Potscherven

362-208b<BR> Mogollon potsherds; pottery; A.D. 1100-1200.<BR> Potsherds: 1 orange-colored (unidentified) Black-on-red rimsherd (bowl, round rim, wide band to rim, with blocky black element below band); 1 St. John's Black-on-red bowl sherd; 1 (unidentified) Black-on-white (Cibola White Ware: a large black blocky trianguloid design element); 1 smudged redware jar sherd (Salt Red? This specimen is lost); 1 plainware jar sherd (with rounded, fine quartz sand temper). This is probably a Bylas phase (1175/1200-1300) assemblage. As defined by Johnson and Wasley (1966), the Bylas phase was a time in the Gila Valley from the gorge east of Safford to San Carlos when the farming population lived in surface rooms built using adobe reinforced with rocks arranged around a courtyard in areas above the river convenient for farming. Identifying indigenous ceramics include plain and corrugated utilitarian ware, and Casa Grande Red-on-buff (Safford Variety) and San Carlos Red-on-brown ware<BR>

Potscherven

362-208b<BR> Mogollon potsherds; pottery; A.D. 1100-1200.<BR> Potsherds: 1 orange-colored (unidentified) Black-on-red rimsherd (bowl, round rim, wide band to rim, with blocky black element below band); 1 St. John's Black-on-red bowl sherd; 1 (unidentified) Black-on-white (Cibola White Ware: a large black blocky trianguloid design element); 1 smudged redware jar sherd (Salt Red? This specimen is lost); 1 plainware jar sherd (with rounded, fine quartz sand temper). This is probably a Bylas phase (1175/1200-1300) assemblage. As defined by Johnson and Wasley (1966), the Bylas phase was a time in the Gila Valley from the gorge east of Safford to San Carlos when the farming population lived in surface rooms built using adobe reinforced with rocks arranged around a courtyard in areas above the river convenient for farming. Identifying indigenous ceramics include plain and corrugated utilitarian ware, and Casa Grande Red-on-buff (Safford Variety) and San Carlos Red-on-brown ware<BR>