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portada Arizona Archaeologist no. 39: Coyote Ruin (na 6654), a Prescott-Area Community (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Year
2013
Language
English
Pages
294
Format
Paperback
ISBN13
9780939071746

Arizona Archaeologist no. 39: Coyote Ruin (na 6654), a Prescott-Area Community (in English)

Mary Spall (Author) · Arizona Archaeological Society · Paperback

Arizona Archaeologist no. 39: Coyote Ruin (na 6654), a Prescott-Area Community (in English) - Mary Spall

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Synopsis "Arizona Archaeologist no. 39: Coyote Ruin (na 6654), a Prescott-Area Community (in English)"

This report documents the archaeological work conducted at Coyote Ruin (NA 6654), a Prescott Culture site located northeast of Prescott Valley, Arizona. The field work for this project involved survey, mapping, excavation, and recording of rock art, followed by extensive analysis and write-up of the features and artifacts. Work began in November 1998 and concluded in April 2004 using volunteers from the Yavapai Chapter of the Arizona Archaeological Society. Data recovered indicates Coyote Ruin represents a record of human occupation from perhaps the A.D. 900s until after 1300. Excavations at the site in the late 1920s are the earliest in the Prescott area for which we have documentation. Included herein is the account of J. W. Simmons who worked at the site starting in 1927. The Yavapai Chapter conducted excavations at 11 of the 26 masonry rooms, 2 of the 10 pit structures, and documented many of the agricultural and water-control features. Ceramics recovered included Prescott Gray Ware, Verde Brown, and a range of tradewares mostly from the Kayenta and Little Colorado River areas. The abundance of projectile points and bones from deer, antelope, elk, and small mammals indicated the importance of hunting for the inhabitants. Archaeo-botanical analysis documented consumption of maize, harvesting of a variety of seeds, and use of agave. The concluding chapter of the report places the pueblo into a context of 13th to 14th century occupation in the Prescott area, discusses how the Prescott Culture was organized in this period, and provides some hypotheses that need to be examined with future research.

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