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A Southern Maya-Peten Pottery Correlation1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

John M. Longyear III*
Affiliation:
Peabody MuseumCambridge, Massachusetts

Extract

This paper represents an attempt to correlate, as far as is now possible, the ceramic sequence of the southern Maya area with that established in the Guatemalan Peten. The southern Maya region includes the Republic of El Salvador from its western border east to the lower Lempa River and the Republic of Honduras from its western border east to an arbitrary line slightly beyond the Ulua River and Lake Yojoa. Generally speaking, there have been defined in this region two principal ceramic phases, one stratigraphically below the other. The lower phase contains monochrome and bichrome wares and handmodeled figurines. The upper horizon consists of the polchrome pottery typical of the region, plus mould-made figurines and whistles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1942

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Footnotes

1

Read before a regional meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in Philadelphia, December 27, 1940.

References

Longyear, J. M. 1940. “The Ethnological Significance of Copan Pottery.” In The Maya and Their Neighbors. New York.Google Scholar
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Smith, R. E. 1940. “Ceramics of the Peten.” In The Maya and their Neighbors. New York.Google Scholar
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