Perishable: Twined Sandal AMNH 29.0/7366
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Twined Sandal, Accession AMNH29.0, Catalog #7366. Morris FS 958. Analyzed by Laurie Webster, 2006. Twined yucca sandal with colored and raised designs, 2-strand twining (S). Image: AMNH 29.0/7366A: twined sandal with colored design, upper face. AMNH 29.0/7366B: twined sandal with colored design, lower face. AMNH 29.0/7366C: oblique view showing raised design under raking light. AMNH 29.0/7366D: oblique view showing raised design. Recovered from Earl Morris' excavation of Room 54, Aztec West Ruin. Morris (1928:309) indicates that “The first 1 ½ feet of fill in Room 54 consisted of fallen masonry and the uncharred wood of a ceiling which had been supported by two transverse pairs of cedar logs. The interstices between the stones were not filled with earth, indicating little action of wind and rain before the subsequent filling took place. Above this basal depodit was 9X to 10 feet of dry refuse with a large vegetable component. It had been well sheltered from moisture; hence, perishable objects were excellently preserved. That the waste material accumulated dur;ng the Chaco period is shown by the fact that a human effigy vessel' (29.0-7321) was scattered from one end of the room to the other. Such vessels do not occur among Mesa Verde pottery. Other specimens from this room are: a grooved hammer, a chipped knife blade, a selenite pendant, a piece of selenite, five arrow points…[long list of artifacts]…The charred timbers of a ceiling were above the refuse, separated from it by 8 inches to 1 foot of drift sand.”
Reference: Earl Morris, 1928, Notes on Excavations in the Aztec Ruin, Volume XXVI, Part V, Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, New York.
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2012-01-30



