Highlighting one of the Peabody Museum's most important
archaeological expeditions--the excavation of the Swarts Ranch Ruin
in southwestern New Mexico by Harriet and Burton Cosgrove in the
mid-1920s--Steven LeBlanc's book features rare,
never-before-published examples of Mimbres painted pottery,
considered by many scholars to be the most unique of all the
ancient art traditions of North America. Made between A.D. 1000 and
1150, these pottery bowls and jars depict birds, fish, insects, and
mammals that the Mimbres encountered in their daily lives, portray
mythical beings, and show humans participating in both ritual and
everyday activities. LeBlanc traces the origins of the Mimbres
people and what became of them, and he explores our present
understanding of what the images mean and what scholars have
learned about the Mimbres people in the 75 years since the
Cosgroves' expedition.
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