HELEN GREENE BLUMENSCHEIN: LAYING THE GROUNDWORK FOR STUDYING TAOS' PAST (original) (raw)
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Journal of Dance and Somatic Practices, 2021
The United States has a long, shameful history of destroying the culture of its Indigenous people. This poetic reflection narrates an experience of mine at the ancient site of the Taos Pueblo in New Mexico. This UNESCO World Heritage Site, open to visitors and closed during sacred ceremonies, provoked a somatic shift in me. I chose to write about the shift using the intimacy of poetic language to blur the boundary between self and environment, human body and Earth body, subject and object. For there to be a change in how humans regard the environment, it seems helpful to hike into the wilderness and sleep under the stars, an embodied experience that can heighten perceptions, which then informs the language used to write about the natural world.
Laboratory of Anthropology note, 1982
Museum of New Mexico MNM Project ; no. 41.309 ; 2417004 ; 70.04. La Plata Project This survey recorded 43 prehistoric sites, the majority of which are the remains of small two- or three-room cobble structures and date to Pueblo II-Pueblo III. Of four Historic sites, two appear to be homesteads dating to 1900, and two are somewhat more recent. Maps are redacted. Archaeological surveying Aerial photography Ancestral Pueblo culture Pueblo architecture Surface architecture Cobblestone architecture Cobble rubble Jacal architecture Basketmaker III period Pueblo I period Pueblo II period Pueblo III period Historical archaeology Navajo Indians Limited occupation sites Sheep camps Euroamerican Homesteads Historic period 20th century 1920-1960 La Plata River (Colo. and N.M.) San Juan County (N.M.) La Plata Highway New Mexico State Road 170 Farmington (N.M.) LA 1897 LA 1903 LA 1926 LA 3293 | Morris 42 LA 37586 LA 37587 LA 37588 LA 37589 LA 37590 LA 37591 LA 37592 LA 37593 LA 37594 LA 37595 LA 37596 LA 37597 LA 37598 LA 37599 LA 37600 LA 37601 LA 37602 LA 37603 LA 37604 LA 37605 LA 37606 LA 37607 LA 37608 LA 37609 LA 37610 LA 37611 LA 37612 LA 37613 LA 37614 LA 37615 LA 37616 LA 37617 LA 37618 LA 37619 LA 37620 LA 37621 LA 37622 LA 37623 LA 37624 LA 37625 LA 37626
Laboratory of Anthropology note, 1982
[Other title: Urbanization and the public domain in late westward expansion] Quay Records Survey Project This report did no receive a Museum of New Mexico Research Project number. Research proposal. Proposal to document existing historical and archaeological data on the settlement and use of the public domain during the period of initial urbanization and economic growth in Quay County. National Register of Historic Places United States. Bureau of Land Management United States. General Land Office United States. National Archives and Records Administration Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad Company Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad El Paso Railway Company Tucumcari Townsite and Investment Company Homestead Act (1862) Homestead case file forms Archaeology -- Research Sampling (Statistics) Archaeological surveying Demographic archaeology Economic anthropology Historical archaeology Homestead law Land settlement patterns Public lands Land tenure Cities and towns Homesteads Railroads Industrialization Historic period 20th century Quay County (N.M.) Dawson (N.M.) Tucumcari (N.M.)
2019
Over the past five years, the University of Colorado, along with the Pueblo of Pojoaque and the Colorado Archaeological Society, have been analyzing the ceramics collected by Fred Wendorf at Cuyamugue Pueblo (LA38) and Florence Hawley Ellis at Pojoaque Pueblo (LA61) in the 1950s. Just through visual macroscopic analyses and measurements, we have been able to learn about changes in occupation of these two pueblos, changes in standards of living or household wealth, incorporation of Spanish foods and products, food preparation and cooking practices, and changes in style over time. Specifically, we have been able to quantitatively assess changes in material conditions of life through tabulating changes in the ratio of fine-wares to cooking-wares, as well as identifying and tabulating trade wares. With regards to incorporation of Spanish products, we have been able to track the adoption and incorporation of wheat and other Spanish foods into the Pueblo diet, through analyzing and quantifying changes in vessel form and use-wear through time. This paper will present the methods and findings from these analyses, highlighting the potentials for gaining new knowledge by re-visiting and re-analyzing old collections with new questions.
Laboratory of Anthropology note , 1984
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