By Kathleen Deagan, David Hurst Thomas, Keith H. Ashley, Chester B. DePratter, Rebecca Saunders, Gifford J. Waters, Mark Williams, and John E. Worth
Read Online or Download From Santa Elena to St. Augustine: Indigenous Ceramic Variability (A.D. 1400–1700): Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History Number 90 PDF
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Extra info for From Santa Elena to St. Augustine: Indigenous Ceramic Variability (A.D. 1400–1700): Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History Number 90
Example text
As stipulated by Ordinance 110, the mission structures were laid out along a rigid grid pattern (fig. 7). A rectangular plaza defined the center of the sacred complex (Ordinance 112), flanked on one side by the mission church (Ordinance 124: “separated from any nearby building . . and ought to be seen from all sides”), on the other by the friary (Ordinances 118, 119, 121). The plaza was surrounded by (and separated from) the secular Guale pueblo; “in the plaza, no lots shall be assigned to private individuals; instead they shall be used only for the building of the church and royal houses” (Ordinance 126).
00% 2009 IRENE AND ALTAMAHA POTTERY FROM THE CHARLESFORT/SANTA ELENA SITE 39 Fig. 15. ” A–C. Irene Corn-cob impressed. D, F–I. Irene Incised and Punctated. E. Irene Punctated. A. 38BU162N-71. B. 38BU162N-14A. C. 38BU162N-20A. D. 38BU162V-61A. E. 38BU162Y-29B. F. 38BU162Y-20B. G. 38BU162Q-1040B. H. 38BU162G-149. I. 38BU162V-59B. 16 includes Irene Plain bowls and jars with forms D, F, and H being the least common. The various forms of stamping occur on a narrow range of vessel forms. Stamping is most common on deep jars (fig.
I. 38BU162V-59B. 16 includes Irene Plain bowls and jars with forms D, F, and H being the least common. The various forms of stamping occur on a narrow range of vessel forms. Stamping is most common on deep jars (fig. 17A–F, G, H, J, L), though it also occurs on bowls (fig. 17 G, I, K). Incising (often accompanied by punctations) is found on bowls (fig. 18) and jars (fig. 19) of the smaller variety. St. Johns vessel forms from the Charlesfort/ Santa Elena site are primarily deep bowls (fig. 20).