufacturing techniques, and also painted design styles. The vessel in this photograph bears the characteristic “Kayenta bat-wing design” brought to southern Arizona by ancient immigrants. - Black-on-white pitcher with a design characteristic of the Mogollon Rim region
This jar has a brown paste, indicating it probably was made locally in the Safford Basin, but its white slip, black paint, and broad-line design imitate Snowflake Black-on-white pottery from the Mogollon Rim region to the north. - Black-on-white pitcher with a design characteristic of the Mogollon Rim region
This jar has a brown paste, indicating it probably was made locally in the Safford Basin, but its white slip, black paint, and broad-line design imitate Snowflake Black-on-white pottery from the Mogollon Rim region to the north.