The Gila Pueblo Salado

The Gila Pueblo Salado

Paperback (19 Apr 2017)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Gila Pueblo is the type-site for the Salado Culture, whose people were the late-prehistoric Western Pueblo inhabitants of the Roosevelt Basin in east-central Arizona. Their pottery has the largest areal distribution of any Southwestern prehistoric ware. The most famous of their sites are Tonto Cliff Dwellings, near the southern shore of Roosevelt Lake, and Gila Pueblo and Besh-ba-gowah, just south of Globe. Gila Pueblo was a major village, consisting of several hundred contiguous rooms. It was a large, nucleated settlement, located at or near the center of a densely populated area. It was one of eight such settlements located along Pinal Creek which, in turn, lay astride the major trade route coming up the San Pedro River from Casas Grandes. In this comprehensive volume, Charmion R. McKusick and Jon Nathan Young detail the discoveries they made during excavations of Gila Pueblo in the 1970s. Their findings offer important insights into the influential culture that occupied the pueblo. Many of those insights are further explored in Charmion McKusick's Upland Salado Iconography and Religious Change.

Book information

ISBN: 9780939071784
Publisher: On Demand Publishing, LLC-Create Space
Imprint: Arizona Archaeological Society
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 152
Weight: 367g
Height: 279mm
Width: 216mm
Spine width: 8mm