Description: Prehistoric Springerville Bowl. Measures 8 1/2" wide x 4" tall. This bowl is found on page 45 of The Desert Southwest by Carol and Allan Hayes. Condition: The bowl has been broken and glued. Remnant of a sticker to base. Please study all photos to best understand condition. Photos show each side. PROVENANCE: This bowl came out of the Carol and Allan Hayes Collection and is found photographed within a couple of their well received books on the subject of Southwest Pottery. Images from the book are shown here, however those images, nor the books are included with the sale of the bowl. Please visit my store's Native American category for more examples from this important Southwest Pottery Collection. This will be packaged with utmost care for safe arrival. This description comes from ceramicsnmarchaeology.org: Springerville Polychrome was defined by Danson (1957) as a variant of St Johns Polychrome and described as a type by Carlson (1970). The production of Springerville Polychrome was short spanning the second half of the thirteenth century, and it appears to have been transitional between St Johns Polychrome and later White Mountain Red Ware tradition polychrome types. This type is similar to St Johns Polychrome with sherd temper, light color pastes, and orange slip (Carlson 1970). Decorative styles applied in black paint also appear to be identical to those noted for St Johns Polychrome. Springerville Polychrome is distinguished from St Johns Polychrome bowls by the use of small amounts black pigment with white clay paint on the same surface. This included the addition of thin outlines in white paint around black designs on the interior surface and thin lines of black paint on the edge of heavier designs executed in white clay paint, Exterior motifs are organized in a solid band and include opposed terraces, chevrons, wavy lines, solid triangles and flagged triangles. References: Carlson, Roy L. 1970 White Mountain Redware Pottery Tradition of East-Central New Mexico. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, No. 19. University of Arizona Press, Tucson. Danson, Edward B. 1957 An Archaeological Survey of West Central New Mexico and East Central Arizona. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography, Bulletin No. 44 (1), Cambridge.
Price: 600 USD
Location: Fort Jones, California
End Time: 2025-01-09T18:15:26.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Provenance: Ownership History Available
Tribal Affiliation: Ancestral Pueblo
Culture: Native American: US
Handmade: Yes