Second Saturday Series Seminar will be about Ancestral Puebloan pottery and presented by archaeologist Mona Charles at 1 p.m. July 8 via Zoom. Charles will be joining as a wrapup to the grant project ...
Bee plants in Colorado and on the Colorado plateau grow two to five feet tall, with many big, showy flowers. Rocky Mountain bee plant, Cleome serrulata, has magenta flowers and they occur frequently ...
The exhibit opened this week and includes more than 20 pieces by Martinez, whose given name was Poveka, a Tewa word meaning “pond lily.” Born in 1887 in San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico, Martinez ...
The Pueblo people have inhabited the Southwestern region of what is now the United States for millennia, and their regional ancestral lineage stretches far deeper into the past. With federally ...
Researchers apply a method to determine gender from fingerprints that suggests pottery making was not a primarily female activity in ancient Puebloan society. Despite the importance of reconstructing ...
Virgil Ortiz considers himself a conduit of his ancestors. Hailing from Cochiti, New Mexico, Ortiz makes pottery the same way his Indigenous Pueblo ancestors have for generations: digging his own clay ...
5.75 x 7.25 x 7.25 in. (14.6 x 18.4 x 18.4 cm.) ...
Climate change led Ancestral Puebloans to relocate, forming denser communities and building grand structures like the great kivas in Chaco Canyon. Sinensky et al. / Antiquity, 2021 In 536 and 541 C.E.
Now 100 of the pots Heye acquired from the Tewa pueblos of New Mexico have been returned—albeit temporarily—to their rightful owners through a new exhibit at the Poeh Cultural Center, a multipurpose ...