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Earthenware Vessel

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
Washington, DC, United States

A pot made in the Acoma Pueblo fashion. Acoma Pueblo pottery is typically painted in black, white, and terra cotta orange. Acoma pottery is characterized by thin but durable walls, geometric patterns and fine line work. Historically, the pottery was made from local deposits of dense clay shaped via hand coiling, and typically served practical storage and serving purposes. Acoma is one of the oldest continually inhabited communities in the United States and its pottery dates back over 1,000 years.

This object was collected from the Acoma Reservation, Cibola County, New Mexico, United States, North America in 1884 by the the Smithsonian's Bureau of American Ethnology, an entity established by congress in 1879 to oversee the transfer of extensive government records, archives, and other materials dealing with American Indians to the Smithsonian Insitution. It's founding director was the well-known explorer, geologist, anthropologist, and conservationist John Wesley Powell. Many of America's earliest field anthropologists were employed by the Bureau of Ethnology, several of whom conducted important research and collecting of North America's indigenous cultures, languages, and archaeological sites. The Bureau would eventually go on to become part of the museum's anthropology department.

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  • Title: Earthenware Vessel
  • Location: Acoma, Cibola County, New Mexico, United States, North America
  • Physical Dimensions: H: 27cm D: 27cm
  • Type: Pot
  • Rights: This image was obtained from the Smithsonian Institution. The image or its contents may be protected by international copyright laws. http://www.si.edu/termsofuse
  • External Link: View this object record in the Smithsonian Institution Collections Search Center
  • Medium: Clay, mineral pigments
  • USNM Catalog Number(s): E110086
  • Photo Credit: Donald E. Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History
  • Field: Ethnology
  • Date Collected: 1884
  • Accession Date: 1885
Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

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