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“Mimbres in Context: Hohokam, Chaco, Casas Grandes” Free Zoom Online Presentation
March 18, 2021 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online dinnertime program will feature “Mimbres in Context: Hohokam, Chaco, Casas Grandes” presentation by archaeologist Stephen H. Lekson. This free presentation will be held from 7:00-8:30 p.m. (MST).
The ancient Mimbres people of southwestern New Mexico were interesting not only for their famous pottery, but also as “players” in the larger history of the ancient Southwest. We consider Mimbres history in context of its times: Hohokam up to about 1000 CE; Chaco from 1000 to 1150; and the run-up to Paquimé/Casas Grandes from 1150 to 1250. Mimbres began as pithouse villages making red-on-brown pottery (much like Hohokam red-on-buff) and developing Hohokam-inspired canal irrigation systems in the Chihuahua Desert. Around 1000 Hohokam waned as Chaco waxed – the “Pueblo II Expansion” of old textbooks. Emil Haury, long ago, identified 1000 as approximately the time Mimbres was transformed into stone pueblos making black-on-white pottery; he insisted that Mimbres (a subset of the larger Mogollon region) essentially ceased being Mogollon and became much more Anasazi-like. Mimbres flourished while Chaco flourished, from 1000 to shortly before 1150. Political shifts after 1125 at Chaco were reflected at the same time by mass depopulation and social change in the Mimbres river valleys. Post-Mimbres people moved south into the desert, and formed new communities in mud-walled-pueblo villages (some of considerable size) with little or no locally produced painted pottery. Those post-Mimbres societies almost certainly contributed substantially to the base population for Paquimé, the Casas Grandes regional center from 1300 to 1450.
To register for the Zoom meeting go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SX6CKc5dTxGpCHJEuhfc2g.
Photo caption: Color images on some Classic Mimbres pottery bowls in the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, and drawing of a Mimbres bowl from the Saige-McFarland site, courtesy of Stephen H. Lekson.
Flyer: 20210318(v1)ThirdThursday_SteveLekson_MimbresInContext-HohokamChacoCasasGrandes