All posts by Jan Johansen

Glittering and Glassy: Mineral Extraction and Rio Grande Pottery in 17th century New Mexico

SAS Webinar
“Glittering and Glassy: Understanding the Intersection of Colonial Mineral Extractivism and the Production of Late Rio Grande Lead Glaze-Painted Pottery in Seventeenth-Century New Mexico”
by
Danielle Marie Huerta, PhD Candidate U.C. Santa Cruz
Saturday, November 11, 2023
2:00 PM – 3:30 PM PT

What happens to Indigenous technologies when the dissemination of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is forced to occur within a historical context characterized by colonial regimes of labor exploitation and religious/ideological subjugation? In order to understand how Colonialism affects the very systems of knowledge it appropriates, it is necessary to understand how that knowledge is situated within Indigenous ways of interacting with and viewing the world around them.

Danielle Marie Huerta will be presenting initial results from her multi-sited and methodologically diverse dissertation project that aims to understand how Spanish colonial mining practices in New Mexico may have impacted the ability of Pueblo potters to create and maintain communities of practice, cultural perceptions of place, and the ability to pass down sociotechnical knowledge from one generation to the next, ultimately leading to the decision by said potters to stop producing glaze-painted pottery in the early eighteenth-century. Using a combination of methods such as lead isotope sourcing, chemical characterization of lead glaze paints using LA-ICP-MS, and ceramic petrography, late Rio Grande Glaze Ware pottery was analyzed from four sites, San Marcos Pueblo (LA 98), Paa’ko (LA 162), Patokwa (LA 96), and the Sanchez Site (LA 20000). These seventeenth-century sites all represent different but interconnected temporal windows and settlement contexts during the Colonial period that have archaeological evidence for the intersection between late Glaze Ware use and/or production and colonial metallurgical activities and/or exploitation of Pueblo labor and Traditional Ecological Knowledge.

Danielle Marie Huerta is a PhD Candidate at University of California, Santa Cruz and 2022 SAS Scholarship recipient. She received her B.A. in Anthropology from Texas A & M University, College Station in 2015 and M.A. from University of California, Santa Cruz in 2017. She is currently a Graduate Student Researcher and Archaeological Technician at Los Alamos National Laboratory where she supports their Environmental Protection and Compliance group with managing cultural resources. She has served as an Archaeological Technician with the Cibola National Forest, SEARCH, Inc., Aspen CRM Solutions, and Bureau of Land Management – New Mexico State Office. She has participated in multiple survey and excavation projects in the state of New Mexico since her first field school in Abiquiu in 2014.

SAS Tour – Fremont: Fossils, Native Americans, and Mission

SAS Tour
“Fremont: Fossils, Native Americans, and Mission”
Saturday, October 7, 2023 and Sunday, October 8, 2023
Sacramento Archeological Society is pleased to offer a historical and pre-history tour in Fremont, CA. We will visit a Native American site with shell mounds, a historical museum for the city of Fremont, the Children’s Natural History Museum, Shinn House Historical Park and Mission San Jose with its associated museum. Given clear skies we will be delighted by an illumination of the mission as the sun proceeds to set.

The target itinerary is as follows:
Saturday, October 07

1:30 – 3:00 PM PT – Math/Science Nucleus Paleontology Museum in Children’s Natural History Museum: 404 Eggers Drive, Fremont, CA
The museum features several exhibits to highlight the natural history of the local area. Tools of Early Humans show how California Native Americans used natural fibers and rocks to help them survive. The largest hall is Wes Gordon Fossil Hall that includes the Irvington Fossils, Environments through Time, Bones and the Boy Paleontologists Room. Hall of Small Wonders is full of little creatures including foraminifers, radiolarian, and diatoms. Mineral Rock Hall has minerals classified by their chemical families and rocks from California. The Nature Hall includes specimens of different animals and shells. (Open 1:00 – 4:00 PM) Admission – $5.00

3:30 – 4:30 PM Old Mission San Jose tour and 6701 San Jose Dr, Fremont, CA 94539
Mission San Jose was founded on June 11, 1797 by Father Fermin Francisco de Lasuen on a site which was part of a natural highway by way of the Livermore Valley to the San Joaquin Valley. It is the fourteenth of the 21 Spanish Missions in Alta California. Although Mission San Jose was founded nearly 225 years ago, we cannot forget that our story stretches back further into time. Before this was Mission San Jose, it was the Ohlone Village of Oroysom.

Guided Tour at 3:30 PM: $10/adult, $7/child 6-12, free for children under 6
4:45 PM After the tour join the group for a dinner at a local restaurant
6:30 PM Experience “illumination” of the mission and bring a camera

Sunday, October 08
9:00 AM – gathering/brunch in Fremont
10:30 AM – The Museum of Local History: 190 Anza St Fremont, CA 94539 (open 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM) offers interesting artifacts associated with the history of Fremont. Admission – $2.00

12:30 PM PT – Coyote Hills Regional Park: 8000 Patterson Ranch Road, Fremont, CA 94555
The East Bay area’s original inhabitants were the ancestors of the Ohlone Indians, hunters, and gatherers whose skills enabled them to live well off the land’s natural bounty. In those days, tule elk roamed the land, condors soared overhead, and sea otters and fish were abundant in the Bay. At Coyote Hills Regional Park, some of this rich wetland is preserved, along with 2,000-year old Tuibun Ohlone Indian shellmound sites with fascinating archaeological resources. We will tour Coyote Hills and Chochenyo site. Multiple bird species and other life are plentiful in the park. $5.00 for car parking.

3:00 PM Tour Shinn House Historical Park
Shinn Historical Park and Arboretum is a 4-1/2 acre hidden gem in Fremont. The Big House dates back to 1876 and it is surrounded by large trees and beautiful gardens. The grounds also include one of the few remaining Chinese bunk houses, symbol both of the differential work conditions afforded Chinese-Americans and Chinese immigrants, and of a path for circumventing the infamous Chinese Exclusion Act.
If you plan to attend, please notify Paul K. Davis at paulkdavis@earthlink.net. Contributions to SAS are welcome and can be collected at the beginning of the tour. All participants are required to sign a Hold Harmless Agreement at the beginning of the tour.

Flintknapping Workshop

Flint knapping Workshop
Led by
Kevin Smith
Saturday, October 21, 2023
1:00 – 4:00 p.m. PT
at
Roger and Lydia Peake’s home
Kevin Smith, PhD archaeologist and SAS scholarship winner will lead Society members in the use of flint knapping techniques. Kevin has been making stone tools since he was 17 years old and also replicates artifacts for local museum displays and for experimental archaeology which is a major research emphasis.

The event is scheduled for 1:00 PM PT to 4:00 PM. PT on Saturday, October 21. This will be an opportunity to enjoy hands on time with obsidian and chert. Since we’ll be working with sharp objects, safety glasses, tight fitting work gloves so that they can feel the materials but protect their hands and closed-toe shoes (no sandals), and a heavy towel to protect legs arms and legs are a must. Long pants and long sleeves are also recommended for protection. If you have obsidian, chert and any flint knapping tools, please bring them. Kevin will provide antler, hammer stones tarps and some obsidian and chert.

Ukraine – Its Turbulent History

SAS Webinar
“Ukraine – Its Turbulent History”
by
Paul K. Davis, SAS vice president
Saturday September 9, 2023
2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PT

Paul K. Davis will review the long and difficult history of the modern nation of Ukraine starting at its prehistory and finishing with its current conflict. Ukraine prehistory as a part of the Pontic steppe in Eastern Europe played an important role in Eurasian cultural events, including the spread of the Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages, Indo-European migrations and the domestication of the horse. The first written information is about invasion by the Persian Empire. The region supplied grain to ancient Athens, and much of it came to be ruled by the Roman Empire. In the early Middle Ages it was the center of a Jewish kingdom, which was then conquered by Vikings, who in turn were subjugated by the Mongols. In modern times it has sometimes been independent, but mostly fought over by Polish, Turkish, Austrian and Russian Empires. In the 1930s it was victim of the Holodomor, the second greatest genocide after the Nazi Holocaust of Jews. Now it again defends itself from imperial aggression.

Crosspath: an Ancestral Pueblo Site – Lithics Production?

X Marks the Spot: Mapping as the Key to Unlocking the Crosspatch Site’s Past”
by
Jessica Weinmeister
Monday, August 14, 2023
5:00 PM – 6:00 PM PT

The Crosspath Site (5DL858, formerly Sarvell Site and Berry Ruin) is a large Ancestral Pueblo community center with Basketmaker through Pueblo II components. Crosspath is located between the Central Mesa Verde region and southeast Utah and has influence from Kayenta and Chaco. Jessica Weinmeister’s Master’s thesis addressed the question whether flaked stone tools were made at the site and/or exchanged and whether these behaviors changed over time. To gather data for this research Jessica and crew conducted field work at Crosspatch including site mapping and collecting of ceramics and lithics in June 2022. In this presentation Jessica will introduce the Crosspath Site and share her research results.

Jessica Weinmeister graduated with a Masters from New Mexico State University. She received her B.A. Summa cum Laude in Anthropology from Western Colorado University. Her professional experience includes Museum Graduate Assistant at the University Museum, New Mexico State University, Los Cruses, NM; Public Archaeology Intern at Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, NM, and Cultural Resource Management at Western Colorado University, Gunnison, CO. Her field work included Maya Archaeological Field School and Haynie and Dillard excavation sites through Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez. Her independent research included Ceramics Analysis Research Project and Lithic Analysis Honor Thesis, and Lithic Analysis Research Project where she analyzed flaked stone tools from the Crosspatch site. She has two publications.

Fifth Annual SAS Pot luck/Pool Party/Social

Saturday, July 29, 2023
1:00 – 6:00+ p.m.
Dan and Victoria Foster have offered their home for another get-together.

Bring your favorite dish and swimming suit. Please RSVP to Dan Foster at calfirearchy@gmail.com or (279) 444-2099 to log your attendance, obtain a parking map and sign up for a dish. There will be plenty of parking close to their house. Dan can offer a map showing the best places to park (really close to their home). A reminder with Dan and Victoria’s address will be provided before the event.

Sir Francis Drake Landed in California?

SAS Webinar
“Sir Francis Drake Landed in California?”
by
Melissa Darby
Monday, June 12, 2023
5:00 PM – 6:00 PM PT

English Navigator and sometime pirate Francis Drake and his crew of eighty men, and one Black woman named Maria, were in peril in the early summer of 1579. Their ship, the Golden Hind, was leaking, and they were searching an uncharted coast for a safe harbor. Though Drake had captured several tons of Spanish treasure, this voyage was not a piratical adventure: Drake was on a secret mission for Queen Elizabeth. He was to explore the west coast of America to find lands to claim for England in regions beyond the possessions of any ‘Christian Prince’; and to ‘seek the strait’ — the entrance to the fabled Northwest Passage. Failing to find the passage, and in danger of sinking, they had to find a bay or harbor that fit the necessary requirements for careening a wooden ship. Sailing south, they found a ‘fair & good bay’ where they spent most of the summer. Though Drake’s logs and charts are long lost, various narratives of the landing survive. Some of the confusion about where Drake landed is because the original sources don’t agree on the location of the fair bay. So the debate has come down to what original source was considered more authoritative; the official account by Queen Elizabeth’s appointed publisher, Richard Hakluyt, who put the bay at 38° north around San Francisco or two contemporary manuscripts that describe that Drake came in on the prevailing winds and currents at about 48° north and his fair bay stood at 44° north latitude.

Melissa Darby is an award-winning historian and anthropologist, and affiliated research faculty in the Anthropology Department at Portland State University. She is principal investigator and sole proprietor of Lower Columbia Research & Archaeology. Darby has worked for over forty years in the Northwest and is a noted authority on the ethnohistory of the Native people of the lower Columbia River region. Her research on Native American cultures of the area includes important works on settlement patterns, plankhouse architecture, and plant foods used by the indigenous people of the region. She has contributed substantially to our understanding of the Native peoples and the world they inhabited prior to European colonization. Her book Thunder Go North the Hunt for Sir Francis Drake’s Fair & Good Bay was published by the University of Utah Press in 2019 and is about the mysterious and vexed question of where Francis Drake landed the Golden Hind in the summer of 1579.

South Africa during Later Stone Age

SAS Webinar
South Africa during Later Stone Age
Saturday May 13, 2023
2:00 p.m. – 3:00 PM PT
“Early Later Stone Age at Knysna Cave, South Africa: Analysis of lithic assemblages”
by
Sara Watson

The beginning of the Later Stone Age is argued to correspond to the introduction of subsistence, mobility, and land use patterns documented in the ethnographic record. However, the earliest technologies of this period, known as the Early Later Stone Age, or ELSA, are poorly defined. The ELSA can be found as early as 40 ka and as late as about 19 ka. There are very few sites with well-described ELSA assemblages, with some researchers suggesting that the apparent variability between assemblages would reflect a shift in occupation to the now submerged continental shelf to follow the receding coastline. In this presentation, Sara will discuss the ELSA from Knysna Eastern Heads Cave 1, a currently unpublished site located on the southern coast of South Africa. In this presentation Sara Watson will define the Stone Age periods, focus on lithic changes in the ELSA in South Africa, and provide a first look at the beginnings of the Later Stone Age along the southern coast

Sara Watson is a graduating PhD candidate at University of California Davis. She has a BA from University of Texas at Arlington, and an MA from University of California, Davis. She has been involved with extensive field work and research projects associated with South Africa including GeoArcheaology Working Group; Experimental investigation of costs and benefits of lithic heat treatment in the Middle Stone Age; Middle Stone Age technological organization at Nelson Bay Cave, South Africa; Doring River Archaeology Project; Center for Experimental Archaeology, at Davis;, Knysa Paleocape and Middle Stone Age Research Project; Experimental examination of structural changes in silcrete during heat treatment; small tool production at Montagu Cave, South Africa and McNair Scholars Summer Research Internship. She has two publications as a first author and a third one as co-author.

Impact of Colonial Mineral Extraction on Pueblo Production of Ceramics

SAS Webinar
“Glittering and Glassy: Understanding the Intersection Of Colonial Mineral Extractivism and The Production of Late Rio Grande Lead Glaze-Painted Pottery In Seventeenth-Century New Mexico”
by
Danielle Marie Huerta
Saturday, November 11, 2023
2:00 PM – 3:30 PM PT

What happens to Indigenous technologies when the dissemination of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is forced to occur within a historical context characterized by colonial regimes of labor exploitation and religious/ideological subjugation? Within anthropology and archaeology, researchers have sought to answer this question through problematic narratives and models of culture contact and technological change, such as that of “quick replacement”— or the immediate abandonment of indigenous tools and technology in favor of European ones after conquest. However, this model ignores the intellectual contributions of Indigenous people whose ways of knowing have historically gone unacknowledged. In order to understand how Colonialism affects the very systems of knowledge it appropriates, it is necessary to understand how that knowledge is situated within Indigenous ways of interacting with and viewing the world around them. Danielle Marie Huerta will be presenting initial results from her multi-sited and methodologically diverse dissertation project that aims to understand how Spanish colonial mining practices in New Mexico may have impacted the ability of Pueblo potters to create and maintain communities of practice, cultural perceptions of place, and the ability to pass down sociotechnical knowledge from one generation to the next, ultimately leading to the decision by said potters to stop producing glaze-painted pottery in the early eighteenth-century.

Danielle Marie Huerta is a PhD Candidate at University of California, Santa Cruz. She received her B.A. in Anthropology from Texas A & M University, College Station in 2015 and M.A. from University of California, Santa Cruz in 2017. She is currently a Graduate Student Researcher and Archaeological Technician at Los Alamos National Laboratory where she supports their Environmental Protection and Compliance group with managing cultural resources. She has served as an Archaeological Technician with the Cibola National Forest, SEARCH, Inc., Aspen CRM Solutions, and Bureau of Land Management – New Mexico State Office. She has participated in multiple survey and excavation projects in the state of New Mexico since her first field school in Abiquiu in 2014.

Friends are welcome and also invited to join our organization. There is no participation fee.

Southwest Pre-history: Rincon Bench, UT & Mesa Verde, CO

SAS Webinar
“Living on the Spine of the World: Placemaking at Early Community Centers Rincon, UT”
by
Daniel Hampson
Monday, April 10, 2023
5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. PT

Rincon Bench, located on the northern bench above the San Juan River at the intersection of Comb Ridge in southeast Utah has been the site for large communities from 500 BCE through 900 CE. Many archaeological sites exist at this intersection. Three different temporal community centers—the Basketmaker II, Basketmaker III, and Pueblo I periods—were constructed and used by ancestral Puebloans at Rincon Bench. Daniel’s thesis research has focused on an intensive survey of sites in this Rincon Bench Community. Daniel will discuss the results of his survey and offer insight into Mesa Verde prehistory and this region.

Daniel Hampson is a graduate student at New Mexico State University expecting to graduate this spring with a Master of Arts in Anthropology. He received a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Fort Lewis College in 2016. Since then as archaeologist with Woods Canyon Archaeological Consultants and Archaeological Lab Employee at Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Daniel has extensive experience analyzing human remains, faunal, lithic, non-flaked lithic and ceramic collections on archaeological projects in Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona. Daniel has used this growing experience to perform the research on Rincon Bench.