SHUMWAY RUIN AND THE LATE PRE-HISPANIC PERIOD IN EAST-CENTRAL ARIZONA. Keuren, S. V. QID: Q108119344
abstract   bibtex   
Shumway Ruin is a large Ancestral Pueblo settlement in east-central Arizona occupied during the fourteenth century A.D. The settlement was one of six villages in the Silver Creek drainage established during a phase of community reorganization throughout the North American Southwest. A new architectural map shows that the village was composed of several contiguous room blocks built around two major plazas and a smaller plaza or possible great kiva. Excavations in one of the large plazas and two nearby rooms demonstrate that Shumway Ruin was one of the latest occupied Pueblo villages in the region and was a possible producer of iconographic-style red ware pottery.
@article{keuren_shumway_nodate,
	title = {{SHUMWAY} {RUIN} {AND} {THE} {LATE} {PRE}-{HISPANIC} {PERIOD} {IN} {EAST}-{CENTRAL} {ARIZONA}},
	abstract = {Shumway Ruin is a large Ancestral Pueblo settlement in east-central Arizona occupied during the fourteenth century A.D. The settlement was one of six villages in the Silver Creek drainage established during a phase of community reorganization throughout the North American Southwest. A new architectural map shows that the village was composed of several contiguous room blocks built around two major plazas and a smaller plaza or possible great kiva. Excavations in one of the large plazas and two nearby rooms demonstrate that Shumway Ruin was one of the latest occupied Pueblo villages in the region and was a possible producer of iconographic-style red ware pottery.},
	language = {en},
	author = {Keuren, Scott Van},
	note = {QID: Q108119344},
	keywords = {⛔ No DOI found},
	pages = {22},
}

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