Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T16:59:38.755Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Kansas and the Postrevolt Puebloan Diaspora: Ceramic Evidence from the Scott County Pueblo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Margaret E. Beck
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, 114 Macbride Hall, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242-1322 ([email protected]; [email protected])
Sarah Trabert
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, 114 Macbride Hall, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242-1322 ([email protected]; [email protected])

Abstract

Native American communities underwent significant upheaval, ethnic blending, and restructuring in the Spanish colonial period. One archaeological example is the appearance of a seven-room stone and adobe structure in western Kansas, known as the Scott County Pueblo (14SC1). Previous researchers used Spanish documents to attribute the site to Puebloan refugees from Taos or Picuris in the mid- to late 1600s. Here we examine the Smithsonian and Kansas Historical Society ceramic collections for evidence of Puebloan women at the site. We find a high proportion of bowls at 14SC1, suggesting the maintenance of Puebloan food-preparation and-serving patterns, as well as some vessels apparently made by Puebloan potters in western Kansas. We cannot falsify our null hypothesis that the Scott County Pueblo included people from one or more northern Rio Grande pueblos during the mid-1600s, or A.D. 1696–1706, or both.

Resumen

Resumen

El Pueblo Scott County (14SC1) es un sitio del período histórico en la parte occidental de Kansas con un pueblo de piedra y adobe de siete cuartos. Investigadores anteriores utilizaron documentos españoles para atribuir el sitio a los refugiados Pue-blanos de Toas o Picuris al mediados a finales de los años 1600. Aquí examinamos las colecciones cerámicas del Smithsonian y de la Sociedad Histórica de Kansas para evidencia de mujeres Pueblanas en el sitio. Encontramos una proporción alta de cuencos en 14SC1, lo que sugiere el mantenimiento de patrones Pueblanos para la preparación y el servicio de alimentos. También encontramos algunas vasijas hechas al parecer por alfareros Pueblanos en la parte occidental de Kansas. Nosotros no podemos falsificar nuestra hipótesis nula que el Pueblo Scott County incluyó personas de uno o más pueblos del Río Grande del norte a mediados de los 1600s o 1696–1796 d.C, o ambos, aunque el sitio puede reflejar agitación posterior, mezcla étnica y la reestructuración de comunidades indígenas americanos en el período colonial español.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Adair, Mary J. 1992 Plant Remains from El Quartelejo: Subsistence Change or Continuity during the Protohistoric Period. Paper presented at the 50th Annual Plains Anthropological Conference, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Adler, Michael A., and Dick, Herbert W. (editors) 1999 Picuris Pueblo Through Time: Eight Centuries of Change at a Northern Rio Grande Pueblo. William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University, Dallas.Google Scholar
Arnold, Dean E. 1985 Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Atalay, Sonya, and Hastorf, Christine A. 2006 Food, Meals, and Daily Activities: Food Habitus at Neolithic Çatalhöyük. American Antiquity 71:283319.Google Scholar
Baugh, Timothy G. 1991 Ecology and Exchange: The Dynamics of Plains-Pueblo Interaction. In Farmers, Hunters, and Colonists: Interaction between the Southwest and the Southern Plains, edited by Katherine A. Spielmann, pp. 107127. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baugh, Timothy G., and Eddy, Frank W. 1987 Rethinking Apachean Ceramics: The 1985 Southern Athapaskan Ceramics Conference. American Antiquity 52:793798.Google Scholar
Beck, Margaret E. 2005 Ceramics. In Material Culture Studies, edited by Edgar K. Huber and Carla R. Van West, pp. 21.121.105. Archaeological Data Recovery in the New Mexico Transportation Corridor and First Five-Year Permit Area, Fence Lake Coal Mine Project, Catron County, New Mexico, Vol. 2; Technical Series 84. Statistical Research, Inc., Tucson.Google Scholar
Beck, Margaret E. 2006 Midden Ceramic Assemblage Formation: An Ethnoarchaeological Case Study from Kalinga, Philippines. American Antiquity 71:2751.Google Scholar
Beck, Margaret E. 2009 Residential Mobility and Ceramic Exchange: Ethnography and Archaeological Implications. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 16:320356.Google Scholar
Bernardini, Wesley 2005 Hopi Oral Tradition and the Archaeology of Identity. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1984 Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1990 The Logic of Practice. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California.Google Scholar
Brooks, James 2002 Captives and Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Brunswig, Robert H. Jr. 1995 Apachean Ceramics in Eastern Colorado: Current Data and New Directions. In Archaeological Pottery of Colorado: Ceramic Clues to the Prehistoric and Protohistoric Lives of the State's Native Peoples, edited by Robert H. Brunswig, Jr., Bruce Bradley, and Susan M. Chandler, pp. 172207. CCPA Occasional Papers No. 2. Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Butler, Todd L. 1997 Lithic Material Availability, Quality, and Selection in the Protohistoric High Plains as Seen from the Scott County Pueblo. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Cameron, Catherine 2011 Captives and Culture Change. Current Anthropology 52:169209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Catherine 2013 How People Moved among Ancient Societies: Broadening the View. American Anthropologist 115:218231.Google Scholar
Carlson, Roy L. 1965 Eighteenth Century Navajo Fortresses of the Gobernador District. Museum Series in Anthropology Vol. 10. University of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Carr, Christopher 1995a Building a Unified Middle-Range Theory of Artifact Design: Historical Perspectives and Tactics. In Style, Society, and Person: Archaeological and Ethnological Perspectives, edited by Christopher Carr and Jill E. Neitzel, pp. 151170. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Carr, Christopher 1995b A Unified Middle-Range Theory of Artifact Design. In Style, Society, and Person: Archaeological and Ethnological Perspectives, edited by Christopher Carr and Jill E. Neitzel, pp. 171258. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Champe, John L. 1949 White Cat Village. American Antiquity 14:285292.Google Scholar
Clark, Jeffery J. 2001 Tracking Prehistoric Migrations: Pueblo Settlers among the Tonto Basin Hohokam. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona No. 65. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Colton, Harold Sellers 1956 Pottery Types of the Southwest. Museum of Northern Arizona Ceramic Series, No. 3C. Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Colton, Harold Sellers, and Hargrave, Lyndon Lane 1937 Handbook of Northern Arizona Pottery Wares. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin No. 11. Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Crown, Patricia L. 2000a Gendered Tasks, Power, and Prestige in the Prehispanic American Southwest. In Women and Men in the Prehispanic Southwest: Labor, Power, and Prestige, edited by Patricia L. Crown, pp. 341. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Crown, Patricia L. 2000b Women's Role in Changing Cuisine. In Women and Men in the Prehispanic Southwest: Labor, Power, and Prestige, edited by Patricia L. Crown, pp. 221266. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Cushing, Frank Hamilton 1920 Zuñi Breadstuff. Indian Notes and Monographs Vol. 8. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Dick, Herbert W. 1965 Picuris Pueblo Excavations. Report on file with the Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southwest Region, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Dick, Herbert W. 1968 Six Historic Pottery Types from Spanish Sites in New Mexico. In Collected Papers in Honor of Lyndon Lane Hargrove, edited by Albert H. Schroeder, pp. 7794. Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico 1. Museum of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Dick, Herbert W., and Adler, Michael A. 1999 Introduction. In Picuris Pueblo Through Time: Eight Centuries of Change at a Northern Rio Grande Pueblo, edited by Michael A. Adler and Herbert W. Dick, pp. 115. William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University, Dallas.Google Scholar
Dick, Herbert W., Wolfman, Daniel, Schaafsma, Curtis, and Adler, Michael A. Dick, Herbert W. 1999 Prehistoric and Early Historic Architecture and Ceramics at Picuris. In Picuris Pueblo Through Time: Eight Centuries of Change at a Northern Rio Grande Pueblo, edited by Michael A. Adler and Herbert W. Dick, pp. 4399. William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University, Dallas.Google Scholar
Dietler, Michael, and Herbich, Ingrid 1998 Habitus, Techniques, Style: An Integrated Approach to the Social Understanding of Material Culture and Boundaries. In The Archaeology of Social Boundaries, edited by Miriam T. Stark, pp. 232263. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Dozier, Edward 1954 The Hopi-Tewa of Arizona. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Eckert, Suzanne L. 2006 The Production and Distribution of Glaze-Painted Pottery in the Pueblo Southwest: A Synthesis. In The Social Life of Pots: Glaze Wares and Cultural Dynamics in the Southwest, AD 1250–1680, edited by Judith A. Habicht-Mauche, Suzanne L. Eckert, and Deborah L. Huntley, pp. 3459. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eiselt, B. Sunday 2006 The Emergence of Jicarilla Apache Enclave Economy During the 19th Century in Northern New Mexico. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Eiselt, Bemice Sunday, and Ford, Richard I. 2007 Sangre de Cristo Micaceous Clays: Geochemical Indices for Source and Raw Material Distribution, Past and Present. Kiva 73:219238.Google Scholar
Ellis, Florence Hawley 1964 Archaeological History of Nambe Pueblo, 14th Century to the Present. American Antiquity 30(1):3442.Google Scholar
Ellis, Florence Hawley, and Brody, J. J. 1964 Ceramic Stratigraphy and Tribal History at Taos Pueblo. American Antiquity 29:316327.Google Scholar
Ferg, Alan 2004 An Introduction to Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache Pottery. Arizona Archaeologist No. 35. Arizona Archaeological Society, Phoenix.Google Scholar
Ferg, Alan, and Kessel, William B. 1987 Subsistence. In Western Apache Material Culture: The Goodwin and Guenther Collections, edited by Alan Ferg, pp. 4987. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Ferguson, Leland G. 1992 Uncommon Ground: Archaeology and Early African America, 1650–1800. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ferguson, T. J., and Preucel, Robert W. 2005 Signs of the Ancestors: An Archaeology of Mesa Villages of the Pueblo Revolt. In The Structure and Meaning in Human Settlements, edited by Tony Akins, pp. 185207. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Forbes, Jack D. 1994 Apache, Navaho, and Spaniard. 2nd ed. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Ford, Richard I. 1972 Barter, Gift, or Violence: An Analysis of Tewa Intertribal Exchange. In Social Exchange and Interaction, edited by Edwin N. Wilmsen,pp. 2145. Anthropological Paper No. 46. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Fowles, Severin M. 2011 Movement and the Unsettling of the Pueblos. In Rethinking Anthropological Perspectives on Migration, edited by Graciela S. Cabana and Jeffery J. Clark, pp. 4567. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Glassow, Michael A. 1980 Prehistoric Agricultural Development in the Northern Southwest. Anthropological Papers No. 16. Ballena Press, Banning.Google Scholar
Gosselain, Olivier P. 1998 Social and Technical Identity in a Clay Crystal Ball. In The Archaeology of Social Boundaries, edited by Miriam T. Stark, pp. 78106. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Gosselain, Olivier P. 2000 Materializing Identities: An Africanist Perspective. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:187217.Google Scholar
Grange, Roger T. 1968 Pawnee and Lower Loup Pottery. Nebraska State Historical Society Publications in Anthropology No. 3. Nebraska State Historical Society, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Gulley, Cara C. 2000 A Reanalysis of Dismal River Archaeology and Ceramic Typology. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Gumerman, George IV 1997 Food and Complex Societies. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 4:105139.Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1959 Archaeological Survey in Northeastern New Mexico. El Palacio 66:145154.Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1960 An Introduction to Plains Apache Archaeology—The Dismal River Aspect. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 173, Anthropological Papers No. 58. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1968 Plains Apache Archaeology: A Review. Plains Anthropologist 13:167189.Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1969 Apache Archaeology in Northeastern New Mexico. American Antiquity 34:2339.Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1979 Southern Athapaskan Archaeology. In Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz, pp. 162169. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 9, William C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1987 Archaeology of the High Plains. Colorado State Office Bureau of Land Management, Denver.Google Scholar
Gunnerson, James H. 1992 Protohistoric Apaches in Northeastern New Mexico. In Cultural Encounters and Episodic Droughts: The Protohistoric Period on the Southern Plains, edited by Eileen Johnson, pp. 91102. Lubbock Lake Landmark Quaternary Research Center Series No. 3. Museum of Texas Tech University, Lubbock.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, Ramón A. 1991 When Jesus Came, the Corn Mothers Went Away. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California.Google Scholar
Habicht-Mauche, Judith A. 1987 Southwestern-Style Culinary Ceramics on the Southern Plains: A Case Study of Technological Innovation and Cross-Cultural Interaction. Plains Anthropologist 32:175189.Google Scholar
Habicht-Mauche, Judith A. 2000 Pottery, Food, Hides, and Women: Labor, Production, and Exchange across the Protohistoric Plains-Pueblo Frontier. In The Archaeology of Regional Interaction: Religion, Warfare, and Exchange across the American Southwest and Beyond, edited by Michelle Hegmon, pp. 209231. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Habicht-Mauche, Judith A. 2008 Captive Wives? The Role and Status of Nonlocal Women on the Protohistoric Southern High Plains. In Invisible Citizens: Captives and Their Consequences, edited by Catherine M. Cameron, pp. 181204. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Hardin, Margaret A., and Mills, Barbara J. 2000 The Social and Historical Context of Short-Term Stylistic Replacement: A Zuni Case Study. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:139163.Google Scholar
Harlow, Francis H. 1973 Matte-Paint Pottery of the Tewa, Keres, and Zuni Pueblos. Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Hawley, Marlin F. 2000 European Contact and Southwestern Artifacts in the Lower Walnut Focus Sites at Arkansas City, Kansas. Plains Anthropologist 45:237255.Google Scholar
Hays, Kelley Ann 1991 Ceramics. In Homol'ovi II: Archaeology of an Ancestral Hopi Village, Arizona, edited by E. Charles Adams and Kelley Ann Hayes, pp. 2347. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona 55. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Henrickson, Elizabeth F., and McDonald, M. M. A. 1983 Ceramic Form and Function: An Ethnographic Search and an Archaeological Application. American Anthropologist 85:630645.Google Scholar
Hoard, Robert J., and Banks, William E. (editors) 2006 Kansas Archaeology. University Press of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Jacobson, Jodi A. 2004 Determining Human Ecology on the Plains through the Identification of Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus) and White-Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) Postcranial Material (Kansas). Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Alfred E. ca. 1957 Additional data on the artifacts from the Scott County Pueblo. Manuscript on file, Archaeological Research Center, University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Kalčik, Susan 1984 Ethnic Foodways in America: Symbol and the Performance of Identity. In Ethnic and Regional Foodways in the United States: The Performance of Group Identity, edited by Linda Keller Brown and Kay Mussell, pp. 3765. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Kavena, Juanita Tiger 1980 Hopi Cookery. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Kidder, Alfred V., and Shepard, Anna O. 1936 The Pottery of Pecos, II: The Glaze Paint, Culinary, and Other Wares. Phillips Academy, Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Lechtman, Heather 1977 Style in Technology—Some Early Thoughts. In Material Culture: Styles, Organization, and Dynamics of Technology, edited by Heather Lechtman and Robert S. Merrill, pp. 320. West Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Liebmann, Matthew 2012 Revolt: An Archaeological History of Pueblo Resistance and Revitalization in 17th Century New Mexico. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Lightfoot, Kent G., Martinez, Antionette, and Schiff, Ann M. 1998 Daily Practice and Material Culture in Pluralistic Social Settings: An Archaeological Study of Culture Change and Persistence from Fort Ross, California. American Antiquity 63:199222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lintz, Christopher 1991 Texas Panhandle-Pueblo Interactions from the Thirteenth through the Sixteenth Century. In Farmers, Hunters, and Colonists: Interaction between the Southwest and the Southern Plains, edited by Katherine A. Spielmann, pp. 89106. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Lowell, Julia C. 2007 Women and Men in Warfare and Migration: Implications of Gender Imbalance in the Grasshopper Region of Arizona. American Antiquity 72:95123.Google Scholar
Lyons, Patrick D., and Clark, Jeffery J. 2008 Interaction, Enculturation, Social Distance, and Ancient Ethnic Identities. In Archaeology Without Borders: Contact, Commerce, and Change in the U.S. Southwest and Northwestern Mexico, edited by Laurie D. Webster, Maxine E. McBrinn, and Eduardo Gamboa Carrera, pp. 185207. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
MacEachern, Scott 1998 Scale, Style, and Cultural Variation: Technological Traditions in the Northern Mandara Mountains. In The Archaeology of Social Boundaries, edited by Miriam T. Stark, pp. 107131. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Marshall, Michael P., and Hogan, Patrick 1991 Rethinking Navajo Pueblitos. Cultural Resource Series, Vol. 8. New Mexico Bureau of Land Management. Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Martin, H. T. 1909 Further Notes on the Pueblo Ruin of Scott County. University of Kansas, Science Bulletin 5(2): 1122.Google Scholar
Mera, H. P. 1935 Ceramic Clues to the Prehistory of North-Central New Mexico. Laboratory of Anthropology Technical Series Bulletin No. 8. Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Mera, H. P. 1939 Style Trends of Pueblo Pottery. Laboratory of Anthropology Memoir III. Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Metcalf, George 1949 Three Pottery Types from the Dismal River Aspect. Proceedings of the Fifth Plains Conference for Archaeology, Notebook No. 1: 7378. Laboratory of Anthropology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Mills, Barbara J. 2008 Colonialism and Cuisine: Cultural Transmission, Agency, and History at Zuni Pueblo. In Cultural Transmission and Material Culture: Breaking Down Boundaries, edited by Miriam T. Stark, Brenda J. Bowser, and Lee Home, pp. 245262. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Opler, M. E. 1982 The Scott County Pueblo Site in Historical Archaeology and Ethnological Perspective. In Pathways to Plains Prehistory: Anthropological Perspectives of the Plains Natives and Their Past. Papers in Honor of Robert E. Bell, edited by Don G. Wyckoff and Jack L. Hofman, pp. 135144. Oklahoma Anthropological Society, Norman.Google Scholar
Ortman, Scott G., and Cameron, Catherine M. 2011 A Framework for Controlled Comparisons of Ancient Southwestern Movement. In Movement, Connectivity, and Landscape Change in the Ancient Southwest, edited by Margaret C. Nelson and Colleen Strawhacker, pp. 233252. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Parsons, Elsie Clews 1928 The Laguna Migration to Isleta. American Anthropologist 30:602613.Google Scholar
Patterson, Orlando 1982 Slavery and Social Death. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Peelo, Sarah 2011 Pottery-Making in Spanish California: Creating Multi-Scalar Social Identity through Daily Practice. American Antiquity 76:642666.Google Scholar
Powers, Robert P., Zandt, Tineke Van, Vint, James M., and Head, Genevieve N. 1999 Site Typology. In The Bandelier Archeological Survey: Vol. 1, edited by Robert P. Powers and Janet D. Orcutt, pp. 117218. Intermountain Cultural Resources Management Professional Paper No. 57; Contribution No. 9 of the Bandelier Archeological Survey. Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Preucel, Robert W. 2002 Writing the Pueblo Revolt. In Archaeologies of the Pueblo Revolt: Identity, Meaning, and Renewal in the Pueblo World, edited by Robert W. Preucel, pp. 329. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Robbins, Wilfred, Harrington, John Peabody, and Freire-Marreco, Barbara 1916 Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians. Bureau of U.S. Ethnology Bulletin 55. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Scheiber, Laura L. 2006 The Late Prehistoric on the High Plains of Western Kansas: High Plains Upper Republican and Dismal River. In Kansas Archaeology, edited by Robert J. Hoard and William E. Banks, pp. 133150. University Press of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Schleiser, Karl H. 1972 Rethinking the Dismal River Aspect and the Plains Athapaskans, A.D. 1692–1768. Plains Anthropologist 17:101133.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Albert H. 1974 A Study of the Apache Indians, Pts. I, II, and III. Garland Publishing, New York.Google Scholar
Scott County Record [Scott City, Kansas] 2000 “You Are the Caretakers”: Picuris Make First Official Return to El Quartelejo in Nearly 300 Years. 30 November: 1, 10. Scott City, Kansas.Google Scholar
Seymour, Deni 2008 Apache Plain and Other Plainwares on Apache Sites in the Southern Southwest. In Serendipity: Papers in Honor of Frances Joan Mathien, edited by R. N. Wiseman, T. C. O'Laughlin, C. T. Snow, and C. Travis, pp. 163186. Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico No. 34. Archaeological Society of New Mexico, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Smith, Marion F. 1985 Toward an Economic Interpretation of Ceramics: Relating Vessel Size and Shape to Use. In Decoding Prehistoric Ceramics, edited by Ben A. Nelson, pp. 254309. Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Spicer, Edward H. 1962 Cycles of Conquest: The Impact of Spain, Mexico, and the United States on the Indians of the Southwest, 1533–1960. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Spielmann, Katherine A. 1991 Interdependence in the Prehistoric Southwest: An Ecological Analysis of Plains-Pueblo Interaction. Garland, New York.Google Scholar
Spielmann, Katherine A., Clark, Tiffany, Hawkey, Diane, Rainey, Katherine, and Fish, Suzanne K. 2009 “… Being Weary, They Had Rebelled”: Pueblo Subsistence and Labor Under Spanish Colonialism. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 28:102125.Google Scholar
Stark, Miriam T. 1999 Social Dimensions of Technical Choice in Kalinga Ceramic Traditions. In Material Meanings: Critical Approaches to the Interpretation of Material Culture, edited by Elizabeth S. Chilton, pp. 2443. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Thomas, Alfred B. 1935 After Coronado: Spanish Exploration Northeast of New Mexico 1696–1727. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Towner, Ronald H. 1996 The Pueblito Phenomenon: A New Perspective on Post-Revolt Navajo Culture. In The Archaeology of Navajo Origins, edited by Ronald H. Towner, pp. 149170. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Trabert, Sarah 2010 Dismal River Vessel Forms: Re-Evaluating Ceramics from the Scott County Pueblo. Poster presented at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Saint Louis.Google Scholar
Twitchell, Ralph E. 1914 The Spanish Archives of New Mexico. Torch Press, Cedar Rapids.Google Scholar
Varien, Mark D., and Mills, Barbara J. 1997 Accumulations Research: Problems and Prospects for Estimating Site Occupation Span. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 4:141191.Google Scholar
Helene, Warren, A. 1977 New Dimensions in the Study of Prehistoric Pottery. In Archaeological Investigations in Cochiti Reservoir, New Mexico, Vol. 2: Excavation and Analysis, 1975 Season, edited by Richard C. Chapman and Jan V. Biella, pp. 362374. Office of Contract Archaeology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Helene, Warren, A. 1981 The Micaceous Pottery of the Rio Grande. Archaeological Society of New Mexico Anthropological Papers 6:149165.Google Scholar
Weber, David J. 1992 The Spanish Frontier in North America. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Wedel, Waldo R. 1940 Archaeological Explorations in Western Kansas. In Explorations and Field-Work of the Smithsonian Institution in 1939, pp. 8386. Publication 3586. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Wedel, Waldo R. 1950 Notes on Plains-Southwestern Contacts in the Light of Archaeology. In For the Dean: Essays in Anthropology in Honor of Bryon Cummings on His 89th Birthday, September 20, 1950, edited by Erik K. Reed and Dale S. King, pp. 99116. Hohokam Museum Association, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Wedel, Waldo R. 1959 An Introduction to Kansas Archaeology. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 174. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Wedel, Waldo R. 1982 Further Notes on Puebloan-Central Plains Contacts in Light of Archaeology. In Pathways to Plains Prehistory: Anthropological Perspectives of the Plains Natives and Their Past. Papers in Honor of Robert E. Bell, edited by Don G. Wyckoff and Jack L. Hofman, pp. 145152. Oklahoma Anthropological Society Memoirs 3. Cross Timbers Press, Duncan.Google Scholar
Whittlesey, Stephanie M., Deaver, William L., and Jefferson Reid, J. 1997 Yavapai and Western Apache Archaeology of Central Arizona. In Vanishing River: Landscapes and Lives of the Lower Verde Valley: The Lower Verde Archaeological Project: Overview, Synthesis, and Conclusions, edited by Stephanie M. Whittlesey, Richard Ciolek-Torrello, and Jeffrey H. Altschul, pp. 185214. SRI Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Wilcox, Michael V. 2009 The Pueblo Revolt and the Mythology of Conquest: An Indigenous Archaeology of Contact. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Williston, Samuel W. 1899 Some Prehistoric Ruins in Scott County, Kansas. Kansas University Quarterly 7(4):109114.Google Scholar
Williston, Samuel W., and Martin, H. T. 1900 Some Pueblo Ruins in Scott County, Kansas. Transactions of the Kansas State Historic Society, 1897–1900 6:124130.Google Scholar
Witty, Thomas A. Jr. 1971 Reconstruction of the Scott County Pueblo Ruins. Kansas Anthropological Association Newsletter 16(8): 13.Google Scholar
Witty, Thomas A. Jr. 1975 Report on the 1975 Lake Scott Kansas Anthropological Association Dig and Kansas Archaeology Training School Activities. Kansas Anthropological Association Newsletter 21(1–2): 19.Google Scholar
Witty, Thomas A. Jr. 1983 An Archaeological Review of the Scott County Pueblo. Bulletin of the Oklahoma Anthropological Society 32:99106.Google Scholar