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- W2485759002 abstract "ABSTRACTOne of the most widely held tenets in southwestern archaeology is the equation that brown ware equals Mogollon and gray ware and white ware equal Anasazi. Along the Puerco River in Arizona from around Navajo to the Petrified Forest, Anasazi sites dating from the Basketmaker III to the late Pueblo II period have ceramic assemblages of brown wares, red wares and white wares, in which the proportion of brown wares to white wares is remarkably high. In this area a developmental sequence can be traced from sand-tempered plain polished brown through the addition of sherd temper and red slips to black-painted red wares. A similar sequence is outlined for the Zuni area. I suggest that the red wares developed directly out of the brown wares and that this brown ware and red ware tradition was an integral part of Anasazi ceramic developments, not the result of Mogollon influences." @default.
- W2485759002 created "2016-08-23" @default.
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- W2485759002 date "1991-01-01" @default.
- W2485759002 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2485759002 title "Brown Ware and Red Ware Pottery: An Anasazi Ceramic Tradition" @default.
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- W2485759002 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/00231940.1991.11758161" @default.
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