`U^@U^P @@@ @@@@T6 U^0U^` EN DB !U^pP &+  &f 6 CC  r g S   ^ :  2 3 ; Nm  ) \ 1 x      :. Day1988 Kaplan19853 Plunket1990( "hPlunket Nagoda19953 Podzuweit1992 Poggenpoal1990& Pogue1987j Pollard1986 Pollock1983 Pool19939 Pool1995a Pool2000Porter de Moedano1945f Potter2000r Pozas1949 Pratt1999 Price2000+ Pring1998Pyszczyk1989 Qyawayma1988X Quye19971 Raby1989 Ramsden1990 Rattray1966 Rattray1977 Rattray1978 Rattray1979 Rattray1980 Rattray1980 Rattray1989g Redford1997" Reents-Budet2000 Reid1990y Reid1998Reina S.1989r Rendon19478 Reyna Robles19929 Reynoso1987 Reynoso1991 Rice1981 Rice1984 Rice1987 Rice1991 Rice1994 Rice1996  Rice1999 Rice1999 Riddick1990Ridings19990 Rigby1989 Ringle1992) Ringle19988 Roaf1994x Robertshaw1994c Robins1988nrRobinson1986Robinson1988Robinson1994Rodrguez Snchez1997 Rojas Chvez19969h Roosevelt1997 Rosado Ojeda19417[ Roux19959H Roux1998Rudolphi2001 Ruiz A.1980d Rupp1986k Ryerson1994 Sadet1988 Sampson1993i Sampson1995Sampson19990E Sandon1998 Santley1989 Santley1993 Sassman2001 Sayre1988 Sayre1989 Schachner2006lSchiffer1987cSChiffer1988oSchiffer1989Schiffer1989Schiffer1990Schiffer1994USchiffer1997 Schneider19898 Schrire1999 Schrive1990KSchwalbe1987 Senior1995 Senior1995` Shafer1986 Shafer1995 Shaffer1993 Shaffer1997 Shapiro1984 Sharer1988 Shimada1988l Shott1996 Siegel1999 Silverman1994 Silverman1999o Simmons1987R Simms1997 Simon1992 Simon1993 Simon1994 Simon1994 Simon1994 Simon1994 Simon1997 Simon1998 Simon1998 Simon1998 Simon1998 Simon1998 Simon1998Sinopoli1988Sinopoli1991l Skibo1987c Skibo1988 Skibo1989 Skibo1989 Skibo1992 skibo1994U Skibo1997 Slane1994  Smith1985r Smith1986 Smith1991 Snow19879y Soper1985dSorenson19869 Soto1999nSpeakman2002Speakman20066 Spence1989a Stahl1994 Stark19915 Stark19926 Stark19925 Stark1993 Stark1994 Stark1994 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stein1993 Steinberg1985 Steponaitis1993m Steponaitis19960 Stevenson Day1996 Stewart1990z Stewart1993 Stinson2005Stoltman1991 Stone1990 Stone1999 Storch1988` Storey1987m Storey1988 Strazicich1998 Stuart19899GStuart?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala Surez19999 Surez Cruz1995Sugiura Yamamoto1980& Suhler1998Sullivan1989` Symonds1987GTarka?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala" Taschek2000 Taube1989 Taylor1986 Teltser1993 Thomson1941 Toll2001 Topic1995Q Tornero1997 Tornqvist1996Tovaln Ahumada1993P Triadan1997 Triadan1997 Triadan2000@ Tsolakidou1999 Tyers1993R Ugan19979 UNderhill1991 Urrutia1991 Valdez1988 Valdez1992 Valencia Cruz1989 Valencia Cruz1989 Van Keuren1999 Van Keuren2004 Van Keuren2006 Vandiver1993 Vargas1999 Varien1993 Viel19888 Vince1993 Vint19955o Vitali1987n Vitali1989p Vitalil1986 Vitelli1989 Vogel1993 Von Winning1967} Wallace1995~ Wallace1995 Wallace1995` Walsh1987 Webster1984 Wells2000 Wells2000 Wesler1991 Westerfeld20004 Whalen1998 Whittlesey1974| Whittlesey1994{ Whittlesey1997 Wieder1992t Wilkinson1989qWilliams1994Williams19979o Wills1996 Willsn.d. Wilson19949r Wolff1986 Woodman1992 Wright1991s Yap19881 Yentsch19902 Yentsch1991 Young1999 Z.19949 Zea1992 Zedeo20001992 Zedeo20001992 Zedeo20001992 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo200092 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo2000 Zedeo2000 Zedeo200092 Zedeo20001988h Sayre1989lSchiffer1987cSChiffer1988oSchiffer1989Schiffer1989Schiffer1990Schiffer1994USchiffer1997 Schneider19898 Schrire1999 Schrive1990KSchwalbe1987 Senior1995 Senior1995` Shafer1986 Shafer1995 Shaffer1993 Shaffer1997 Sharer1988 Shimada1988l Shott1996 Siegel1999 Silverman1994 Silverman1999o Simmons1987R Simms1997  Simon1993Sinopoli1988l Skibo1987c Skibo1988 Skibo1989 Skibo1989 skibo1994U Skibo1997 Slane1994  Smith1985r Smith1986 Smith1991y Soper1985dSorenson19869 Soto1999n Spence1989a Stahl1994 Stark19915 Stark19926 Stark19925 Stark1993 Stark1994 Stark1994 Stark1995 Stark1995 Stark1995  Stein1993m Steponaitis19960 Stevenson Day1996 Stewart1990z Stewart1993Stoltman1991 Stone1990 Stone19990 Storch1988` Storey1987m Storey1988 Strazicich1998 Stuart19899GStuart?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala Surez19999" Surez19999 Surez Cruz1995Sugiura Yamamoto1980& Suhler1998Sullivan1989` Symonds1987GTarka?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala" Taschek2000 Taube1989 Taylor1986 Teltser1993 Thomson1941 Topic1995Q Tornero1997 Tornqvist1996Tovaln Ahumada1993P Triadan1997@ Tsolakidou1999R Ugan19979 UNderhill1991 Urrutia1991, Urrutia1991 Valdez1988 Valdez1992 Valencia Cruz1989 Valencia Cruz1989  Valencia Cruz1989  Valencia Cruz1989 Vandiver1993 Vargas1999 Viel19888o Vitali1987n Vitali1989p Vitalil1986 Vitelli1989 Vogel1993 Von Winning1967` Walsh1987 Webster1984 Wells2000 Wesler1991 Westerfeld20004 Whalen1998 Wieder1992t Wilkinson1989qWilliams1994Williams19979o Wills1996 Willsn.d. Wilson19949r Wolff1986 Woodman1992 Wright1991s Yap19881 Yentsch19902 Yentsch1991 Young19990 Z.19949 Zea1992a1992# %/*0 12 )$ :=9' Authors"- Journals##Keywords(({  9 % 0  0  : *1%2212 /  % '*=%    '''/09 0 /1/2:: %%* ::999'''' ::*  *00  % -"Hernndez S., GildaHernndez, CarlosHerr, Sarah A.Herrere, R. Sergio0+Hildebrand, John A. and Melissa B. Hagstrum\VHistoria), Direccin de Monumentos Prehispanicos (Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e$ Hoopes, John W. and Marc BermannHuntley, Deborah L. Jacobs, David84Jacobson, L., W.A. Van_der_Westhuizen, and J. Dreyer Jimnez Hernndez, LeticiaJimnez Lara, PedroJimnez, ManuelJornet, AlbertKamilli, D. C.Kintigh, Keith W.Knoblock, Patricia J.Kohler, Timothy A. Kojo, Yasushi Komorowski, Jean-ChristopheKrotser, Paula@Herrera, R. S. Neff, Hector Glascock, Michael D. Elam, J. M. 1999Ceramic Patterns, Social Interaction, and the Olmec: Neutron Activation Analysis of Early Formative Pottery in the Oaxaca Highlands of Mexico4(!Journal of Archaeological Science0268l967-988s:4Herrere, R. Sergio Neff, Hector Glascock, Michael D. 1999Ceramic Patterns, Social Interaction, and the Olmec: Neutron Activation Analysis of Early Formative Pottery in the Oaxaca Highlands of Mexico(!Journal of Archaeological Science26967-9872+Hildebrand, John A. and Melissa B. Hagstrumn 1999|vNew Approaches to Ceramic Use and Discard: Cooking Pottery from the Peruvian Andes in Ethnoarchaeological Perspective.Latin American Antiquity101 25-47d]Ethnoarchaeological data from contemporary Wanka villages in the Mantaro Valley of the Peruvian Andes provide new perspectives on the use and discard of ceramic cooking vessels. We present a regional survey of ceramic vessel use and discard with household consumption as the focus of study. A mathematical model determines vessel uselife from the age distribution of in-use vessels. We examine the number of vessels per household, their volume, their uselife, and their reported discard. A typical Wanka household cooking vessel assemblage consists of four or five ollas, two large ollas, one chata, and one tostadera. As family members are added to a household, the number of household ollas slightly increases, as does olla volume and the overall rate of olla discard. Large families have fewer chatas, and the rate of chata discard is uncorrelated with household size. Large and small families alike have only one tostadera, but in large families, a shortened tostadera uselife increases their discard rate. Distributing the same population into small or large households will result in significantly different rates of total sherd accumulation. Bulk sherd accumulation is a better indicator of the number of households rather than of the total number of persons. Household size can be estimated from the relative proportions of discarded ollas, chatas, and tostaderas.kHAHoard, R. J. O'Brien, M. J. Khorasgany, M. G. Gopalaratnam, V. S.  1995rk A Materials-science Approach to Understanding Limestone-tempered Pottery from the Midwestern United States1(!Journal of Archaeological Science226823-8320 Mary G. Hodge Leah D. Minc 1990voThe Spatial Patterning of Aztec Ceramics: IMplications for Prehispanic Exchange Systems in the Valley of Mexico"Journal of Field Archaeology174u415-437r>8Mary G. Hodge Hector Neff M. James Blackman Leah D. Minc 1993HABlack-on-Orange Ceramic Production in the Aztec Empire's Heartlan9Latin American Antiquity4n120-157Richard Hodges 1991~wThe 8th Century pottery industry at La Ronde and its implications for cross-Channel trade with Anglo-Saxon Southhampton Antiquity65882-887John S. Holladay 1976*#A technical aid to pottery drawings Antiquity50 221Holladay Jr., John S.n 1990<5Red Slip, Burnish, and the Solomonic Gateway at GezerD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR)277-278 5-22George R. Holley 198681The Ceramic Sequence at Piedras Negras, Guatemala(!Ceramica de Cultura de Maya et alf14 49-72John W. Hoopes 1994PJThe Tronadora Complex: Early Formative Ceramics in Northwestern Costa RicaLatin American Antiquity5i 3-30w& Hoopes, John W. and Marc Bermann 1996 ReviewLatin American Antiquity7o4e373-376 zsReviews the book "Creations of the Rainbow Serpent: Polychrome Ceramic Designs From Ancient Panama," by Mary Helms.60Stephan D. Houston David D. Stuart Karl A. Taube 19892+Folk Classification of Classic Maya PotterywAmerican Anthropologist.913720-726kThomas N. Huffman 198981Ceramic, Settlements and Late Iron Age Migrations$African Archaeological reviewa7155-182>bY~`N_ Hagstrum, Melissa B. 1985`YMeasuring Prehistoric Ceramic Craft Specialization: A Test Case in the American Southwestl"Journal of Field Archaeology121p 65-75,&Melissa B. Hagstrum John A. Hildebrand 1990F?The two-curvature method for reconstructing ceramic morphology.American Antiquity552388-403*$Correlating Vessel Form and FunctionZTGrant D. Hall Stanley M. Jr. Tarka W. Jeffrey Hurst David Stuart Richard E. W. AdamsF?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, GuatemalaAmerican Antiquity5510138-1435David J. Hally 1986,%The Dientification of Vessel FunctionAmerican Antiquity512267-295Hally, David J.o 1986JDThe Identification of Vessel Function: A Case from Northwest GeorgiaAmerican Antiquity51267-295Norman Hammond 1984\UHolmul and Nohmul: A Comparison and Assessment of Two Maya Lowland Protoclassic Sites $Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 1-17,%R.G.V. Hancock N.B. Millet A.J. Mills 1986<5A Rapid INAA Method to Characterize Egyptian CeramicsB(!Journal of Archaeological Scienceh13107-117aRichard J. Harrison 1988d]Bell Beakers in Spain and Portugal: Working with radiocarbon dates in the 3rd Millennium B.C. Antiquity62464-472@:F.A. Hart J.M.V. Storey S.J. Adams R.P. Symonds J.N. Walsh 1987An Analytical Study, Using Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP) Spectrometry, of Samian and Colour-Coated Wares from the Roman Towns at Colchester together with Related Continental Samian Waresk(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencec14577-598 .'Christine A. Hastorf Sissel Johannessen 1993VPPre-Hispanic Political Change and the Role of Maize in the Central Andes of PeruAmerican Anthropologist951T115-138William A. Havilandc 1991D>Status and Power in Classic Maya Society: The View from TikalAmerican Anthropologistr644937-940Hayashida, Frances M.o 1999b\Style, Technology, and State Production: Inka Pottery Manufacture in the Leche Valley, Peru.Latin American Antiquity104d337-353B;Presents insights on the organization and technology of pottery production of the Inka relocated groups in Leche Valley, Peru. Pottery production as part of the labor tribute obligation of Inka polities; Analysis on state retention of production decisions; Implications of pottery features for Inka provincial rule.a Brian Hayden Aubrey Cannon 1983D=Where the Garbage Goes: Refuse Disposal in the Maya Highlands{.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology2117-163 Brian Hayden Aubrey Cannon 1984D=Interaction Inferences in Archaeology and Learning Frameworks{.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology3325-367Kelley Ann Hays 1989`YKatsina Depictions on Homol'ovi Ceramics: Toward a Fourtheenth-Century Pueblo IconographyThe Kiva543357-362b[Heggenhougen, Kris, Michelle Hegmon, James R. Allison, Hector Neff, and Michael D. Glascock7 1997zProduction of San Juan red ware in the northern Southwest: insights into regional interaction in early Puebloan prehistory2,Anthropology and medicine American Antiquity62 3:3l327-8, 449-463American Antiquity&ceramic production, interaction.Michelle Hegmon 1994XRPueblo I ceramic Production in Southwest Colorado: Analysis of Igneous Rock Temper Kiva60371-390.0)Hegmon, Michelle, and Wenda R. Travathano 1996Gender, anatomical knowledge and pottern production: implications of an anatomically unusual birth depicted on Mimbres pottery from southwester New MexicoAmerican antiquity614747-7545,%New Mexico, Mimbres, gender, ceramicsc!IT$M@ Jane S. Day 1988@:A Typological Problem from Guanacaste Province, Costa Rice$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 1-10:3Day, P. M Kiriatzi, E. Tsolakidou, A Kilikoglou, V.o 1999xqGroup Therapy in Crete: A Comparison Between Analyses by NAA and Thin Section Petrography of Early Minoan Pottery(!Journal of Archaeological Science0268 1025-1036s Michael Deal 1985^WHousehold Pottery Disposal in the Maya Highlands: An Ethnoarchaeological Interpretation.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology4243-291((!W. L. Deaver R.S. Ciolek-Torrello  1994<6Early Formative Period Chronology for the Tucson Basin Kiva60481-529tDeBoer, Warren R.B 1996F@Ceramic Seriation and Site Reoccupation in Lowland South AmericaLatin American Antiquity73263-279hbEvaluates the argument in Amazonian archaeology as to whether large sites represent contemporaneous communities or palimpsects accrued through multiple reoccupations in terms of its statistical basis and its assumptions about sources of ceramic variability. Used of quantitative ceramic seriation to support the case for reoccupation, based on seriation.Deiter, Michaeli 1999 Book ReviewsAmerican Anthropologiste 101g1a194-195\f`Reviews the book "Pottery in Rajasthan: Ethnoarchaeology in Two Indian Cities," by Carol Kramer.$Michael Dietler Ingrid Herbick 1989^XTich Matek: the Technology of Luo Pottery Production and the Definition of Ceramic StyleWorld Archaeologyd211t148-164& Dietler, Michael Herbich, Ingrid 1989^WTich Matek: The Technology of Luo Pottery Production and the Defnition of Ceramic StyleWorld Archaeologyp211u148-164& Dietler, Michael Herbich, Ingrid 1998xqHabitus, Techniques, Style: An Integrated Approach to the Social Understanding of Material Culture and Boundariess Stark, Miriam T.*$The Archaeology of Social Boundaries Washington, D.C. $Smithsonian Institution PressDonnan, Christopher B. 1997HBA Chimu-Inka Ceramic-Manufacturing Center from North Coast of PeruLatin American Antiquity8u1 30-55NGAnalyzes the samples of molds and over-fired shreds of Chimu-Inka ceramic-manufacturing center dating 1470-1532 A.D. at Jeqeutepeque Valley of northern Peru. Production of mold-made utility wares; Development of the ceramic technology in the region; Ceramics collected from the surface of the site; Composition of the ceramics. Dreyer, J. 1996LFClay 'figurines' from the Riet river: a case of natural site formation("Southern African field archaeology52 99-102"Journal of field archaeologySouth Africa, figurinesd Druc, I. C. Gwyn, Q. H. J. 1998y From Clay to Pots: A Petrographical Analysis of Ceramic Production in the Callejon de Huaylas, North-Central Andes, Peru(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencel25707-718TIsabelle C. Druc      2000@9Ceramic Production in San Marcos Acteopan, Puebla, MexicoAncient Mesoamerica111 77-90iAncient MesoamericaThis article presents a study of ceramic production in San Marcos Acteopan, a small village in the southern part of the state of Puebla, Mexico. Field observation and interviews with the families of two potters document the different steps of the ceramic production process. The approach is ethnographic and aims at better understanding ancient ceramic production. Special emphasis is given to raw material acquisition and paste preparation to provide comparative data for analysis of archaeological material and clay preparation strategies. This study adopts the perspective of ceramic ecology, which situates the information on ceramic production in environmental and socioeconomic contexts.i"Du Solier Massieu, Wilfridob 19496/Cermica Arqueolgica de San Cristobal EcatepecC>8Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia III  27-57v mesoamericaePJDescribes the ceramics found at an excavation in Ecatepec, Estado de Mxico, which includes ceramics from the formative (Ticoman) to postclassic (Aztec) periods. It also includes a brief description of Colonial period ceramics. Refers to some Teotihuacan types, and also findings of Coyotlatelco ceramics. Includes illustrations.uarchaeology central ceramics classic culture history epiclassic formative mesoamerica mexico postclassic prehispanic Duff, Andrew I.s 1993TNAn Exploration of Post-Chacoan Community Organization through Ceramic Analysis Department of Anthropology Tempe\ :4Department of Anthropology, Arizona State University Unpublished Masters thesis ]D,<N"C.R. Ferring T. K. Perttula 1987d^Defining the provenance of Red Slipped Pottery from Texas and Oklahoma by Petrographic Methods(!Journal of Archaeological Science14437-456m Burit Fieg 1985*#Pottey, Glass, and Coins from MagenD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 258 33-40(!Finsten, Laura, and John R. Topic  1996Reviews and BooknoteslLatin American Antiquity7t1o 86-88sxqReviews the book "Early Formative Pottery of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico," by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus.*# Foias, Antonia E Bishop, Ronald L 1997uChanging Ceramic Production and Exchange in the Petexbatun Region, Guatemala: Reconsidering the Classic Maya Collapse- Ancient Mesoamerica8i2o275-292 Ancient Mesoamerica"Foncerrada de Molina, Marta, 1977Maya Vase Painting of the Classic Period: An Evaluation of the Formal Characteristics of Polychrome Designs Based on a Selection of a Limited Number of Archaeological Maya Vessels2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicos  XXIII2c247-270 mesoamericaoB"Ceramic Indices of Aztec ElitenessAncient Mesoamerica21122323-340Ancient Mesoamerica2$: %10* $0 9/0 1122 //01) : *:: %%%%%%///**00 11222 ))$$$$$ 99'%***0 1)$:=&DBmz0.m^pTfMiriam T. Starkd 1995LEUtilitarian Vesel Fffform and Function in a Developmental Perspectivea &James M. Heidke Miriam T. Stark^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tucson $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 215$Anthropological Papers No. 141Miriam T. StarkN 1995:4The Early Ceramic Horizon and Tonto Basin Prehistory &James M. Hedike Miriam T. Stark^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tempe $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 223$Anthropological Papers No. 141Miriam T. Stark 1995VOThe Utilitarian Ceramic Collection: Plainware, Redware, and Corrugated Ceramics &James M. Heidke Miriam T. Starke^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tempe $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 242$Anthropological Papers No. 141.(Steponaitis, Vincas P. Kintigh, Keith W. 1993VOEstimating Site Occupation Spans from Dated Artifact Types: Some New Approaches Stoltman, James B.PIArchaeology of Eastern North America: Papers in Honor of Stephen Williams Jackson, Mississippi LEMississippi Department of Archives and History Archaeology Report 25.@:Steponaitis, Vincas P., M. James Blackman, and Hector Neff 1996PILarge-scale patterns in the chemical composition of Mississippian potterylAmerican antiquity613g555-572 & compositional analysis, ceramics@:Stevenson Day, Jane Butterwick, Kristi Pickering, Robert B 1996sArchaeological Interpretations of West Mexican Ceramic Art From the Late Preclassic Period: Three Figurine Projects-Ancient Mesoamericao71149-162 Ancient MesoamericaI@9Joe D. Stewart P. Fralick R. Hancock J. Kelley E. Garrettc 1990jdPetrographic analysis and INAA geochemistry of prehistoric ceramics from Robinson Pueblo, New Mexico(!Journal of Archaeological Science17601-6252Kearsley A. Stewart  1993^XIron Age ceramic studies in Great Lakes eastern Africa: a critical and historical review$African Archaeological Review11 21-38rJames B. Stoltmanf 1991|uCeramic Petrography as a Technique for Documenting Cultural InteractionL An Example from the Upper Mississippi ValleyAmerican Antiquity561e103-120 Elizabeth C. Stone 1990.'The Tell Abu Duwari Project, Iraq, 1987"Journal of Field Archaeology1721141-162.J. M. V. Storeya 1988^WA Chemical Study of Clays and Roman Pottery from the Lower Nene Valley, Eastern England(!Journal of Archaeological Science15 35-50MStrazicich, Nicola M.e 1998d]Clay Sources, Pottery Production, and Regional Economy in Chalchihuites, Mexico A.D. 200-900.Latin American Antiquity9\3g259-275ztFocuses on the possibility that pottery was used at Chalchihuites centers in Mexico before and after A.D. 650, while examining the history of pottery. Description of ceremonial centers in the Chalchihuites; Details on Chalchihuites pottery; Information regarding the petrographic characteristics of pottery and clays; Details on the production and distribution of pottery.Surez Cruz, Sergios 1995"La Cermica Lisa Cholulteca  Arqueologai 13-14p109-120 mesoamericaTypes description.bEarchaeology central ceramics culture history gulf mesoamerica puebla MSugiura Yamamoto, Yoko 1980d^El Material Cermico Formativo del Sitio 193, Metepec, Edo. de Mxico: Algunas ConsideracionesAnales de Antropologa XVII129-148r mesoamericarVarchaeology central ceramics culture history formative mesoamerica mexico prehispanic 4-Suhler, Charles Ardren, Trad Johnstone, David 1998F?The Chronology of Yaxuna: Evidence From Excavation and CeramicsAncient Mesoamerica9 1 167-182dAncient MesoamericaAlan P. III Sullivan 1989VPThe Technology of Ceramic Reuse: Formation Processes and Archaeological EvidenceWorld Archaeology211101-114Patice A. Teltserc 1993jcAn Analytic Strategy for Studying Assemblage-Scale Ceramic Variation: A Case Study from SE MissouriAmerican Antiquity583i530-543x@ Day1999De Atley1988De Atley1990 Deal1985M Deaver1994 DeBoer1996r Deetz1990 Deiter1999 Delgado Rubio1997? Demirci1999 Descantes2006 Diehl1992 Dietler1989 Dietler1989 Dietler1998Doershuk1991 Donald19831 Donnan19975 Dosh19933? Dothan198684 Douglas1992T Dreyer19969I Druc1998! Druc2000 Du Solier Massieu1949 Duff1993 Duff1996 Earle1987 Earle1989 Eckert2006c Eddy19877 Eerkens2002u Eggert1989 Ekholm1940a Elam19944; Elam19991 Elson1988 Emerson1991V Emerson2000W Epenshade1997; Epstein1985? Ertem1999Espejo1952-53Estrada Balmori19451 Estrada Belli1999% Estrada Belli2000 et al1989Evershed1991XEvershed1997Evershed2008Feathers1989 Feinman1989B Feinman1999QFernandez-Ruiz1997Fernndez Mendiola19975N Ferring1987< Fieg1985 Finsten1996 Fitzgerald1990, Foias1997Foncerrada de Molina1977D Fontana1998 Ford1992 Forsyth1986 Forsyth1993Fournier1987] Fowler1991 Fralick1990 Franco19458 Frankel1994~ Frankel1997pFranklin1986 Freestone1989 Freestone1994 Freidel1995 Freter1996r Galbraith1994 Garber1984 Garber1988 Garber1996Q Garcia-Heras1997 Garca Cook1987 Garca Payn1941Garca Snchez19939GarcXXXa2006# Garraty2000 Garrett1990Gaxiola Gonzlez1999| Geib1987`} Geib19882 Genova2000 Gibson1980= Gilead1989 Gilman1990 Gilman1994? Giten1986Glascock1992Glascock1994PGlascock1997;Glascock1999Glascock1999$Glascock2000Glascock2000Glascock2002Glascock20066Glowacki2002 Goad19911^ Goetze1991<Goldberg1999Z Gopalaratnam1995= Goren1989> Goring1991 Gosselain1992 Graham1986 Graves1982O Greenough1998 Grove1995 Grygiel1993Guderjan1992Guilliem Arroyo1997?Gunneweg1986I Gwyn1998Habicht-Mauche2006Hagstrum1985 Hagstrum1990Hagstrum1995EHall?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala Hally1986 Hally1986 Hamer1986 Hammer19869 Hammond1984_ Hancock1986o Hancock1987 Hancock1990) Hanson19988G Harbottle1994Harrison1988` Hart1987 Hastorf1993j Hatcher1986Haviland1991 Hayashida1999 Hayden1983 Hayden1984~ Hays1989Y Heggenhougen1997b Hegmon1994 Hegmon1996n[ Hegmon1997n Hegmon1998r Heidke1988 Heidke1995 Heidke1995 Hein19891# Heite1983@ Helms1989 Helms1993 Henderson1989 Hendon1991 Hendon1992  Henrickson1983o Henrickson1987v Herbich1987 Herbich1987 Herbich1989 Herbich1998 Herbick1989 Hermes19922 Hernndez1999Hernndez Aranda1995 Hernndez S.19951 Heron1991 Herr2005; Herrera1999 Herrere1999  Hildebrand1990 Hildebrand1999Z Hoard1995 Hodge1990 Hodge1993 Hodges1991Holladay1976A Holladay Jr.1990 Holley1986 Hoopes1994 Hoopes1996) Houck1998 Houston1989w Huffman1989 Huntley2004 Huntley2006 Huntley2006GHurst?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala< Iceland1999 Ichon1988Iglesias1992Iglesias1992 III1995 Inomata2001Jacobsen1993VJacobson1997\Jacobson19981Jernigan1986Jernigan1986 Jett1986 Jimnez1991Jimnez Hernndez1997 Jimnez Lara19951 Johannessen1993c johnson1988& Johnstone1998 Jones19898 Jordan1999 Jornet1987a Joyce1986 Joyce1988 Joyce1991 Kamilli1980 Kamilli1985 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan1985 Kaplan198585 Kaplan1985 Kaplan1985 Kaplan1985 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan1985 Kaplan1985 Kaplan1985 Kaplan198585 Kaplan198585 Kaplan1985 Finsten1996 Fitzgerald1990, Foias1997Foncerrada de Molina1977D Fontana1998 Ford1992 Forsyth1986 Forsyth1993Fournier1987] Fowler1991 Fralick1990 Franco19458 Frankel1994~ Frankel1997pFranklin1986 Freestone1989 Freestone1994 Freidel1995 Freter1996r Galbraith1994 Garber1984 Garber1988 Garber1996Q Garcia-Heras1997 Garca Cook1987 Garca Payn1941Garca Snchez19939# Garraty2000 Garrett1990Gaxiola Gonzlez1999| Geib1987`} Geib19882 Genova2000 Gibson1980= Gilead1989 Gilman1990 Gilman1994? Giten1986Glascock1994PGlascock1997;Glascock1999$Glascock2000 Goad19911^ Goetze1991<Goldberg1999Z Gopalaratnam1995= Goren1989> Goring1991 Gosselain1992 Graham1986 Graves1982O Greenough1998 Grove1995 Grygiel1993Guderjan1992Guilliem Arroyo1997?Gunneweg1986I Gwyn1998Hagstrum1985 Hagstrum1990EHall?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala Hally1986 Hammer19869 Hammond1984_ Hancock1986o Hancock1987 Hancock1990) Hanson19988G Harbottle1994Harrison1988` Hart1987 Hastorf1993j Hatcher1986Haviland1991 Hayashida1999 Hayden1983 Hayden1984~ Hays1989Y Heggenhougen1997b Hegmon1994 Hegmon1996n[ Hegmon1997n Hegmon1998r Heidke1988 Hein19891# Heite1983@ Helms1989 Helms1993 Henderson1989 Hendon1991 Hendon1992  Henrickson1983o Henrickson1987v Herbich1987 Herbick1989 Hermes19922 Hernndez1999Hernndez Aranda1995 Hernndez S.19951 Heron1991; Herrera1999  Hildebrand1990 Hildebrand1999Z Hoard1995 Hodge1990 Hodge1993 Hodges1991Holladay1976A Holladay Jr.1990 Holley1986 Hoopes1994 Hoopes1996) Houck1998 Houston1989w Huffman1989GHurst?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemala< Iceland1999 Ichon1988Iglesias1992Iglesias1992 III1995 Inomata2001Jacobsen1993VJacobson1997\Jacobson19981Jernigan1986Jernigan1986 Jett1986 Jimnez1991Jimnez Hernndez1997 Jimnez Lara19951 Johannessen1993c johnson1988& Johnstone1998 Jones19898 Jordan1999 Jornet1987a Joyce1986 Joyce1988 Joyce1991 Kamilli1980 Kaplan1985 l|Gerwulf Schneider 1989<6A Technological Study of North-Mesopotamian Stone WareWorld Archaeology 211 30-50B;Carmel Schrive James Deetz David Lubinski Cedric Poggenpoal 1990VOThe chrinilogy of outpost I, Cape, as influenced from an analysis of clay pipes(!Journal of Archaeological Science17269-300*#Louise Senior Dunbar P. Birnie III 1995D>Accurately Estimating Vessel Volume from Profile IllustrationsAMerican Antiquity602 319-334p(!Senior, Louise, and DP III BirnieW 1995D>Accurately estimating vessel volume from profile illustrationsAmerican antiquity602319-3344-Quantitative methods, ceramics, vessel volumeo"Harry J. Shafer A. J. Taylor 1986@9Mimbres Mogollon Pueblo Dynamics and Ceramic Style Changen"Journal of Field Archaeology131 43-68Harry J. Shaferi 1995jdArchitecture and Symbolism in Transitional Pueblo Development in the Mimbres Valley, S.W. New Mexico"Journal of Field Archaeology221 23-47pGary D. Shaffer 1993D=An Archaeomagnetic Study of Wattle and Daub Building Collapse"Journal of Field Archaeology201 59-75>8Shaffer, Brian S., Karen M. Gardner, and Harry J. Shafer 1997An unusual birth depicted in Mimbres pottery: not cracked up to what it is supposed to be [comments on M. Hegmon and WR Trevathan in American Antiquity 1996 (61:4) 747-754aAmerican Antiquity624c727-732lJDMimbres, ceramics, ceramic production, Southwest, New Mexico, gender Shapiro, Gary 1984PICeramic Vessels, Site Permanence, and Group Size: A Mississippian ExampleAmerican Antiquity49696-712&Robert J. Sharer David W. Sadet 1988.(Ceramics of the Salama Valley, Guatemala$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 72-78Shott, Michael J.- 1996VPMortal pots: on use life and vessel size in the formation of ceramic assemblagesAmerican antiquity613463-482&quantitiative methods, ceramicstSiegel, Peter E. 1999|vContested Places and Places of Contest: The Evolution of Social Power and Ceremonial Space in Prehistoric Puerto Rico.Latin American Antiquity103209-239The evolution of social power during the ceramic age of Puerto Rico is investigated. Archaeological site plans, ethnohistoric and ethnographic accounts, and size/spatial distributions of ball courts and ceremonial plazas are investigated as they relate to political organization and leadership roles in prehistoric Puerto Rico. One of the strands linking 14 centuries of ceramic-age culture in Puerto Rico is the emphasis on ceremonial space as an overtly integrative arena for the group. As the definition of the "group" evolved from a village-bound entity to a multivillage polity, the importance and elaboration of ceremonial space increased accordingly. The central argument in this paper is that politically motivated individuals accrued power by controlling the rituals and ceremonies that were of fundamental importance for maintaining and reproducing society. Rituals and ceremonies were performed in specially designated areas of communities. As access to power narrowed to specific lineages, families, or individuals, the designated community spaces became more formal in construction and location. These ceremonial spaces, referred to as ball courts and ceremonial plazas in the ethnohistoric accounts, ultimately became contested places as well as places of contest.Halanie Silverman 1994jdParacas in Mazca: New Data in the Early Horizon Occupation of the Rio Grande de Nazca Drainage, PeruLatin American Antiquity5359-38221sr oq{|p4JL~J}n~Von Winning, Hasso 1967@9Semejanzas Entre las Figurillas de Jaina y de Teotihuacano2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicost XXIn 41-69\ mesoamericalXQComparative analysis of figurines from Teotihuacan and Jaina, in the Maya region.hLarchaeology central ceramics classic figurines maya mesoamerica teotihuacan Henry D. Wallace 1995HACeramic Accumulation Rates and Prehistoric Tonto Basin Households 4.Mark D. Elson Miriam T. Stark David A. Gregory\UThe Rroosevelt Community Development Study New Perspectives on Tonto Basin Prehistory Tucson $Centre for Desert Archaeology1 148$Anthropological Papers No. 1511Henry D. Wallace 19950)Decorated Buffware and Brownware Ceramics &James M. Heidke Miriam T. Stark^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tempe $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 265$Anthropological Papers No. 141Henry D. Wallace 19950)Mixture Model and Additional Ceramic Datao 4.Mark D. Elson Miriam T. Stark David A. GregoryZTThe Roosevelt Community Development Study New Perspectives on Tonto Basin Prehistory Tucson $ Centre for Desert Archaeology1 14Anthropological Papers1David L. Webster 1984HBCeramic Assemblages from Three Fortified SItes of Northern Yucatan$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 84-108Wells, E. Christian  2000jcPottery Production and Microcosmic Organization: The Residential Structure of La Quemada, Zacatecs.fLatin American Antiquity111r 21-42yIncised-engraved pottery and clays from the Malpaso Valley region of northwest Mexico are chemically characterized to investigate the nature of residential organization of the capital settlement, La Quemada, during the Epiclassic period, ca. A.D. 600--900. Scanning-electron microprobe analysis of 115 pottery and 10 clay samples from settlements in the valley, and from middens associated with the civic-ceremonial core of La Quemada and flanking residential terraces, identifies locations of pottery production and indicates patterns of pottery circulation. The distribution of pottery at La Quemada, manufactured in specific outlying settlements, suggests that the social composition of the polity was reproduced in microcosm at the site, and that activities in civic-ceremonial zones involved a greater degree of separation among social groups than those in flanking residential areas.hWells, E. Christiant 2000jcPottery Production and Microcosmic Organization: The Residential Structure of la Quemada, ZacatecasaLatin American Antiquity111l 21-42 Kit W. Wesler 1991B;Ceramics, Chronology, & Horizon Markers at Wickliffe MoundsAmerican Antiquity562f278-290Westerfeld, Scottn 2000All is Not Loste Nature 406a 6793 241sReports on the discovery of the Landry-M'batu 'Cretan Spirals,' or spirals found on Cretan pottery that may help scientists decode ancient Cretan language. How the vibrations made by sound would have affected the pottery in its creation stage; Details regarding the use of molecular mapping in the decoding of the language; Future use of such sound techniques and how they may affect scientific exploration.Whalen, Michael Et 1998zJCeramic Vessel Size Estimation from Sherds: An Experiment and a Case Study J "Journal of Field Archaeology252oWhittlesey, Stephaniet 1974TMIdentification of Imported Ceramics Through Functional Analysis of Attributes Kiva401t101-112oStephanie M. Whittlesey 1994Ceramics :4Richard Ciolek-Torrello Steven D. Shelley Su BenaronVPThe Roosevelt Rural Sites Study Prehistoric Rural Settlements in the Tonto Basin Tucson 0)Statistical Research, Inc. P.O. Box 318652 292Jeffrey H. Altschud2,Statistical Research Technical Series No. 281Stephanie M. Whittleseyn 1997piToward a Unified Theory of Ceramic Production and Distribution: Examples from the Central Arizona Deserts HBStephanie M. Whittlesey Richard Cilek-Torrello Jeffrey H. AltschulD>Vanishing River Landscapes and Lives of the Lower Verde Valley Tucson  SRI Press1e 1430RKThe Lower Verde Archaeological Project Overview, Synthesis, and Conclusionso1nT. J. Wilkinson 1989JDExtensive Sherd Scatters and Land-Use Intensity: Some Recent Results"Journal of Field Archaeology161 31-46M. A. Williams 1994LFLa Familia Bauelos: A case Study of a Mata Ortiz Potterymaking Family Kiva60119-129 Williams, Denisa 199782Early pottery in the Amazon: a correction [comments on 'Early pottern in the Amazon: twenty years of scholarly obscurity' by Anna Roosevelt in The emergence of pottery: technology and innovation in ancient societies, eds. W.K. Barnett and J.W. Hoopes (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1995)American Antiquity622o342-352  Amazon, ceramic technology Wills, W.H. 1996f`The transition from the preceramic to ceramic period in Mogollon highlands of western New Mexico"Journal of field archaeology233r335-359g<5New Mexico, chronology, ceramic technology transitionrHBS. R. Wolff D. J. Liddy G. W. A. Newton V. J. Robinson R. J. Smith 1986xrClassical and Hellenistic Black Glaze Ware in the Mediterranean: A Study by Epithermal Neutron Activation Analysis(!Journal of Archaeological Science213245-259iRita P. Wright 199181Women's labor and pottry production in prehistory (!Joan M. Gero Margaret W. Conkey4-Engendering Archaeology. Women and Prehistory Oxford  Blackwello194-223a>7Social Issues in the Organization of Pottery ProductionL C. T. Yap 1988A Quantitative Spectrometric Analysis of Trace Concentrations of Manganese and Cobalt in Ceramics and the Significance of As/Co and Mn/Co Ratios(!Journal of Archaeological Science 15173-177e Anne Yentsch 1990\UMinimum Vessel Lists as Evidence of Change in Folk and Courtly Traditions of Food UseHistorical Archaeology243 24-53 Anne Yentsch 1991RLEngendering Visible and Invisble Ceramic Artifacts, Especially Dairy VesselsHistorical Archaeology254132-155l Lisa C. Young Tammy Stone 1999HBThe Thermal Properties of Textured Ceramics: An Experimental Study"Journal of Field Archaeology172t195-203e("Zedeo, M. Nieves Triadan, Daniela 2000VPCeramic Evidence for Community Reorganization and Change in East-Central Arizona Kiva65215-233s\F,RO+feaR5p`**#Florence C. Lister Robert H. Lister 19846/The Potters' Quarter of Colonial Puebla, MexicoHistorical Archaeology181 87-102Loney, Helen L. 2000piSociety and technological control: a critical review of models of technological change in ceramic studiespAmerican Antiquity654a646-668n"ceramic technology, ceramics>7William A. Longacre Kenneth L. Kvamme Masashi Kobayashia 1988\VSouthwestern POttery Standardization: An Ethnoarchaeological View from the PhilippinesThe Kiva532A101-112 Longacre, Williamc 1991Ceramic Ethnoarchaeology Tucson "University of Arizona Pressf&William A. Longacre Miram Stark  19926/Ceramics, Kinship, and Space: A Kalinga Example,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology11125-136Lopez Varela, Sandra L. 19924-Ceramic Units from Yaxchilan, Chiapas, Mexico$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al16 18-21 Michael Love 1993d^Ceramic Chronology and Chronometric Dating: Stratigraphy and Seriation at La Blanca, GuatemalaAncient Mesoamerica41 17-29^XLynott, Mark J., Hector Neff, James E. Price, James W. Cogswell, and Michael D. Glascock 2000xqInferences about prehistoric ceramics and people in southeast Missouri: results of ceramic compositional analysisoAmerican Antiquity651s103-126c:4ceramics, southeast Missouri, compositional analysisZTLynott, Mark J. Neff, Hector Price, James E. Cogswell, James W. Glascock, Michael D. 2000xqInferences about Prehistoric Ceramics and People in Southeast Missouri: Results of Ceramic Compositional AnalysisAmerican Antiquity651103-126Lyons, Patrick D.e 2003 Ancestral Hopi Migrations&Anthropological Paper Number 68r Tucson "University of Arizona PresstS. H. MacCullum 1994LEIntroduction: Chronology and Perspective on the Mata Ortiz Phenomenono Kiva60 5-23S. H. MacCullum 1994NHPioneering an Art Movement in Northern Mexico: The Potters of Mata Ortiz Kiva60 71-91MacNeish, Richard S. 1947LEA Synopsis of the Archaeological Sequence in the Sierra de Tamaulipasr2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicoseIX 1-3 79-96g mesoamericarHACeramic sequence used for dating findings in caves at Tamaulipas.dHarchaeology ceramics culture history mesoamerica prehispanic tamaulipas Teresita Majewskif 199182Massola: Pottery and Porcelain on Peachtree StreetHistorical Archaeology252116-117:4Mallory-Greenough, L. M Greenough, J. D. Owen, J. V. 1998f_ New Data For Old Pots: Trace-Element Characterization of Ancient Egyptian Pottery Using ICP-MSn(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencee251 85-985RKManzanilla, Linda Barba, Luis Aburto, Sergio Urrutia, Jaime Jimnez, Manuele 1991`ZEstudio Interdisciplinario de Arcillas y Cermicas de Teotihuacan y del Centro de VeracruzAntropologa y Tcnica4_ 7-55mesoamerica/archaeologyeHAarchaeology ceramics classic geology gulf prehispanic teotihuacanrAnn Smart Martin 1989PIWilcoxen: Dutch Trade and Ceramics in America in the Seventheenth CenturyHistorical Archaeology232131-133&Robert B. Mason Edward J. Keallq 1988vpProvenance of local ceramic industry and characterization of imports: Petrography of pottery from medieval Yemen Antiquityi62452-463dStephania MazzoniS 1985d^Elements of the Ceramic Culture of Early Syrian Ebla in Comparison with Syrio-Palestinian EBIVD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 257 1-182+McAnany, Patricia A; Lopez Varela, Sandra Lh 1999~wRe-creating the Formative Maya Village of K'axob: Chronology, Ceramic Complexes, and Ancestors in Architectural ContextAncient Mesoamerica101e147-168'''999=======111' %/  :9''/1  2 ''%0 %/' @ 95 t7'8/"J=!F9K) : LVM 3{u CPB GX>JQRS[-KS @MT!IuVW;?N<,D]~Q#|}=^>? _`~Yb[#@ v;ZAw<\c8Ba$%(&d'C]6I1%+4^)(D_E*3*`5aef+O,F\.G27H-./0bcA$iTWEL9:Yjfg" xhHkilRUl y6m0zm&Pnop}~4|{qors12[_0BP)XK9FZ!=J"Arthur, John W. 2002ztPottery Use-Alteration as an Indicator of Socioeconomic Status: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of the Gamo of Ethiopia2+Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory94331-355Michael Attas et al. 1987voAn Archaeometric study of Early Bronze Age Pottery Production and Exchange in Argolis and Korinthia (Corinthia)t"Journal of Field Archaeology141 77-90Mary C. Baeudry et al. 1983XRA Vessel Typology for the Early Chesapeake Ceramics: The Potmac Typological SystemHistorical Archaeology171 18-43 B;Balkansky, Andrew K., Gary M. Feinman and Linda M. Nicholas 19976/Pottery kilns of ancient Ejutla, Oaxaca, Mexico"Journal of field archaeology242139-160g.'Oaxaca, Mesoamerica, pottery productionuJoseph W. Ball 1984B8Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia III\ 59-77r mesoamericanharchaeology/art/ceramics/classic/iconography/oaxaca/prehispanic/sculpture/south/monte alban/scroll style4-Geroge J. Bey Carlos Peraza William M. Ringle 1992b[Comparative Analysis of Late Classic Period Ceramic Complexes of the Northern Maya Lowlands$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al16 11-17<6Bey, George J., Craig A. Hanson, and William M. Ringle 1997rkClassic to Postclassic at Ek Balam, Yucatn: Architectural and Ceramic Evidence for Defining the TransitioniLatin American Antiquity83237-255b\Presents a report of the transition of Classic-to-Postclassic in the Maya Lowlands. Reference to a study of the site of Ek Balam, Yucatan; Information of a comparison of the structural and chronological changes in structures; Argument that the type of building known as the C-shaped structure made its appearance during the Terminal Classic period.piBey III, George J Bond, Tara M Ringle, William M Hanson, Craig A Houck, Charles W Peraza Lope, Carlos 1998N2The Ceramic Chronology of Ek Balam, Yucatan MexicoAncient Mesoamerica9 1r101-120Ancient MesoamericaDiane Beynon et al. 1986f`Temporary Types and Sources for Early Bronze Age ceramics from Bab edh-Dhra' and Numeira, Jordan"Journal of Field Archaeology133y297-306[SdRv"QJ>X&(G Christopher Carr 1990NHAdvances in ceramic radiography and analysis: Application and potentials(!Journal of Archaeological Science17 13-34,%Christopher Carr Earle B. Jr. Riddick 1990F@Advances in ceramic radiography and analysis: Laboratory methods(!Journal of Archaeological Science17 35-66dChristopher Carr 199381Identifying Individual Vessels with X-RadiographyAmerican Antiquity581 96-117.'Carvajal, Agustn Valencia Cruz, Daniel 1989La Casa de TalaveradNotas Mesoamericanas11229-245 mesoamericaDescribes colonial materials found in a building at Mexico City during reconstruction operations. Links these materials with an ethnohistoric document that lists the potters from colonial Puebla.i`Carchaeology architecture ceramics colonial mexico city mesoamerica aM. O. H. CarverU 19854.Theory and Practice in Urban Pottery Seraition(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencee12353-366o$Casasola, Luis Alvarez, Carlos 19782,La Cermica Moderna de Monte Grande, Tabasco2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicosr XXIV3l301-307o F1201 .R462 mesoamericaPJceramics craft production ethnography gulf mesoamerica prehispanic tabasco"Casimir de Brizuela, Gladys  1995*$La Cermica de Loma Iguana, Veracruz Arqueologa} 13-14  89-91\ mesoamericatLFarchaeology ceramics classic culture history gulf mesoamerica veracruz(!Overview and some interpretation.c"Fernando Robles Castellanos 1988>8Ceramic Units from Isla Cerritos, North Coast of Yucatan$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 65-071"Castelln Huerta, Blas Romn 1993@:Cermica de la Regin Atotonilco-Arandas, Altos de Jalisco Arqueologaa 9-10 49-590 mesoamericaRLarchaeology ceramics culture history classic jalisco mesoamerica west mexico&Raffael Cavallaro Izumi Shimadad 1988B;Some Thoughts on Sican Marked Adobes and Labor OrganizationAmerican Antiquity531 75-101<6Charters, S. Evershed, R. P. Quye, A. Blinkhorn, P. W. 1997 Simulation Experiments for Determining the Use of Ancient Pottery Vessels: the Behaviour of Epicuticular Leaf Wax During Boiling of a Leafy Vegetable(!Journal of Archaeological Science0241l 1-8fAlren F. Chase 1984PIThe Ceramic Complexes of the Tayasal-Paxcaman Zone, Lake Peten, Guatemala5$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 27-41Diane Z. Chase 1984^XThe Late Postclassic Pottery of Santa Rita Corozal, Belize: The Xabalxab Ceramic Complex&Ceramica de Cultural Maya et al13 18-26Philip G. Chase 1985b[Whole Vessels and Sherds: An Experimental Investigation of Their Quantitative Relationships"Journal of Field Archaeology122213-218aChase, Philip G. 1985`ZWhole Vessels and Sherds: An Experimental Investigation of Their Quantitative Relationship"Journal of Field Archaeology12213-218*$Chen, T.; Rapp, G.; Jing, Z.; He, N. 1999pi Provenance Studies of the Earliest Chinese Protoporcelain Using Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencee268 1003-10166A. Christenson 1994JDA Test of Mean Ceramic Dating Using Well-Dated Kayenta Anasazi Sites Kiva59297-317eCiudad Ruiz, Andres 198860Desarrollo Ceramico en el Alto Samala, Guatamala$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 93-130:3Clark, Jeffrey T., Peter Sheppard, and Martin Jones 1997F?Late ceramics in Samoa: a test using hydration-rim measurements7Current anthropology385898-904g,%Samoa, quantitative methods, ceramicsiClark, Jeffery J.e 2001TNTracking Prehistoric Migrations: Pueblo Settlers among the Tonto Basin Hohokam Tucson "University of Arizona PresstClark, Tiffany 20064-Regional Organization of Chupadero Production3\VProduction, Exchange, and Social Identity: A Study of Chupadero Black-on-White Pottery Tempe\ XRUnpublished PhD Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Arizona State University117-1804-Cobean, Robert H. Mastache F., Alba Guadalupem 1987@:Cermica Importada en Tula, Hidalgo: Un Informe Preliminar \UDireccin de Monumentos Prehispanicos (Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia)j Arqueologaa1e 89-132 mesoamericab\archaeology/ceramics/central/economics/chronology/hidalgo/postclassic/prehispanic/trade/tula>8Cogswell, James W., Hector Neff, and Michael D. Glascock 1998XRAnalysis of shell-tempered pottery replicates: implications for provenance studiesAmerican Antiquity631  63-72tceramic technology& Cathy Lynne Costin Timothy Earle 1989~xStatus Distinction and Legitimization of Power as reflected in Changing Patterns of Consumption in Late Prehispanic PeruAmerican Antiquity544c691-714Cathy L. Costin1 1991jdCraft specialization: issues in defining, documenting, and explaining the organization of production Michael B. Schiffer& Archaeological Method and Theory Tucson University of Arizona 1-56Craft Specialization,%Costin, Cathy L. Hagstrum, Melissa B. 1995|vStandardization, Labor Investment, Skill, and the Organization of Ceramic Production in Late Prehispanic Highland PeruAmerican Antiquity604619-639hbCotkin, Spencer J., Christopher Carr, Mary Louise Cotkin, Alfred E. Dittert, and Daniel T. Kremser 1999~wAnalysis of slips and other inorganic surface materials on Woodland and early Fort Ancient ceramics, south central OhiouAmerican Antiquity642r316-342p<5ceramics, slip analysis, Woodland, south central OhiorCourty, M. A. Roux, V. 1995b[ Identification of Wheel Throwing on the basis of Ceramic Surface Features and Microfabricsp(!Journal of Archaeological Science+2211 17-50o ,?;W(V^uDuff, Andrew I.  19964-Ceramic Micro-Seriation: Types or Attributes?8American Antiquity61 89-1014.Eerkens, Jelmer Neff, Hector Glascock, Michael 2002|uCeramic Production among Small-scale and Mobile Hunters and Gatherers: A Case Study from the Southwestern Great Basin{,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology21200-229Manfred K. H. Eggert 1989\UImbonga and Batalimo: ceramic evidence for early settlement of equatorial rain forests$African Archaeological Review5129-1464Ekholm, Gordon F.T 1940("Prehistoric "Lacquer" from Sinaloa2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicosIV 1-2 10-15e mesoamericaaHBIdentification of "pseudo-cloisonn" ceramics in Guasave, Sinaloa.hKarchaeology ceramics epiclassic mesoamerica prehispanic sinaloa technology g0)Emerson, Thomas E., and Randall E. Hughesh 2000TMFigurines, flint clay sourcing, the Ozark highlands, and Cahokian acquisitionAmerican Antiquity651s 79-101LEceramics, figurines, compositional analysis, Ozark highlands, Cahokiat Epenshade, Christopher T.v 1997Mimbres pottery, births, and gender: a reconsideration [comments on M. Hegmon and WR Trevathan in American Antiquity 1996 (61:4) 747-754]American Antiquity624t733-736u60gender, ceramics, Mimbres, Southwest, New MexicoClaire Epstein 1985F@Laden Animal Figurines from the Chalcolithic Period in PalestineD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 258 53-62aErtem, E. Demirci, S.o 1999TM Characteristics of Hittite Pottery Sherds from Sites in the Kizilirmak Basin(!Journal of Archaeological Science268 1017-1024Espejo, Antonietao1952-53 ^XDos Tipos de Alfarera Negro-sobre-anaranjado en la Cuenca de Mxico y en el Totonacapan2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicos2 XIII 2-3 403-412l mesoamericaG^XStudy of Aztec ceramics. Interaction between the Basin of Mexico and the Totonac region.rUarchaeology aztec central ceramics gulf mesoamerica postclassic prehispanic veracruz iEvershed, Richard P. 2008leExperimental Approaches to the Interpretation of Absorbed Organic Residues in Archaeological CeramicspWorld Archaeologya401 26-47James K. Feathersn 1989PJEffects of Temper on Strength of Ceramics: repsonse to Bronitsky and HamerAmerican Antiquity543579-588Gary Feinman et al,  1989tmA Technological Perspective on Changes in the Ancient Oaxacan Grayware Ceramic tradition: Preliminary results"Journal of Field Archaeology163331-344<6Fernndez Mendiola, Sara E. Jimnez Hernndez, Leticia 199760Restauracin de la Ofrenda Cermica Teotihuacana Arqueologao18 23-282 mesoamericaevparchaeology central ceramics classic household ideation mexico prehispanic religion ritual teotihuacan figurines0v @#D[.'Hegmon, Michelle and Wenda R. Trevathans 1997JDResponse to comments by LeBlanc, by Epenshade, and by Shaffer et al.American Antiquity624c737-739,%ceramics, gender, Mimbres, New MexicoM:4Hegmon, Michelle, Margaret Nelson, and Susan M. Ruth 1998VOAbandonment and Reorganization in the Mimbres Region of the American Southwest. American Anthropologist5 1001148-163jcProvides information on an investigation of the abandonment at the end of the Mimbres Classic Period as a process of reorganization within a larger social context. Analyses of the pottery and architecture indicating material changes; Information on the social implications of material culture change and variation; Conclusion reached on the investigation.aJames Heidke Mark Elsonc 1988HATucson Basin Stucco-Coated Plain ware: A Technological Assessment.The Kiva533273-285 Edward Heite 1983B8Arizona State Museum and the University of Arizona PressVan Keuren, Scott G. 200460Feasting and Crafts in the Prehispanic Southwest Mills, Barbara J.uF@Identity, Feasting, and the Archaeology of the Greater Southwest Boulder "University of Colorado Press192-209Van Keuren, Scott G. 2006>8Decorating Glaze-Painted Pottery in East Central Arizona F?Habicht-Mauch, Judith A. Eckert, Suzanne L. Huntley, Deborah L. `YThe Social Life of Pots: Glaze Wares and Cultural Dynamics in the Southwest, AD 1250-1680 Tucson "University of Arizona Press 86-1042,Vargas, Ramon Carrasco, and Sylvaine Boucher 1999^WA Dynastic Tomb from Campeche, Mexico: New Evidence on Jaguar Paw, a Ruler of Calakmul.lLatin American Antiquity101 47-59ZTReports on the discovery of a royal tomb in Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico, believed to be that of Yukom Yich'ak K'ak' or Jaguar Paw, the former governor of Calakmul. Alleged legend of Jaguar Paw regarding his capture and sacrifice at Tikal in 695 A.D.; Description of the tomb and its contents; Discovery of ceramic vessels and royal identity.& Varien, Mark D. and James Potter 1993leUnpacking the Discard Equation: Simulating the Accumulation of Artifacts in the Archaeological RecordAmerican Antiquity622194-214LFV. Vitali J. W. Simmons E. F. Henrickson L. D. Levine R. G. V. Hancock 1987zA Hierarchical Taxonomic Procedure for Provenance Determination: A Case Study of Chalcolithic Ceramics from Central Zagros(!Journal of Archaeological Science14423-435y V. Vitali 1989B;Archaeometric Provenance Studies: An Expert System Approach(!Journal of Archaeological Science16383-391 V. Vitalil U. M. Franklin 1986xqNew Approaches to the Characterization anf Classification of Ceramics on the Basis of their Elemental Composition("Journal of Archaeological Ceramics13161-170rKaren D. Vitelli 1989:4Were Pots Forst Made for Food? Doubts from FranchthiWorld Archaeology211 17-29crDb L0/.-George L. Miller 1987^WCollard: The Potters' View of Canada: Canadian Scenes on Noneteenth-Century Earthenware{Historical Archaeology211o109-110BGeorge L. Miller 1988F?Strong: History of American Ceramics: An Annotated BibliographyHistorical Archaeology222107-108George L. Miller 1989VOEdwards: Neals Pottery and Porcelain: Its Predecessors and Successors 1763-1820Historical Archaeology232134-135George L. Miller 1991tnA Revised Set of CC Index Values for Classification and Economic Scaling of English Ceramics from 1787 to 1880Historical ArchaeologyVirginia E. Miller 1994aReview of Painting the Maya Universe: Royal Ceramics of the Classic Period, by Dorie Reents-Budet   J LAtin American Antiquity5278-279Mills, Barbara J.e 1989jdIntegrating Functional Analyses of Vessels and Sherds through Models of Ceramic Assemblage FormationWorld Archaeologyt211{133-147*$Mills, Barbara J. Crown, Patricia L. 19952,Ceramic Production in the American Southwest Tucson "University of Arizona PresstMills, Barbara J. 1999PJCeramics and Social Contexts of Food Consumption in the Northern Southwest & Skibo, James M. Feinman, Gary M.0)Pottery and People: A Dynamic Interaction Salt Lake City University of Utah Press ("Barbara J. Mills Patricia L. Crown 20002,Ceramic Production in the American Southwest Tucson "University of Arizona PressoChristi Mitchell 19924.Activating women in Arikara ceramic production Cheryl Claussen*$Exploring Gender Through Archaeology Madison, Wisconsin Prehistory Press 89-94o>7Social Issues in the Organization of Pottery Productiona Moedano, Hugo  1941PJEstudio Preliminar de la Cermica de Tzintzuntzan: Temporada III 1939-19402+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicosrIg1i 21-42h mesoamerica|`archaeology ceramics culture history mesoamerica michoacan postclassic prehispanic tzintzuntzan Moholy-Nagy, Hattula 1997Middens, construction fill, and offerings: evidence for the organization of classic period craft production at Tikal, Guatemala"Journal of field archaeology243293-313d4.Mesoamerica, Tikal, craft production, ceramics0)H. Mommsen T. Beier U. Diehl C. Podzuweit 1992hbProvenance determination of Mycenaen sherds found in Tell el Amarna by neutron activation analysis(!Jounral of Archaeological ScienceA19295-302r,&Barbra K. Montgomery J. Jefferson Reid 1990F?An Instance of Rapid Ceramic Exchange in the American SouthwestuAmerican Antiquity551 88-97Muller, Florencia 19746/Cermica de Xochicalco, Morelos. Temporada 1962,Cultura y Sociedad1 54-60 mesoamericalHBResults from the analysis of ceramics from 1962 excavation season.dGarchaeology central ceramics epiclassic mesoamerica morelos xochicalco tMuller, Florencias 1977.(La Iconografa de la Cermica de Cholula2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicosy XXIIIr2s155-177c mesoamericah0*Iconographic analysis of Cholula ceramics.manalysis archaeology central ceramics cholula iconography mesoamerica postclassic prehispanic mixteca-puebla nMunson, Marit K. 2000D>Sex, gender, and status: human images from the Classic MimbresAmerican Antiquity651l127-143o2,gender, ceramics, classic Mimbres, SouthwestRoger C. Nance 1992PJGuzman Mound: A Late Preclassic Salt Works on the South Coast of GuatemalaAncient Mesoamerica31 27-46 James A. Neely Paul Storch 1988F@Friable Pigments and Ceramic Surfaces: A Case Study from SW Iran"Journal of Field Archaeology151108-113 H7 2~GH.McCafferty, Geoffrey G 1996J.The Ceramics and Chronology of Cholula, MexicoAncient Mesoamerica72299-324Ancient MesomamericaMcClure, Sarah B. Bernabeu, Joan GarcXXXa, Oreto Aura, Emili Molina, LLuXXXs Descantes, Christophe Speakman, Robert J. Glascock, Michael D.} 2006lfTesting Technological Practices: Neutron Activation Analysis of Neolithic Ceramics from Valencia Spain(!Journal of Archaeological Science33671-680F?Patrick McGovern Janin Bourriau Garman Harbottle Susan J. Allens 1994rkThe Archaeological Origin and Significance of the Dolphin Vase as Determined by Neutron Activation AnalysisD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 296 31-44$S. K. McIntosh Kevin McDonalde 19894.Sponge Spicules in POttery: New Data from Mali"Journal of Field Archaeology1642489-493oMedelln Zenil, Alfonso1952-53c>7Secuencia Cronolgico-Cultural en el Centro de Veracruzl2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicos0 XIII 2-3p371-378a mesoamerica D=Description of ceramic types en relation to local chronology.shKarchaeology ceramics culture history gulf mesoamerica prehispanic veracruz a(Meloni, S Oddone, M Genova, N Cairo, A       (  2000The production of ceramic materials in Roman Pavia: An archaeometric NAA investigation of clay sources and archaeological artifactsn 60Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry 244c3a:4Mercader, J.; Garcia-Heras, M.; Gonzalez-Alvarez, I. 2000~wCeramic Tradition in the African Forest: Characterization Analysis of Ancient and Modern Pottery from Ituri, D.R. Congo(!Journal of Archaeological Science271163-18242,Merino Carrin, Leonor B. Garca Cook, Angel 1987$Proyecto Arqueolgico Huasteca Arqueologae1d 31-72\ mesoamericagvZarchaeology architecture central ceramics culture history huastec mesoamerica prehispanic Merlo Jurez, Eduardoo 1991.'Los Teocalli-Maqueta de Calipan, Puebla Notas Mesoamericanas13 25-34b mesoamericaDescribes the representation of Temple effigies made out of ceramics from Calipa, Puebla, in the southern part of the Tehuacan Caada from a looted tomb context.yZ=archaeology central ceramics ethnohistory mesoamerica puebla  E. M. Meyers 1985Stratigraphic and Ceramic Observations from the Medieval Strata of Khirbet Shema, Israel: Assessment of the Values of Scientific AnalysisD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 260 61-70`LE0WTh"*$Paul T. Nicholson Helen L. Patterson 1989B7Los Monumentos Arqueolgicos y la Cermica de Zacatepec2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicosIV 1-2 16-42l`Yarchaeology architecture central ceramics mesoamerica mexico city postclassic prehispanic nhDescription of site at Pedegral in Mexico City and the classification of ceramic materilals found there.( mesoamerica Noguera, Eduardo 1941@:La Cermica de Cholula y sus Relaciones con Otras Culturas2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicosVp 2-3151-161 mesoamerica voReviews the interaction of Cholula ceramics with sites in the Basin of Mexico, Yucatan, Oaxaca, and Xochicalco.x\archaeology central ceramics cholula interaction mesoamerica postclassic prehispanic puebla Noguera, Eduardo 1947Cermica de XochicalcoEl Mxico Antiguo\VI 9-12273-300h mesoamerica tWarchaeology central ceramics culture history epiclassic mesoamerica morelos xochicalco  Colm O'Brien 1980&An experiment in pottery firing ANtiquity54 57-59Patrick O'Brien 1990F?An experimental study of the effects of salt erosion in potteryr(!Journal of Archaeological Science 17393-401r O'Mack, Scotth60Reconocimiento Arqueologico en Tututepec, OaxacaNotas Mesoamericanas 199012 19-38i mesoamericaoTMarchaeology/ceramics/mixtec/oaxaca/prehispanic/south/sculpture/settlement/arte* - xerox copy4.J. Oates T. E. Davidson D. Kamilli H. Mckerrel 1980 Seafaring Merchants of Ura Antiquityc51221-234m82Ochoa Castillo, Patricia Rojas Chvez, Juan Martn 1996@:Algunos Artefactos Cermicos de Tlatilco, Estado de Mxico Arqueologa16109-112l mesoamericaJDescribes a few utilitarian ceramic vessels (dropers and funnels) from Tlatilco used in medical and possible ritual activities.P4archaeology ceramics formative mesoamerica tlatilco *$Orton, Clive Tyers, Paul Vince, Alan 1993Pottery in Archaeology& Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology  Cambridger Cambridge University Press Owen, J. V. 1997vpQuantification of Early Worcester Porcelain Recipes and the Distinction between Dr Wall- and Flight-period Wares(!Journal of Archaeological Science244301-310Owen, J. V. Barkla, R. 1997Compositional Characteristics of 18th Century Derby Porcelains: Recipe Changes, Phase Transformations, and Melt Fertility (as950099)(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencec242127-1401Owen, J. V. Sandon, J. 1998Petrology of Gilbody, Pennington and Christian/Pennington (18th Century Liverpool) Porcelains and their Distinction from some Contemporary Phosphatic and Magnesian/Plombian British Wares(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencer2511 1131-1148t@9Owen, J. V.; Wilstead, J. O.; Williams, R. W.; Day, T. E.a 1998A Tale of Two Cities: Compositional Characteristics of some Nantgarw and Swansea Porcelains and their Implications for Kiln Wastage(!Journal of Archaeological Science254m359-376lPadilla Yedra, Judith 1995D=Areas Culturales de la Costa del Golfo Durante el Postclsicoo Arqueologa 13-14 5-15 mesoamerica\F?Describes briefly the sequence of ceramic groups from Veracruz.stWanalysis archaeology ceramics culture history gulf mesoamerica postclassic prehispanic iDiogenes Patinoa 1993d^Arqueologia del Bajio Patia, fases y correlaciones en la costa poacifica de Colombia y EcuadorLatin American Antiquity4180-199 ^xN"gRattray, Evelyn Childs 1989VPEl Barrio de los Comerciantes y el Conjunto Tlamimilolpa: Un Estudio Comparativo rUDireccin de Monumentos Prehispanicos (Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia)  Arqueologa5, Primera Epoca105-129 mesoamericaarchaeology/central/ceramics/mexico/prehispanic/classic/social structure/teotihuacan/politics/gulf/maya/architecture/chronology/economics/gulf,%Redford, Scott, and M. James Blackmans 1997HALuster and fritware production and distribution in medieval Syria"Journal of field archaeology242e233-247o("medieval Syria, ceramic production,GDorie Reents-Budet Ronald L. Bishop Jennifer T. Taschek Joseph W. Ballf      / 0 7 9 B C  2000PJOut of the Palace Dumps: Ceramic Production and Use at Buenavista del CayoAncient Mesoamericac111- 99-121Anicent MesomamericaAn interdisciplinary approach to Late Classic Maya polychrome-painted ceramics from Buenavista del Cayo and Cahal Pech, Belize allows for preliminary observations relevant to a better understanding of elite pottery production and use in the western Belize Valley. The combination of typological and contextual data from archaeological investigations of ceramics along with art-historical stylistic analyses and ceramic-paste chemical-composition data identifies ordinary and special-purpose vessels excavated from palace-midden contexts as having been created in the same elite-oriented or palace workshop(s) at Buenavista del Cayo. The method allows for the identification of unslipped, monochrome, and polychrome pottery excavated from palace contexts at nearby Cahal Pech as products of the palace school workshop(s) at Buenavista del Cayo, which implies movement of the ruling elite of the site between the two locales. The method also allows for the identification of a group of multiphase special-purpose ceramics excavated from Buenavista del Cayo palace middens whose chemical divergence from the other palace-school pottery provides evidence for the existence of different ceramic-paste recipes existing simultaneously within the same palace ceramic school or pottery tradition.P0)Reid, J. Jefferson Montgomery, Barbara K. 1998RLThe Brown and the Gray: Pots and Population Movement in East-Central Arizona*#Journal of Anthropological Researchp544447-459Reina S., Magdalena: 1989tmEstudio de Materiales de Terradas de una de las Casas de Barrio, Localizados en la Nmina de Loceros Poblanos2Notas Mesoamericanas11220-228o mesoamericarDescribes colonial materials found in a building at Mexico City during reconstruction operations. Links these materials with an ethnohistoric document that lists the potters from colonial Puebla.aT7archaeology architecture ceramics colonial mexico city sRendon, Silvia 1947B7Ceramic Units from Macanche Island, El Peten, Guatemala$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 69-73Rice, Prudence M.e 1987$Pottery Analysis: A Sourcebook Chicagot "University of Chicago PressaPrudence M. Rice 1991.(Women and prehistoric pottery production "Dale Walde Noreen D. WillowsTNThe Archaeology of Gender. Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Chacmool Conference Calgaryr >7Archaeological Association of the University of Calgaryi436-443>8Social Issues in the Organization of Pottery Production, ({ Amazon, ceramic technologyZ analysis archaeologylharchaeology/art/ceramics/classic/iconography/oaxaca/prehispanic/sculpture/south/monte alban/scroll styleXSarchaeology/central/ceramics/chronology/ethnohistory/postclassic/prehispanic/pueblalfarchaeology/central/ceramics/mexico/oaxaca/prehispanic/classic/chronology/social structure/teotihuacanarchaeology/central/ceramics/mexico/prehispanic/classic/social structure/teotihuacan/politics/gulf/maya/architecture/chronology/economics/gulf`Zarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/thin orange/mexico|yarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/maya/politics/east/south/thin orange/mexicoxuarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/oaxaca/maya/politics/thin orange/mexicoarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/politics/production/distribution/thin orange/mexicoliarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/politics/thin orange/mexico`\archaeology/ceramics/central/economics/chronology/hidalgo/postclassic/prehispanic/trade/tulaXTarchaeology/ceramics/chiapas/formative/guatemala/gulf/ interaction/mesoamerica/olmecPMarchaeology/ceramics/mixtec/oaxaca/prehispanic/south/sculpture/settlement/art architectureaztecbajo burialolo campeche centralloLHcentral/ceramics/colonial/economics/ethnohistory/mexico city/mesoamerica$ceramic production, interaction ceramic production, Southwest41ceramic seriation, typology, quantitative methodsceramic technology ceramic technology, ceramics ceramicso$ ceramics, compositional analysisHEceramics, figurines, compositional analysis, Ozark highlands, Cahokia(%ceramics, gender, Mimbres, New Mexico41ceramics, method and theory, quantitative methods85ceramics, slip analysis, Woodland, south central Ohio84ceramics, southeast Missouri, compositional analysis chichen-itza cholulasochronology, ceramics chupicuaroy classicst colonialo$ compositional analysis, ceramics coyotlatelcoocraft productionculture history("Cyprus, complex society, figurines economics economysoEcuador, ceramic exchange epiclassicsto ethnographyct ethnohistory feasting, Southwest, ceramics figurinesfigurines, Cyprusforeign traditions formative genderive0,gender, ceramics, classic Mimbres, Southwest40gender, ceramics, Mimbres, Southwest, New MexicoHDgender, Mimbres, Southwest, New Mexico, ceramics, ceramic production geologyso guanajuatocto guerreroegulfh hidalgosi household84households, ceramic production, economic archaeology huastec h iconography ideationd4/Illinois Woodland, stylistic analysis, ceramics interaction jalisco hmayae("medieval Syria, ceramic production mesoamerica4.Mesoamerica, Tikal, craft production, ceramics methodcso mexicocst mexico cityct mezcalari michoacanHDMimbres, ceramics, ceramic production, Southwest, New Mexico, gendermixteca-puebla morelosri85New Mexico, chronology, ceramic technology transition(%New Mexico, Mimbres, gender, ceramics oaxacarap,'Oaxaca, Mesoamerica, pottery production petrography politicso postclassicbl prehispanicbl productioncct pueblaeri$quantitative methods, ceramics0-Quantitative methods, ceramics, vessel volume$quantitiative methods, ceramics religionn ritualonn(%Samoa, quantitative methods, ceramics4.Seacow valley, pottery decorations, chronology sinaloaansocial structure0-South Africa, ceramic production, ethnographySouth Africa, figurinesY4/South Africa, stratigraphy, pottery, chronology tabascoan tamaulipascto technologyc teotihuacane tlatilcoi tlaxcalan toltecis totonac-ptradetulau typologyn tzintzuntzano veracruzn west mexicoto xochicalcocto yucatanzn4 "- pyAbbott, David R.Aburto, SergioAgrinier, Pierre Aikens, C. W.Altschud, Jeffrey H.Altschul, Jeffrey H.Alvarez, CarlosArnold, Dean E.$ Arnold, Dean E. and Marc BermannArthur, John W. Aura, Emili@;Balkansky, Andrew K., Gary M. Feinman and Linda M. Nicholas Barba, LuisBarlow, Robert Barton, Huw4/Beaudry-Corbett, Marilyn, and John S. Henderson Benaron, Su(#Bermann, Marc, and Warren R. DeBoerBernabeu, JoanBernadini, WesleyBernal, Ignacio<6Bey, George J., Craig A. Hanson, and William M. RingleBishop, Ronald L. Blinman, EricBlitz, John H. Bolger, Diane,(Bollong, Charles A. and C. Garth SampsonBowser, Brenda J.Brainerd, George W.Braniff C., BeatrizBray, Tamara L.Bronitsky, GordonBurton, James H.(%Burton, James H., and Arlyen W. Simon Byrd, John E.Cabrera Castro, RubnCabrera, Oralia Cackette, M.Cano Salas, GildaCanouts, VelattaCarvajal, AgustnCasasola, Luis Casimir de Brizuela, Gladys Castelln Huerta, Blas RomnChase, Philip G.Cilek-Torrello, RichardCiolek-Torrello, RichardClark, Jeffery J.83Clark, Jeffrey T., Peter Sheppard, and Martin JonesClark, TiffanyCobean, Robert H.Cogswell, James W.<8Cogswell, James W., Hector Neff, and Michael D. GlascockCostin, Cathy L.hbCotkin, Spencer J., Christopher Carr, Mary Louise Cotkin, Alfred E. Dittert, and Daniel T. KremserCowgill, George L.Crown, Patricia L.Curet, L. AntonioCyphers Guilln, AnnD'Auria, J. M.Daneels, AnnickDe Atley, Suzanne P. Deal, MichaelDeBoer, Warren R.Deiter, MichaelDelgado Rubio, JaimeDescantes, ChristopheDietler, MichaelDonnan, Christopher B. Dreyer, J. Du Solier Massieu, WilfridoDuff, Andrew I.($Duff, E. Charles Adams and Andrew I.Eckert, Suzanne A.Eckert, Suzanne L.Eerkens, JelmerEkholm, Gordon F.Elson, Mark D.,)Emerson, Thomas E., and Randall E. HughesEpenshade, Christopher T.Espejo, AntonietaEstrada Balmori, ElmaEvershed, Richard P.Feinman, Gary M. Fernndez Mendiola, Sara E.$!Finsten, Laura, and John R. Topic Foncerrada de Molina, MartaFournier, PatriciaFranco, Jos LuisFrankel, DavidFreidel, David A.Freter, AnnCorinneGarber, James F.Garca Cook, AngelGarca Payn, JosGarca Snchez, SoledadGarcXXXa, Oreto Gaxiola Gonzlez, Margarita Gifford, J.Glascock, MichaelGlascock, Michael D.Glowacki, Donna M.Gregory, David A.Grove, David C.Guilliem Arroyo, SalvadorHabicht-Mauch, Judith A.Habicht-Mauche, Judith A.Hagstrum, Melissa B.Hally, David J. Hamer, RobertHantman, Jeffrey L.Hayashida, Frances M.Hedike, James M.`[Heggenhougen, Kris, Michelle Hegmon, James R. Allison, Hector Neff, and Michael D. Glascock,'Hegmon, Michelle and Wenda R. Trevathan,)Hegmon, Michelle, and Wenda R. Travathan84Hegmon, Michelle, Margaret Nelson, and Susan M. Ruth Heidke, J. M.Heidke, James M.Herbich, IngridHernndez Aranda, Judith # African Archaeological ReviewAmerican AnthropologistAmerican AntiquityAnales de Antropologa<8Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e HistoriaAntropologa y Tcnica Arqueologa Arqueologa. Primera EpocaCultura y SociedadCurrent anthropologyEl Mxico AntiguoExpresin Antropolgica,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology(#Journal of Anthropological Research0+Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory("Journal of Archaeological Research$!Journal of Archaeological Science Journal of field archaeology Journal of Social ArchaeologyKivaLatin American Antiquity NaturewNotas Mesoamericanas0+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicos SciencewWorld Archaeology?>^ =b}|l"Gaxiola Gonzlez, Margaritaa 1999<6Huapalcalco y las Tradiciones Alfareras del Epiclsico Arqueologas21 45-72t mesoamericarRKDescribes the ceramic types of the pottery from Huapalcalco, Hidalgo and their placement in the development of the Epiclassic societies of the Northeast region of the Basin of Mexico. The ceramic complex of Huapalcalco appears to be a derivation of the ceramic tradition of Teotihuacan but with local inovations. Like in the cases of Cholula, Xochicalco, Xochitecatl, and Cacaxtla, no Coyotlatelco ceramics are recognized in this area. This makes Gaxiola to suggest that the Coyotlatelco complex is not the predominant tradition in all areas of the Basin of Mexico during the Epiclassic.x\archaeology ceramics culture history epiclassic hidalgo interaction mesoamerica prehispanic &Phil R. Geib Martha M. Callahans 1987ZTCeramic Exchange Within the Kayenta Anasazi Region: Volcanic Ash-Tempered White WareThe Kiva522 95-112&Phil R. Geib Martha M. Callahan 1988(!Clay Rresidue on Polishing StonesThe Kiva534 357-3624 Alex Gibson 1980Pot beaters in Britain? Antiquity54219-221Isaac Gilead Yuval Goren 1989jdPetrographic Analysis of Fourth Millenium BC Pottery and Stone Vessels in the Northern Negev, IsraelD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 275 5-14Patricia A. Gilman 1990VOSocial Organization and Classic Mimbres Period Burials inthe S.W. United Stateso"Journal of Field Archaeology174457-469:3Patricia A. Gilman Valetta Canouts Ronald L. Bishop 1994PIThe Production and Distribution of Classic Mimbres Black on White PotteryAmercian Antiquity594695-709Glascock, Michael D. 1992tnCharacterization of Archaeological Ceramics at MURR by Neutron Activation Analysis and Multivariate Statistics  Neff, Hector@9Chemical Characterization of Ceramic Paste in Archaeology  Madison, WI Prehistory Press 11-26 &Glowacki, Donna M. Neff, Hector 2002B;Ceramic Production and Circulation in the Greater Southweste60The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Monograph 44  Los Angeles ,%University of California, Las AngelesC.E. Goetze B. J. Mills 1991~wAn Assessment of the Research Potential of Museum Collections: The Babbit Collection oat the Museum of Northern Arizonac Kiva57 77-91Elizabeth Goring 1991TNPottery FigurinesL The Development of a Coroplastic Art in Chalcolithic CyprusD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR)282-286153-162Oliver P. Gosselain 1992JDBonfire of the Enquiries: Pottery firing temperatures in archaeology(!Journal of Archaeological Science19373-381Elizabeth Graham 1986`YBarton Ramie Ceramic Types at Colson Point, North Stann Creek: A Focus on the Postclassice$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al14 32-486Michael W. Graves 1982jdBreaking Down Ceramic Variability: Testing Models of White Mountain Redware Design Style Development.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology1305-3543Grove, David C. 1995 Book ReviewsAmerican Anthropologiste973n116-118sxqReviews the book "Early Formative Pottery of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico," by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus. Guilliem Arroyo, Salvadorm 1997Figurillas de Tlatelolco Arqueologas17111-138\ mesoamerica;Describes the typology of a group of figurines foud in caches at Tlatelolco. Includes female, male and zoomorphic figurines. Some of the female figurines are identify as dead. There are also figurines representing Xipe with detachable faces.o\?archaeology ceramics central figurines mesoamerica postclassic o>7Jan Gunneweg Trude Dothan Isadore Perlman Sermour Giten 19862+On the Origin of Pottery at Tel Miqne-EkronD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR)c 264 3-16 F@Habicht-Mauche, Judith A. Eckert, Suzanne L. Huntley, Deborah L. 2006b[The Social Life of Pots: Glaze Wares and Cultural Dynamics in the Southwest, A.D. 1250-1680 Tucson "University of Arizona PressWbPratt, Jo Ann F. 1999zsDetermining the Function of One of the New World's Earliest Pottery Assemblages: The Case of San Jacinto, Columbia.lLatin American Antiquity101 71-86One of the earliest pottery assemblages in the New World (5900 B.P.) was manufactured by logistically mobile hunter-gatherers at San Jacinto I, in Colombia, South America. The vessels were constructed using fiber-temper and were elaborately decorated. These characteristics along with the archaeological context of the pottery suggest that its use was unrelated to cooking or food processing. Visual and statistical analyses indicate the pottery had high economic and social value for this semisedentary group; it likely was utilized for feasting/serving activities and possibly for short-term storage. Comparative analyses indicate that the pottery from other early sites in northeast South American may have served similar functions during the early Formative period.Heinz W. Pyszczykc 1989PJConsumption and Ethnicity: An Example from the Fur Trade in Western Canada.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology8388-409  (clay pipes),&Peter G. Ramsden Wiiliam R. Fitzgerald 1990*$More (or Less) on Iroquoian StemwareAmerican ANtiquity551f159-161Rattray, Evelyn C. 1966D=An Archaeological and Stylistic Study of Coyotlatelco PotterylNotas Mesoamericanas 7-8c 87-193 mesoamericac4.Study of Coyotlatelco ceramics in Mesoamerica.harchaeology ceramics coyotlatelco culture history epiclassic mesoamerica mexico prehispanic teotihuacan Rattray, Evelyn Childs 1977("Seriacin de Cermica TeotihuacanaAnales de Antropologa Mxico, Mxico ZTInstituto de Investigaciones Antropolgicas, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico XIV 35-48 mesoamerica`Zarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/thin orange/mexico* - xerox copypRattray, Evelyn Childs 1978F?Los Contactos Teotihuacan-Maya Vistos desde el Centro de MxicorAnales de Antropologa Mxico, Mxico ZTInstituto de Investigaciones Antropolgicas, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de MxicoXV 33-52 mesoamericayarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/maya/politics/east/south/thin orange/mexico* - xerox copyoRattray, Evelyn Childs 1979B7Interpretacines Culturales de La Ventilla, TeotihuacanbAnales de Antropologa Mxico, Mxico ZTInstituto de Investigaciones Antropolgicas, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico XVII105-114S mesoamericapiarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/politics/thin orange/mexico* - xerox copyo VM$L R: Ronald L. Bishop et al.& 1988haThe Formation of Ceramic Analytical Groups: Hopi Pottery Production and Exchange, A. C. 1300-1600"Journal of Field Archaeology153317-338^WBishop, Ronald L. Canouts, Velatta De Atley, Suzanne P. Qyawayma, Alfred Aikens, C. W. 1988f`The Formation of Ceramic Analytical Groups: Hopi Pottery Production and Exchange, A.D. 1300-1600"Journal of Field Archaeology15317-337LERonald L. Bishop Valetta Canouts Patrica L. Crown Suzanne P. De Atley 1990ZTSensetivity, Precision, and Accuracy: Their Roles in Ceramic Compositional DatabasesAmerican Antiquity553t537-546PJBishop, Ronald L. Canouts, Velatta Crown, Patricia L. De Atley, Suzanne P. 1990\USensitivity, Precision, and Accuracy: Their Roles in Ceramic Compositional Data BasestAmerican Antiquity553 537-545e81M. James Blackman Gil J. Stein Pamela B. Vandiver 1993The Standardization Hypothesis & Ceramic Mass Production: Technical, Compositional, & Metric Indexes of Craft Specialialization at Tel Leilan, SyriaAmerican Antiquity581 60-80M. J. Blackman et al.\VProduction and Exchange of Ceramics in the Oman Peninsula from the Perspective of Hili"Journal of Field Archaeology161 61-78Jeffrey A. Blakely 1988<6Ceramics and Commerce: Amphorae from Caesarea MaritimaD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 271 51-68 Blinman, Eric 1997Book Review EssaysAmerican Anthropologiste992sReviews the book, "The Emergence of Pottery: Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies," by William K. Barnett and John W. Hoopes and "The Social Dynamics of Pottery Style in the Early Puebloan Southwest," by Michelle Hegmon. John H. Blitt 1993PIBig Pots for Big Shots: feasting and Storgae in a Mississippian CommunityAmerican Antiquity581 80-96Blitz, John H. 1993PIBig Pots for Big Shots: Feasting and Storage in a Mississippian CommunityAmerican Antiquity581r 80-96o$Peter Bogucki Ryszard Grygiel 1993<5The First Farmers of Central Europe: A Survey Article"Journal of Field Archaeology204399-426 Bolger, Diane 1996VOFigurines, fertility and the emergence of complex society in prehistoric Cyprus Current anthropology372f365-373 ("Cyprus, complex society, figurinesBDiscussion of "The Ceramics and Chronology of Cholula, Mexico"Ancient Mesoamerica7"2 325Ancient Mesoamerica Winifred Creamer 1992piRegional Exchange Along the Pacific Coast of Costa Rice During the Late Polychrome Period, A.C. 1200-1550"Journal of Field Archaeology191 1-16Crown, Patricia L. 199460Ceramics and Ideology: Salado Polychrome Pottery  AlbuquerqueC $University of New Mexico PressCrown, Patricia L. 2000& Women's Role in Changing Cuisine Crown, Patricia L.LFWomen and Men in the Prehispanic Southwest: Labor, Power, and Prestige Santa Fe, New Mexico (!School of American Research PressCrown, Patricia L. 2001D>Learning to Make Pottery in the Prehispanic American Southwest*#Journal of Anthropological Research\574t451-469i$Patricia L Crown Wirt H. Wills n.d.jcThe origins of Southwesten ceramic containers: women's time allocation and economic intensificationb\paper presented at the Southwest Symposium, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ, January 1994>7Social Issues in the Organization of Pottery Productionr"T.P. Culbert L. A. Schwalbe  19872+Z-Ray Fluorescence Survey of Tikal Ceramics(!Journal of Archaeological Science14635-657o Antonio Curet 1993f_Regional Studies and Ceramic Production Areas: An Example from La Mixtequilla, Veracruz, Mexico5"Journal of Field Archaeology204427-440t:3L. Antonio Curet Barbara L. Stark Sergio Vasquez Z. 1994.'Postclassic Changes in Veracruz, MexicowAncient Mesoamerica51 13-32Curet, L. AntonioB 1996ZTIdeology, Chiefly Power, and Material Culture: An Example from the Greater Antilles.Latin American Antiquity7n25114-132iStudies archeological evidence regarding cultural evolution in eastern Puerto Rico. Theoretical background and considerations; Contributing factors to development of social complexity; Saladoid ceramic series; Elanan Ostinoid subseries; Ceramics of the Chican Ostionoid subseries. Curet, L. A. 1997b\Technological Changes in Prehistoric Ceramics from Eastern Puerto Rico: An Exploratory Study(!Journal of Archaeological ScienceL2461497-5040Cyphers Guilln, Ann 1980:4Una Secuencia Preliminar para El Valle de XochicalcoAnales de Antropologa XVII 33-52r mesoamericasx[archaeology ceramics culture history epiclassic mesoamerica morelos prehispanic xochicalco rCyphers Guilln, Ann 1987PJAnlisis Petrogrfico de Dos Cermicas Importadas de Chalcatzingo, MorelosAntropologa y Tcnica2r 85-98l mesoamericab[analysis archaeology central ceramics epiclassic mesoamerica morelos prehispanic xochicalcoxCyphers Guilln, Ann 1990:3Figurillas Femeninas del Preclsico en Chalcatzingo Arqueologan3t 41-48 mesoamericaXRarchaeology ceramics economy formative gender mesoamerica morelos social structure("Terrence D'Altroy Ronald L. Bishop 1990<6The Provincial Organization of Inka Ceramic ProductionAmerican Antiquity551w120-138aDaneels, Annicko 1995D=La Cermica Postclsica de la Cuenca Baja del Jamapa-Cotaxtlar ArqueologaS 13-14  85-88u mesoamericagPJarchaeology ceramics culture history mesoamerica gulf postclassic veracruz0)overview of types and some interpretationiDaneels, Annicke 1996B;La Relacin Teotihuacan-Centro de Veracruz: Una Revaluacin 2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicoso XLII145-157e F1201 .R46nmesoamerica/archaeology2}archaeology central ceramics classic economics foreign traditions gulf mexico politics prehispanic teotihuacan trade veracruz Abbott2000 Aburto19911` Adams1987 Adams1989  Adams19895 Adams1993GAdams?Cacao Residues in Ancient Maya Vessels from Rio Azul, Guatemalaat Adamson1987 Adan-Bayewitz1992Agrinier1989 Aikens19889" al.1983 al.1986 al.1986t al.1987 al.1987 al.1988 al.1988 al.19897 Allen1994G Allen1994 Alvarez19788Anderson1990'Anderson1998 Andrews1988& Ardren1998 Arnauld1988 Arnauld1988 Arnold1985 Arnold1988 Arnold1990 Arnold1990 Arnold1991 Arnold1991 Arnold1993 Arnold1993 Arnold1999 Aronson1994/ Aronson1996 Arroyo19949 Arthur2002 Atley1990 Attas1987 Aura20062" Baeudry1983J Balkansky1997 Ball1984" Ball20000= Balla1999 Bankes Barba1991Barbetti1989! Barka1985W Barkla1997 Barlow19518 Barnett1990 Barton2007 Baugh1987 Beale1978 Beaudry1988Beaudry-Corbett1996 Beier1992F Bell19949 Bergoften1991 Bermann1998Bernabeu2006K Bernadini2000 Bernal19498 Bey1992 Bey1997) Bey III1998 Beynon1986 Bishop1988 Bishop1988 Bishop1988 Bishop1988 Bishop1989i Bishop19900 Bishop1990 Bishop19909 Bishop1990 Bishop1990 Bishop1991 Bishop19944, Bishop1997" Bishop2000tBlackman1993 Blackman1993Blackmanet al.: Blakely1988X Blinkhorn1997 Blinman1987 Blinman1997  Blitt1993 Blitz1993 Boelke19949 Bogucki1993L Bolger1996r Boling1989 Boling1989 Bollong1993 Bollong1994M Bollong1996V Bollong1997 Bond1988) Bond19989GBourriau1994 Bove1994A Bove1999 Bower1986 Bowser2000 Brady1992Brainerd1941Brainerd1952-53 Braniff C.19963  Braun19833 Braun1991 Bray1982 Bray1995`Y Bresson1996R Bright1997 Brody1986 Bronitsky1986{ Bronitsky1986 Bronitsky1986 Bronitsky1986 Bronitsky1989Brumfiel1987 Bryant1984 Bryant1984 Bryant1986 Burton19921  Burton1993u Burton1996r Burton1998 Burton19980 Butterwick19969U Butts1997CBuxeda i Garrigos1999P Byrd19979 Cabrera1991Cabrera Castro1988Cackette19872 Cairo2000|Callahan1987}Callahan1988 Cannon1983 Cannon1984 Cano Salas19891 Canouts1988 Canouts1990 Canouts1990 Canouts1994B Carpenter1999 Carr1990 Carr1990  Carr1993Carvajal1989G Carver1985Casasola1978Casimir de Brizuela1995 Castellanos1988Castelln Huerta199399Castillo1999u Cavallaro1988$Charlton2000XCharters1997 Chase1984 Chase1984 Chase1985 Chase1985> Chen1999J Christenson1994MCiolek-Torrello1994 Ciudad Ruiz1988c Clark1988Q Clark1997 Clark2001 Clark2006 Cobean1987u Cobean19999RCogswell1998bCogswell2000 Costin1989 Costin1991 Costin1995S Cotkin19999[ Courty1995H Courty1998 Cowgill1991- Cowgill1996 Creamer1992 Crown1990 Crown1990 Crown1994 Crown1995 Crown2000 Crown2000 Crown2001 Crownn.d.K Culbert1987 Curet1993 Curet1994 Curet1994 Curet1996S Curet1997Cyphers Guilln1980Cyphers Guilln1987Cyphers Guilln1990 D'Altroy1990 D'Auria1987 Daneels1995 Daneels1996Davidson1980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day19880 Day19880 Day19881980 Day19881980 Day19880 Day19880 Day19880 Day1988980 Day19881980 Day19881980 Day19881980 Day1988980 Day19880 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day19880 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988980 Day1988\f 2+Pool, Christopher A. and Georgia Mudd BrittP 2000`ZA Ceramic Perspective on the Formative to Classic Transition in Southern Veracruz, Mexico.Latin American Antiquity112139-1620)For any particular historical circumstance, explanations of ceramic evolution should consider the performance characteristics of pottery vessels in their behavioral contexts, as well as the varying effects of evolutionary processes operating at different social, spatial, and temporal scales. The replacement of tempered black and differentially fired serving vessels by fine-paste wares during the Formative to Classic transition in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, Mexico illustrates these points. New radiocarbon assays from the Bezuapan site document the rapidity of this transition. Evaluation of visual performance characteristics and contextual associations suggest that the Tuxtlas fine-paste tradition began as a Late Formative prestige technology. Adoption of updraft kilns in the Terminal Formative period lowered the risk of firing losses and allowed savings in paste preparation and resource procurement costs to be realized. As a result, the fine-paste tradition spread to wider segments of society, ultimately replacing earlier traditions. A volcanic eruption at the close of the Formative period and subsequent immigration of Central Mexican settlers constituted evolutionary sorting mechanisms, which perturbed general trends in ceramic evolution within a restricted area of the central Tuxtlas.s6/Porter de Moedano, Murial Estrada Balmori, Elmae 1945B;Estudio Preliminar de la Cermica de Chupcuaro, Guanajuatoi2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicosc VIIs 1-3o 89-33e mesoamericaNHTypology and description of ceramics and excavation, Some color figures.tXarchaeology ceramics culture history formative mesoamerica prehispanic bajo guanajuato Potter, James M. 2000NHPots, parties, and politics: communal feasting in the American SouthwestAmerican Antiquity653 471-492a$feasting, Southwest, ceramics Pozas, Ricardo 1949La Alfarera de Patamban>8Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia III115-145h mesoamericacRKThis is an ethnographic study that describes the stages of production of the pottery from Patabam, in the Highlands of Michoacan. Provides list of tools for pottery production, information abnout ceramic forms and volumetric capacity, manufacture techniques, decorative motifs, organization of labour, and distribution of ceramics.dHarchaeology ceramics craft production ethnography michoacan west mexico  tl6ty Robert Soper 1985b[Roulette decoration on African pottery: technical considerations, dating and distributions,$African Archaeological Review3 29-52& Speakman, Robert J. Neff, Hector 2002Evaluation of Painted Pottery from the Mesa Verde Region Using Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS)American Antiquity671137-144Spence, Michael W. 1989PJExcavaciones Recientes en Tlailotlacan, el Barrio Oaxaqueo de Teotihuacan \UDireccin de Monumentos Prehispanicos (Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia)y Arqueologac5l 81-104 mesoamericarlfarchaeology/central/ceramics/mexico/oaxaca/prehispanic/classic/chronology/social structure/teotihuacan Ann B. Stahl 1994TNChange and Continuity in the Banda Area, Ghana: The Direct Historical Approach"Journal of Field Archaeology22181-203 Miriam Stark 1991ZTCeramic Production and Community Specialization: A Kalinga Ethnoarchaeological StudyWorld Archaeology231 64-78 Miriam Stark 1992^XFrom Sibling to Suki: Social Relations and Spatial Proximity in Kalinga Pottery Exchange,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology11137-151(!Barbara L. Stark L. Antonio Curett 1994ZSThe Development of the Classic-Period Mixtequilla in South-Central Veracruz, MexicoAAncient Mesoamerica5926267-287tStark, Miriam T. 1995JCUtilitarian Vessel Form and Function in a Developmental Perspective *#James H. Heidke and Miriam T. Stark`YThe Roosevelt Community Development Study: Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics  Tucson, AZ $Center for Desert ArchaeologyVolume 2315-329$Anthropological Papers No. 1481Vessel Form, Technological Style, Vessel FunctionStark, Barbara L.c 1995\UIntroduccin a la Alfarera del Postclsico en La Mixtequilla, Sur-Centro de Veracruze Arqueologae 13-14; 17-36i mesoamerica NGDescription of Postclassic ceramic types from La Mixtequilla, Veracruz.nbFarchaeology ceramics culture history mesoamerica postclassic veracruz 4-Miriam T. Stark James M. Vint James M. HeidkeT 1995RKCompositional Variability in Utilitarian Ceramics at a Colonial Period Site &James M. Heidke Miriam T. Stark^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tempe $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 223$Anthropological Papers No. 141&Miriam T. Stark James M. Heidke 1995ZSEarly Classic Period Variability in Utilitarian Ceramic Production and Distributiona &James M. Hedike Miriam T. StarkH^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tucson $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 232$Anthropological Papers No. 141Miriam T. Stark 1995ZSCultural Identity in the Archaeological Record: The Utility of Utilitarian Ceramics &James M. Heidke Miriam T. Stark.^WThe Roosevelt Community Development Study Ceramic Chronology, Technology, and Economics Tucson $Centre for Desert Archaeology2 231$Anthropological Papers No. 141B Katafi1990a Keacock1994 Keall1988$ Keddie1991% Kelley1989 Kelley19900 Kent1986( Kepecs1998Z Khorasgany1995@ Kilikoglou1999d King1986& King1987 Kintigh1993 Kintigh2004 Kintigh2006@Kiriatzi1999' Klein1991C Knapp1987KNeebone1993Knoblock2000w Kobayashi1988 Kohler1987] Kojo199616 Kolb1993I Kolb1996 Komorowski1992 Komorowski1998 Kosakowsky1984+ Kosakowsky19981 Kosakowsky1999% Kosakowsky2000Kowalski19894 Kramer1992 Krause1990 Krotser1980 Kvamme19888^ Kvamme19969Lagunes Gushiken1995)Landreth1983(Landreth1990 Laporte1992 Laporte1992D Lapp1985 Latta1987 Latta1990 LeBlanc1975_ LeBlanc1997 LeCount1999 Lee Jr.1978E Leonard Jr.1989* Lesure19983 Lesure1998o Levine19871r Liddy1986Lindauer1994Lindauer1997Lindauer1998Lindauer1998 Lira Lpez1995* Lister1984* Lister1984` Loney2000Longacre1988Longacre19915Longacre1992 Lopez Varela1992 Love1993 Lubinski1990 Lucero19922a Lynott20007 Lynott2000 Lyons2003e MacCullum1994f MacCullum1994MacNeish19479+Majewski1991OMallory-Greenough1998 Manzanilla1991, Martin1989 Mason1988Mastache19999 Mastache F.1987F Mazzoni1985\ McAnany1999. McCafferty1996 McClure2006McDonald1989GMcGovern1994McIntosh1989Mckerrel1980Medelln Zenil1952-53 Meeks19942 Meloni20007Mercader2000Merino Carrin1987\ Merlo Jurez19918H Meyers1985 Middleton1989 Middleton1994- Miller1987. Miller1988/ Miller19890 Miller1991 Miller19948 Miller19999cMiller-Antonio1988_ Millet19866_ Mills1986 Mills1989^ Mills1991 Mills1995 Mills1999 Mills2000 Minc19900 Minc19931Mitchell1992 Moedano1941b Moholy-Nagy1997 Molina20060 Mommsen1992 Montgomery1990 Montgomery1998 Moore1984Y Moran1996 Moyle1986 Muller19741 Muller19771c Munson2000r Nance1992 Neely1988 Neff1988 Neff1988 Neff1988 Neff1989 Neff19909 Neff19919 Neff1992 Neff19933 Neff1993 Neff1994 Neff19941 Neff19960P Neff199791 Neff1999e; Neff19999A Neff1999 Neff1999 Neff19999$ Neff2000 Neff20000 Neff20020 Neff20022 Neff20022 Neiman1995 Neiman1995i Neitzrl1990 Nelson1985 Neupert1994 Neupert1994 Neuzil2005r Newton1986$ Nichols2000 Nicholson1985 Nicholson1989 Nicholson1991 Noguera1928 Noguera1940 Noguera1941 Noguera1947 O'Brien1980 O'Brien1990Z O'Brien1995 O'Mack19907 Oates1980Ochoa Castillo1996\2 Oddone2000 Orton1993$ Otis Charlton2000T Owen1997W Owen1997E Owen1998L Owen1998 O Owen1998 Padilla Yedra1995 Patino1993 Patterson1985 Patterson1989Pauketat1991 Peacock1988V Peisach1997 Peraza1992) Peraza Lope19989Perez-Arantegui1999? Perlman1986NPerttula1987% Pettitt2000Pfannkuch Wachtel1993Philpots19940 Pickering1996: Picouet1999 Pierce2005Y Pierret1996Pikirayi2007V Pineda19977 Pia Chn1967 Plunket1990 Plunket19901967 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket199067 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990 Plunket1990jN>Y:x9n,%Timothy R. Pauketat Thomas E. Emerson 199182The Ideology of Authority and the Power of the PotAmerican Anthropologistn934919-941D. P. S. Peacock 1988&The Gabroic pottery of Cornwallr Antiquityr62302-304e0*Perez-Arantegui, J Soto, M Castillo, J. R. 1999ha Examination of the 'Cuerda Seca' Decoration Technique on Islamic Ceramics from al-Andalus (Spain(!Journal of Archaeological Science2687935-942cRLPfannkuch Wachtel, Tilman Garca Snchez, Soledad Tovaln Ahumada, Alejandro 1993.(La Cermica Arqueolgica de TlalpizhuacExpresin Antropolgica 11-12 42-73l mesoamericanXRDescribes the results of analysis of ceramics from Tlalpizahuac, State of Mexico.archaeology central ceramics culture history classic coyotlatelco epiclassic formative mesoamerica mexico postclassic prehispanic & Anthony R. Philpots Nancy Wilson 1994ZSApplication of petrofabric and phase equilibria analysis to the study of a potsherdr(!Journal of Archaeological Science21607-618pA re-examination shows that the interpretation of the 1977 article was mistaken. The data did not prove the existence of 'Seafaring Merchants of Ur' in the Ubaid Period>7Picouet, P.; Maggetti, M.; Piponnier, D.; Schvoerer, M. 1999ZS Cathodoluminescence Spectroscopy of Quartz Grains as a Tool for Ceramic Provenance (!Journal of Archaeological Science2687943-950cPierce, Christophert 2005pjReverse Engineering the Ceramic Cooking Pot: Cost and Performance Properties of Plain and Textured Vessels2+Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory122117-157.'Pierret, A. Moran, C. J. Bresson, L.-M. 1996Calibration and Visualization of Wall-Thickness and Porosity Distributions of Ceramics Using X-radiography and Image Processing (!Journal of Archaeological Science2331419-428sPikirayi, Innocent 2007nhCeramics and Group Identities: Towards a Social Archaeology in Southern African Iron Age Ceramic Studies$Journal of Social Archaeology{7l3T286-301Pia Chn, Romn 19670*Un Complejo Coyotlatelco en Coyoacn, D.F.Anales de AntropologaIV mesoamericaa0*reference incomplete, missing page numbersiarchaeology central ceramics culture history coyotlatelco epiclassic mesoamerica mexico city prehispanic sPlunket, Patricia 199081Arqueologa y Etnohistoria en el Valle de AtlixcoNotas Mesoamericanas12 3-18 mesoamericaZSarchaeology/central/ceramics/chronology/ethnohistory/postclassic/prehispanic/pueblas* - xerox copyoPlunket Nagoda, Patricia 1995>7Cholula y su Cermica Postclsica: Algunas Perspectivasl Arqueologag 13-14e103-108e mesoamericao:4Description of ceramics by phases, some implicationsnQarchaeology central ceramics culture history gulf mesoamerica postclassic puebla iA. M. Pollard H. Hatcher 1986VOThe Chemical Analysis of Oriental Ceramic Body Composition: Part 2 - Greenwares(!Journal of Archaeological Science13261-287l Susan Pollock 1983<6Style and Information: An Analysis of Susiana Ceramics.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology2354-390Pool, Christopher A. 1995RKLa Cermica del Clsico Tardo y el Postclsico en la Sierra de los Tuxtlasg Arqueologa5 13-14u 37-48e mesoamericarjNarchaeology ceramics culture history classic mesoamerica postclassic veracruz 3*E"_pD Nancy Lapp 19852,The Stratum V Pottery from Balatah (Shechem)D=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 257 19-44Martha A. Latta 1987Iriquoian StemwareAmerican Antiquity524717-724Martha A. Latta 1990<5The Stem of the Matter: Reply to Ramsden & FitzgeraldAmerican Antiquity551162-165LeBlanc, Steven A. 1975F@Micro-Seriation: A Method for Fine Chronological DifferentiationAmerican Antiquity40 22-38lLeBlanc, Steven A. 1997`ZA comment on Hegmon and Trevathan's 'Gender, anatomical knowledge, and pottery production'American Antiquity624n723-726lJDgender, Mimbres, Southwest, New Mexico, ceramics, ceramic productionLeCount, Lisa J. 1999d^Polychrome Pottery and Political Strategies in Late and Terminal Classic Lowland Maya Society.Latin American Antiquity103 239-259\ULowland Maya site of Xunantunich in Belize investigates the complex relationships between wealth, social status, and political strategies in state-level societies. Rather than using the distribution of decorated pottery as an indicator of social status, this study treats it as an independent variable and illustrates how prestige goods circulated as political currency to further political ambitions. Two social strata and the two ranks within each stratum are defined by architectural complexity and intersite location of house mounds at the Late Classic II (A.D. 670 to 790) to Terminal Classic (A.D. 790 to 1000) provincial center of Xunantunich and its nearby hamlet, San Lorenzo. During the Late Classic II phase, elaborately decorated pottery was found concentrated in elite households in the civic center, whereas during the Terminal Classic, when Xunantunich was in the process of collapse, they were found dispersed equally among all house mounds. I suggest that local elites, to maintain power, abandoned rival displays of prestige goods and attempted to consolidate community support by gifting luxury items down through the social hierarchy. This article, therefore, seeks not only to craft a clearer definition of wealth, but to build a model of when and how prestige goods function as a means to promote political strategies in state-level societies.Lee Jr., Thomas A. 19784.The Origin and Development of Plumbate Pottery2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropolgicos XXIV3h287-300y mesoamericaafJarchaeology central ceramics epiclassic maya mesoamerica prehispanic tula Leonard Jr., Albertr 1989F@A Chacolithic "Fine Ware" from Kateret es-Samra in Jordan ValleyD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 276 3-14Lesure, Richard G 1998jMRefining an Early Formative Ceramic Sequence From the Chiapas Coast of Mexico Ancient Mesoamerica91 67-82Ancient Mesoamerica3Lesure, Richard Ge 1998rUVessel Form and Function in an Early Formative Ceramic Assemblage from Coastal Mexico "Journal of Field Arcaheology251 Owen Lindauer 1994$Systematics of Decorated Wares  David JacobsArchaeology of the Salado in the Livingston Area of Tonto Basin Roosevelt Platform Mound Study Report on the Livingston Management Group Pinto Creek Complex Part 2M Tempew lfArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724022 2o29 Glen E. RiceD=Roosevelt Monograph Series 3 Anthropological Field Studies 32 1p Owen Lindauer 1998HAPolychrome Systematics: Roosevelt Red Ware or Salado Polychromes? Arleyn W. SimonSalado Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin The Roosevelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 Tempe lfArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724021 18 Glen E. RiceD>Roosevelt Monograph Series 11 Anthropological Field Studies 401p Owen Lindauer 1998>7Traditional and International Pinto and Gila Polychrome Arleyn W. SimonSalado Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin The Roosevelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 Tempe lfArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724021E 18 Glen E. RiceD=Roosevelt Monograph Series 11 AnthropologicalField Studies 4041Lira Lpez, Yamile 1995@:Tipologa y Arqueometra de la Cermica de Tajn, Veracruz Arqueologaa 13-14u 49-57a mesoamericagTypes description.`Danalysis archaeology ceramics gulf mesoamerica petrography veracruz BPCu 4{3David P. Braun 1991D>Why Decorate a Pot? Midwestern Household Pottery 200 BC-AD 600,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology10360-397 Alilcia Bray 1982PJMimbres Black-on-White, meamine or wedgewood? A ceramic use-wear analysis.The Kiva473133-149*$Correlating Vessel Form and FunctionTamara L. Bray 1995JCThe Panzaleo Puzzle: Non-Local Pottery in Northern Highland Ecuador"Journal of Field Archaeology222137-156$Gordon Bronitsky Robert Hammer 1986|uExperiments in ceramic technology: the effects of various tempering materials on impact and thermal-shock resistance.lAmercian Antiquity511u 89-101Vessel PropertiespGordon Bronitsky 1986<6Compressive Testing of Ceramics: A soutwestern ExampleThe Kiva512r 85-98Bronitsky, Gordon 1986ZTThe Use of Materials Science Techniques in the Study of Pottery Construction and Use Michael B. Schiffer\2,Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory New York Academic Press9&Bronitsky, Gordon Hamer, Robert 1986ztExperiments in Ceramic Technology: The Effects of Various Tempering Materials on Impact and Thermal-Shock ResistenceAmerican Antiquity511 89-101Gordon Bronitsky 19892+Ceramics and Temper: A Response to FeathersAmerican Antiquity543589-593,&Elizabeth M. Brumfiel Timothy K. Earle 1987HASpecialization, exchange, and complex socieities: an introduction ,&Elizabeth M. Brumfiel Timothy K. Earle4.Specialization, Exchang, and Complex Societies  Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1-9gCraft SpecializationDouglas Donne Bryant 1984F?Early Pottery from Santa Cruz, Chiapas Central Highland, Mexicok$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 42-47*#Douglas Donne Bryant Jerry D. Moore 1984<6San Jacinto Pottery in Terminal Preclassic Mesoamerica$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13 48-68("Douglas Donne Bryant M. Jill Brody 19860*Modern and Prehistoric Pottery Manufacture$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al14 73-86n&James H. Burton Arleyn W. Simon 1993vpAcid Extraction as a Simple and Inexpensive Method for Compositional Characterization of Archaeological CeramicsAmercian Antiquity581l 45-59r,%Burton, James H., and Arlyen W. Simonm 1996JCA pot is not a rock: a reply to Neff, Glascock, Bishop and BlackmaneAmerican antiquity612405-413ceramicsBuxeda i Garrigos, J.e 1999XQAlteration and Contamination of Archaeological Ceramics: The Perturbation Problemf(!Journal of Archaeological Science263295-314. Byrd, John E. 1997VOA method for measuring relative abundance of fragmented archaeological ceramicsc"Journal of field archaeology243315-320$quantitative methods, ceramicsCabrera Castro, Rubnr 1988>8Horno Cermico Posteotihuacano en el Palacio de Atetelco Arqueologa. Primera Epoca4 47-75 mesoamericaZTarchaeology architecture ceramics classic mexico mesoamerica postclassic teotihuacanA post-Teotihuacan kiln for manufacturing ceramics was found in a salvage excavation at Atetelco. This paper describes the findings and implications.t0*Cackette, M. D'Auria, J. M. Snow, Bryan E. 1987LFExamining Earthenware Vessel Function by Elemental Phosphorous ContentCurrent Anthropology281 121-127 .'Cano Salas, Gilda Valencia Cruz, Daniela 1989lfColegio de Cristo y los Materiales Detectados que se Interrelacionan con la Nmina de Loceros PoblanosNotas Mesoamericanas11207-219c mesoamericasDescribes colonial materials found in a building at Mexico City during reconstruction operations. Links these materials with an ethnohistoric document that lists the potters from colonial Puebla.dGarchaeology ceramics colonial craft production mexico city mesoamerica c&Carpenter, A. J. Feinman, G. M.p 1999nhThe Effects of Behaviour on Ceramic Composition: Implications for the Definition of Production Locations(!Journal of Arcaheological Science2670783-7960&d(%$aBL8c \<ZP*$Huntley, Deborah L. Keith W. Kintigh 2004{Archaeological Patterning and Organizational Scale of Late Prehistoric Settlement Clusters in the Zuni Region of Nex Mexico0 *#E. Charles Adams and Andrew I. Duff4.The Protohistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1275-1600 Tucson "University of Arizona Press 62-74Huntley, Deborah L.c 2006PJFrom Recipe to Identity: Exploring Zuni Glaze Ware Communities of Practice F@Habicht-Mauche, Judith A. Eckert, Suzanne A. Huntley, Deborah L.b[The Social Life of Pots: Glaze Wares and Cultural Dynamics in the Southwest, A.D. 1250-1680e Tucson "University of Arizona Press2105-123r Iceland, H. B Goldberg, P. 1999~xLate-Terminal Classic Maya Pottery in Northern Belize: A Petrographic Analysis of Sherd Samples from Colha and Kichpanha(!Journal of Archaeological Sciencei268c951-9660*Alain Ichon Rene Viel M. Cjarlotte Arnauld 1988:4Ceramic Units from La Lagunita, El Quiche, Guatemala$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 84-88Takeshi Inomata 2001b\The power and ideology of artistic creationL Elite craft specialists in Classic Maya societyCurrent AnthropologyCraft Specializationin press:4Jacobson, L., W.A. Van_der_Westhuizen, and J. Dreyer 1998The compositional relationship between pottery and its source clay (1): an example from the work of a traditional potter on the farm Nonnashoek, Betlehem, Free Stateu("Southern African field archaeology7u2n 98-100"Journal of field archaeology4-South Africa, ceramic production, ethnographyaE. W. Jernigan 1986ZTThe Derivation of Chaco Counterchange Designs: A Structural Approach to Style ChangeThe Kiva521 23-52E. W. Jernigan 1986XRA Non-Hierarchical Approach to Ceramic Decoration Analysis: A Southwestern ExampleAmerican Antiquity511 13-20$Steven C. Jett Peter B. Moyle 1986ZTThe Exotic Origins of Fishes Depicted on Prehistoric Mimbres Pottery from New MexicoAmerican Antiquity514688-720eJimnez Lara, Pedroo 19954-La Cermica Arqueolgica de Serafn, Veracruzr Arqueologa  13-14l 59-77y mesoamerica Types description.\?archaeology ceramics culture history gulf mesoamerica veracruz sTNJ. S. Johnson J. Clark S. Miller-Antonio D. Robins M. B. SChiffer J. M. Skibo 1988b\The effects of Firing Temperature on the Fate of Naturally Occurring Organic Matter in Clays(!Journal of Archaeological Science15403-414Bruce A. Jones 1989RKUse-Wear Analysis of White Mountain Redwares at Grasshopper Pueblo, ArizonaThe Kiva544353-360("Jordan, S. C Schrire, C Miller, D. 1999f_Petrography of Locally Produced Pottery from the Dutch Colonial Cape of Good Hope, South Africa(!Journal of Archaeological Science-1611 1327-1338aJornet, Albert 1987ZTLa Cermica en la Arqueometra: Las Ciencias Naturales al Servicio de la ArqueologaAntropologa y Tcnica2} 99-118 mesoamericaNHProvides an overview of methodological applications to analyze ceramics.B%analysis archaeology ceramics method lRosemary Joyce 1986F?Terminal Classic Interaction on the Southeastern Maya PeripheryAmerican Antiquity512313-329tRosemary A. JoyceV 1988@:Ceramic Units of Terminal Classic Cerro Palenque, Honduras$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 31-34Arthur A. Joyce 1991RLFormative Period Social Change in the Lower Rio Verde Valley, Oaxaca, MexicoLatin American Antiquity2126-150"Kamilli, D. C. Steinberg, A. 1985<6New Approaches to Mineral Analysis of Ancient Ceramics Rapp, G. Gifford, J.Archaeological Geology  New Haven} Yale University PressFlora S. Kaplan 19850*The Measuring Mapping, and Meaning of PotsAmerican Anthropologist872357-364nZeidon A. Katafi 19906/Early Pottery Contexts from 'Ain Ghazal, JordansD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 280 15-30 L.A. Keacock 1994JCArchaeological Investigations of Three Mesa Verde Anasazi Pit Kilns  Kiva391-410mGrant R. Keddie 1991}Costello and Mainiery: Rice Bowls in the Delta: Artifacts Recovered from the 1915 Asian Community of Walnut Grove, CaliforniaHistorical Archaeology251 123Roger E. Kelleyr 1989JDGurke: Bricks and Brickmaking, A Handbook for Historical ArchaeologyHistorical Archaeology231133-134 Susan Kent 1986@:New Dates for Old Pots: A Comment on Cortez Black-On-WhiteThe Kiva5142255-262r Kepecs, Susan 1998kDiachronic Ceramic Evidence and its Social Implications in the Chikinchel Region, Northeast Yucatan, Mexico+ Ancient Mesoamerica+9+1m121-136Ancient Mesoamericac*$R. H. King D. W. Rupp L. W. Sorenson 1986d]A Multivariate Analysis of Pottery from Southwestern Cyprus Using Neutron Activation Analysis(!Journal of Archaeological Science413361-374a$Julia A. King Dennis J. Pogue 1987@:An Unusual Pipe Stem Find from St. Inigoes Manor, MarylandHistorical Archaeology171102-104():^4% 12+~IV6]C' Kintigh, Keith W.A 2006*$Ceramic Dating and Type Associations & Hantman, Jeffrey L. Most, RachelHAManaging Archaeological Data: Essays in Honor of Sylvia W. Gaines Tempe B;Arizona State University Anthropological Research Papers 57Terry H. Klein 1991B;Nineteenth-Century Ceramics and Models of Consumer BehaviorHistorical Archaeology252 77-91A. Bernard Knapp 1987&Pots, PIXE, and Data ProcessingD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR)R 266a 1-30Knoblock, Patricia J.a 2000`ZWari Ritual Power at Conchopata: An Interpretation of Anadenanthera Colubrina Iconography.Latin American Antiquity114r387-403TMStudies the elaborate religious iconography that incorporated coastal Nasca and highland Pukara art from the Early Intermediate Period within the Wari art in Peru. Tradition of burying large, colorfully decorated ceramic vessels; Iconographic examples of Anadenanthera Colubrina; Hallucinogenic properties of Anadenanthera Colubrina.r& Kohler, Timothy A. Blinman, Eric 1987vpSolving Mixture Problems in Archaeology: Analysis of Ceramic Materials for Dating and Demographic Reconstruction,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology61 1-28 Kojo, Yasushi 1996PJProduction of prehistoric Southwestern ceramics: a low-technology approachAmerican antiquity612325-339$ceramic production, Southwest  Kolb, C. Charlesi 1993tWReview: Ceramic Production and Distribution: An Integrated Approach (Bey and Pool eds.)o &American Journal of Archaeology923  572ACharles C. Kolb 1996j"Firing" as the Critical Stage of Pottery Manufacture: A Ceramic Ecology and Materials Science Perspective  ZTAlba Guadalupe Mastache Jeffrey R. Parsons Robert S. Santley Mari Carmen Serra Puche>8Arqueologa Mesoamericana, Homenaje A William T. Sanders Mxico PIInstituto NAcional de Antropologa E Historia Arqueologa Mexicana (INAH)I II 97-110arqueologa MexicanaISBN 968-29-5183-6D>ceramic technology, firing, production steps, cultural ecologyLaura Kosakowsky 1984(!Comment: A Note to Maya Ceramists$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al13iv*#Kosakowsky, Laura J Pring, Duncan C 1998L0The Ceramics of Cuello, Belize: A New Evaluation Ancient Mesoamericai9e1a 55-66Ancient Mesoamerica @:Kosakowsky, Laura J Estrada Belli, Francisco Neff, Hector 1999Field Reports: Excavation and Survey - Late Preclassic Ceramic Industries of Pacific Guatemala and El Salvador: The Pacific Coast as Core, Not Periphery "Journal of Field Archaeology264@:Kosakowsky, Laura J Estrada Belli, Francisco Pettitt, Paul 2000fPreclassic Through Postclassic: Ceramics and Chronology of the Southeastern Pacific Coast of Guatemala Ancient Mesoamerica112199-216 Ancient Mesoamerica"Carol Kramer John E. Douglas 1992F?Ceramics, Caste, and Kin: Spatial Relations in Rajasthan, India,&Journal of Anthropological Archaeology11187-201PRichard A. Krause 1990b\Ceramic practice and semantic space: An ethnographic inquiry into the logic of Bantu Potting Antiquity64711-726(!Krotser, Paula Rattray, Evelyn C. 1980HBManufactura y Distribucin de Tres Grupos Cermicos de TeotihuacanAnales de Antropologa Mxico, Mxico ZTInstituto de Investigaciones Antropolgicas, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico XVII 91-104 mesoamericaxarchaeology/ceramics/central/chronology/prehispanic/classic/teotihuacan/trade/politics/production/distribution/thin orange/mexicou* - xerox copyoB7Unidades Ceramicas de la Fase Manik 3, Tikal, Guatemala $Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al16 69-101LEJuan Pedro Laporte Bernard Hermes Lilian de Zea Maria Josefa Iglesias 1992D>Nuevos Entierros y Escondites de Tikal: Subfases Manik 3a y 3b$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al16 30-68 , :RH.(Silverman, Helaine, and Michael E. Smith 1999Reviews and BooknotesSLatin American Antiquity102C201-202iReviews the book "The Archaeology and Pottery of Nazca, Peru: Alfred L. Krober's 1926 Expedition," by Alfred L. Kroeber and Donald Collier and edited by Patrick H. Carmichael.*#Simms, S. R. Bright, J. R. Ugan, A. 1997VOPlain-Ware Ceramics and Residential Mobility: A Case Study From the Great Basin{(!Journal of Archaeological Science\249779-7931@:Arleyn W. Simon Jean-Christophe Komorowski James H. Burton 1992XRPatterns of Production and Distribution of Salado Wares as a Measure of Complexity 81Charles L. Redman Glen E. Rice Kathryn E. PedricklpiDeveloping Perspectives On Tonto Basin Prehistory Roosevelt Platform Mound Study Arizona State Universityr Tempen lfArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724021A 1l16 Glen E. RiceD=Roosevelt Monograph Series 2 Anthropological Field Studies 26t1Arleyn W. Simoni 1994("Ceramic Evidence for room Function  David JacobsArchaeology of the Salado in the Livingston Area of Tonto Basin Roosevelt platform Mound Study Report on the Livingston Managment Group Pinto Creek Complex Part2 Tempe leArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724022 227 Glen E. RiceD=Roosevelt Monograph Series 3 Anthropological Field Studies 321Arleyn W. Simon 1994@9Performance Analysis of the Livingston Ceramic Assemblage  David JacobsArchaeology of the Salado in the Livingston Area of Tonto Basin Roosevelt Platform Mound Study Report on the Livingston Management Group Pinto Creek Complex Part 2n Tempec lfArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of ASnthropology Box 8724022 217 Glen E. RiceBRoosevelt Monograph Series 11 Anthropological Field Studies 401Arleyn W. Simoni 1998F?Ceramic Burial Assemblages: Gender, Status, and Social Networks Arleyn W. SimonSalado Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin The Roosevelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 Tempe leArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724021 132 Glen E. RiceD>Roosevelt Monograph Series 11 Anthropological Field Studies 401pArleyn W. Simon 1998:4Salado Decorated Ceramics: Paint, Pigment, and Style Arleyn W. SimonSalado Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin The Rooseelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 Tempe jdArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Managemnt Department of Anthropology Box 8724021 124 Glen E. RiceD=Roosevelt Monograph Series 11 Anthropological Field Series 4041Arleyn W. Simonl 1998JCSalado Ppolychrome, Social Relationships, and Prehistoric Community Arleyn W. SimonSalado Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin The Roosevelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 Tempep jdArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Mangament Department of Anthropology Box 8724021 152 Glen E. RiceD>Roosevelt Monograph Series 10 Anthropological Field Studies 401Arleyn W. Simon 1998VOSaldo Ceramics and Social Organisation: Prehistoric Interactions in Tonto Basin 6/The Roosevelt Archaeology Studies, 1989 to 1998 D>Roosevelt Monograph Series 10 Anthropological Field Studies 40 Tempe leArizona State University Office of Cultural Resource Management Department of Anthropology Box 8724021 1E 2101 1886067-00-7Carla M. Sinopoli 1988HBThe organization of craft production at Vijinyanagara, South IndiaAmerican Anthropologistf903580-597Craft SpecializationSinopoli, Carlar 1991,%Approaches to Archaeological Ceramicsl New York  Plenum Press J. M. Skibo M. B. Schiffer 1987<5The Effects of Water on Processes of Ceramic Abrasion9(!Journal of Archaeological Science14 83-9681James M. Skibo Michael B. Schiffer Nancy Kowalskiy 1989^WCeramic Style Analysis in Archaeology and Ethnoarchaeology: Bridging the Analytical Gap.'Journal of Anthropological Anthropology8388-409Skibo, James M.o 19924.Pottery Function: A Use-Alteration Perspective New York  Plenum Press0)Skibo, J. M. Butts, T. C. Schiffer, M. B.\ 1997NHCeramic Surface Treatment and Abrasion Resistance: An Experimental Study(!Journal of Archaeological Science\2440311-318B;Kathleen W. Slane Michael Elam Michael Glascock Hector Neff1 1994\UCompositional analysis of Eastern Silleta A and related wares from Tell Anafu, Israel(!Journal of Archaeological Science21 51-64Marion F. Jr. Smiths 1985\UToward an economic interpretation of ceramics: relating vessel size and shape to use/  Ben A. Nelson$Decoding Prehistoric Ceramics  Carbondale ("Southern Illinois University Press254-309 *$Correlating Vessel Form and Function(!Michael E. Smith John F. Doershuki 1991<6Late Postclassic Chronology in Western Morelos, MexicoLatin American Antiquity2291-310/ &|'87<t5 David R. Abbottr 2000<5Ceramics and Community Organization among the Hohokamd Tucson "University of Arizona Press\.'William Hampton Adams Sarah Jane Boling 1989VPStatus and Ceramics for Planters and Slaves on Three Georgia Coastal PlantationsHistorical Archaeology231t69.'William Hampton Adams Sarah Jane Boling 198960Artifact Illustration Using Computer VideographsHistorical Archaeology232113-118:3Adams, E. Charles Stark, Miriam T. Dosh, Deborah S. 1993z^Ceramic Distribution and Exchange: Jeddito Yellow Ware and Implications for Social Complexity. "Journal of Field Archaeology201Adamson, D. A. et al.e 1987>7Pottery tempered with Sponge from the White Nile, Sudant$African Archaeological Reviewh5f115-128C& David Adan-Bayewitz Moshe Wieder 1992b[Ceramics from Roman Galilee: A Comparison of several techniques for Fabric Characterizationl"Journal of Field Archaeology192t189-205uAgrinier, Pierre 1989Mirador-Plumajillo, Chiapas, y sus Relaciones con Cuatro Sitios del Horizonte Olmeca en Veracruz, Chiapas y la Costa de Guatemalaa Arqueologa/2 19-36 mesoamericagZTarchaeology/ceramics/chiapas/formative/guatemala/gulf/ interaction/mesoamerica/olmecSusan Heuck AllenS 1994*#Trojan Grey Ware at Tel Miqne-EkronD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 293 39-52William P. Andersonr 1990The Beginnings of Phoenician Pottery: vessel Shape, Style, and Ceramic Technology in the early Phases of the Phoenician Iron AgeD=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR) 279 35-54Anderson, Patricia K 1998vZ Yula, Yucatan, Mexico: Terminal Classic Maya Ceramic Chronology for the Chichen Itza AreaAncient Mesoamericao9n1 151-1660Ancient MesoamericaE. Wyllys V. Andrews 19882,Ceramic Units from Komschen, Yucatan, Mexico$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 51-648Charlotte M. Arnauld 1988>7Ceramic Units from Southwestern Alta Verapaz, Guatemala$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 79-83nArnold, Dean E.o 1985*#Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process  Cambridget Cambridge University PressPhilipJ. III Arnold, 1990f`The Organization of Refuse Disposal and Ceramic Production within Contemporary Mexican HouselotsAmerican Anthropologist9243915-9324.Arnold, Dean E. Neff, Hector Bishop, Ronald L. 1990VPCompositional Analysis and "Sources" of Pottery: An Ethnoarchaeological ApproachAmerican Anthropologista93 70-90Phillip J. Arnold 1991PIDimensional Standardization and Production Scale in Mesoamerican CeramicsLatin American Antiquity2363-3712+Dean E. Arnold Hector Neff Ronald L. Bishop 1991XQCompositional Analysis and "Sources": of Pottery: An Ethnoarchaeological ApproachAMerican Anthropologist931 70-90lDean E. Arnold 1993Review of Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Organization: A Mexican Case Study in Ethnoarchaeology, by Phillip J. Arnold III   h *#Journal of Latin AMerican Antiquity4297-299TMPhilip J. III Arnold Christopher A. Pool Ronald R. Kneebone Robert S. SantleyA 1993vpIntensive Ceramic Production and Classic-Period Political Economy in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, MexicoAncient Mesoamericae4c2175-191a& Arnold, Dean E. and Marc Bermann 1999Reviews and Booknotes Latin American Antiquity101  93-96ub[Reviews the book "Pottery Ethnoarchaeology in the Central Maya Highlands," by Michael Deal.Aronson, Meredith 1996zTechnological Change: Ceramic Mortuary Technology in the Valley of Atemajac From the Late Formative to the Classic PeriodsAncient Mesoamerican7m1163-171 Ancient Mesoamerica9\ikHNh8x Prudence M. Rice 1994HBThe kilns of Moqugua, Peru: Technology, Excavations, and Functions"Journal of Field Archaeology213325-344Rice, Prudence M.e 1996F?Recent Ceramic Analysis: 2. Composition, Production, and Theory("Journal of Archaeological Research43h165-202aPrudence M. Rice 19996/Rethinking Classic Lowland Maya Pottery CensersAncient Mesoamerica101 25-50Ancient Mesoamerica&Classic lowland Maya censers can be described in terms of two general categories, image (or effigy) and non-image. The function and meaning of these incensarios is approached through consideration of their embellishment, symbolism, and contexts of use and recovery. It is suggested that in Peten and some adjacent areas, Classic image censers were part of the paraphernalia of divine kingship, associated with termination rituals and a royal funerary cult. Non-image and particularly spiked censers were more associated with birth/renewal, earth, rain, and calendrical rituals involving fire drilling. Their use became widespread in the lowlands during the Terminal Classic period, with the collapse of divine kingship and elite power.   Rice, Prudence M.e 1999Recent Ceramic Analysisi("Journal of Archaeological Research4\133-201n& Rosanna Ridings C. Garth Sampson 19990b\There's No Percentage in it: Intersite Spatial Analysis of Bushman (San) Pottery DecorationsAmerican Antiquity554r766-780r.(V. Rigby A. P. Middleton I. C. Freestone 1989d]The Prunay Workshop: Technical Examination of La Tene Bichrome Painted Pottery from ChampagneWorld Archaeologyu211t 1-16"Michael Roaf Jane Galbraith 1994D>Pottery and P values: 'Seafaring Merchants of Ur?" re-examined Antiquity68770-783Francis B. RobertshawA 1994TNArchaeological survey, ceramic analysis, and state formation in western Uganda$African Archaeological review12105-132Eugenia J. Robinsonh 1988<6Ceramic Spheres of the Southwest Mesoamerican Frontier$Ceramica de Cultura Maya et al15 11-3082Rodrguez Snchez, Ernesto A. Delgado Rubio, Jaime 1997F@Una Ofrenda Cermica al Este de la Antigua Ciudad de Teotihuacan Arqueologa}18 17-22} mesoamerica8vparchaeology central ceramics classic household ideation mexico prehispanic religion ritual teotihuacan figurinesRoosevelt, Anna C. 1997jcThe demise of the Alaka initial ceramic phase has been greatly exaggerated: response to D. WilliamsAmerican Antiquity622353-364gchronology, ceramicsRosado Ojeda, Vladimirot 1941$Las Mscaras Rientes Totonacas2+Revista Mexicana de Estudios AntropolgicosI1 53-63  mesoamericatBProvenience Investigation of Ceramics and Obsidian from Otumba Ancient Mesoamericac112307-322 Ancient MesoamericaFraser D. Neiman 1995Stylistic Variation in Evolutionary Perspective: Inferences from Decorative Diversity & Inter-Assemblage Distance in Illinois Woodland Ceramic AssemblagesAmerican Antiquity601m 7-36Neiman, Fraser D. 1995Stylistic variation in evolutionary perspective: inferences from decorative diversity and interassemblage distance in Illinois Woodland ceramic assemblageszAmerican antiquity601o 7-366/Illinois Woodland, stylistic analysis, ceramicsp J. E. Neitzrl R. L. Bishop 1990leNeutron Activation of Dogoszhi Style Ceramics: Production and Exchange in the Chacoan Regional System Kiva56 67-85{ Nelson, Ben A. 1985$Decoding Prehistoric Ceramicsu  Carbondale ("Southern Illinois University PressMark A. Neupert 1994B;Strength Testing Archaeological Ceramics: A New PerspectiveAmerican Antiquity594709-723Neuzil, Anna A.o 2005f`Corrugated Ceramics and Migration in the Pueblo II to Pueblo IV Transition, Silver Cree, Arizona Kiva71101-124*$Paul T. Nicholson Helen L. Patterson 1985B;Pottery Making in Upper Egypt: An Ethnoarchaeological StudyWorld Archaeology122222-239