Abstract

For more than a century, archaeological traditions and patterns of interaction within the Southwestern United States and northern Mexico have been defined largely on the basis of pottery and architecture. For example, black-on-white pottery and above ground houses equal “puebloan.” Textiles,however, tell a different story, and an important one. In textiles, we can identify two broadly defined areas of related archaeological traditions prior to about A.D. 1200, one above the Mogollon Rim and the other below. Given this foundation, we can find new perspectives on those who lived below the rim, both before and after European contact.

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