Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:49:11.888Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cultural resources management at the Pueblo of Zuni, New Mexico, USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Roger Anyon
Affiliation:
Zuni Heritage and Historic Preservation Office, PO Box 339, Zuni NM 87327, USA
T. J. Ferguson
Affiliation:
5000 W. Placita de los Vientos, Tucson AZ 85745, USA

Abstract

As once-colonial countries recognize the special claim of indigenous peoples to their own history, so archaeology is becoming more a partnership between researcher and community. The next step, of indigenous people directing their own archaeology, was taken long ago by the Zuni peopel of New Mexico, in a programme that is an example and model for others. The authors have worked in the Zuni programmes for over 15 years.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anyon, R. 1990. Cultural values and laws: looting the Native American heritage, in Klesert, & Downer, (ed.): 129–37.Google Scholar
Anyon, R. 1991. Protecting the past, protecting the present: cultural resources and American Indians, in Smith, G.S. & Ehrenhard, J.E. (ed.), Protecting the past: readings in archaeological resource management: 215–22. Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press.Google Scholar
Anyon, R. 1992. The late prehistoric and early historic periods in the Zuni Cibola area AD 1400–1680, in Vierra, (ed.): 7583.Google Scholar
Anyon, R. & Othole, A.L.. 1993. Protection and conservation of cultural resources, in Enote, J. et al. (ed.), The Zuni Resource Development Plan: a program of action for sustainable resource development: 1620. Zuni (NM): Pueblo of Zuni.Google Scholar
Anyon, R. & Zunie, J.. 1989. Cooperation at the Pueblo of Zuni: common ground for archaeology and tribal concerns, Practicing Anthropology 11(3): 1315.Google Scholar
Bean, L.J. (ed.). 1989. Seasons of the kcachina. Menlo Park (CA): Ballena Press.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1980. Cultural resource management at the Pueblo of Zuni: the Zuni Archaeology Program, Quarterly of the Southwestern Association on Indian Affairs 15(4): 610.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1982. Application of New Mexico State dead body and indigent burial statutes to a prehistoric mummified body, in Holmes, B. (ed.), American Indian concerns with historic preservation in New Mexico: 4551. Albuquerque (NM): New Mexico Archaeological Council.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1984. Archaeological ethics and values in a tribal cultural resource management program at the Pueblo of Zuni, in Green, (ed.): 224–35.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1989. The impact of Federal Policy on Zuni land use, in Bean, (ed.): 85131.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1990. The repatriation of Ahayu:da: Zuni War Gods; an interview with the Zuni Tribal Council on April 25, 1990, Museum Anthropology 14(2): 714.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1992. Zuni settlement patterns during the pueblo revolt, in Vierra, (ed.): 8592.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1993. Historic Zuni architecture and society: a structural analysis. Ph.D dissertation, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. 1995. An anthropological perspective on Zuni land use, in Hart, (ed.): 103–20.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. In press. Historic Zuni architecture and society. Tucson (AZ): University of Arizona Press. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J., Anyon, R. & Ladd, Edmund J.. In press. Repatriation at the Pueblo of Zuni: diverse solutions to complex problems, in Mihesuah, D.A. (ed.), The repatriation of American-Indian remains and sacred objects. Champaign (IL): University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. & Eriacho, W.. 1990. Ahayu:da, Zuni War Gods, cooperation and repatriation, Native Peoples 4(1): 612.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. & Hart, E.R.. 1985. A Zuni atlas. Norman (OK): University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J., Hart, E.R. & Seciwa, C.. 1988. Twentieth century Zuni political and economic development in relation to Federal Indian policy, in Snipp, M.C. (ed.), Public policy impacts on American Indian economic development: 113–44. Albuquerque (NM): Institute of Native American Economic Development, University of New Mexico.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J. & Mills, B.J.. 1987. Settlement and growth of Zuni Pueblo: an architectural history, The Kiva 52(4): 243–66.Google Scholar
Ferguson, T.J., Mills, B.J. & Seciwa, C.. 1990. Contemporary Zuni architecture and society, in Preiser, W. et al. (ed.), Pueblo style and regional architecture: 103–21. New York (NY): Van Nostrand Reinhold.Google Scholar
Fletcher, T.F. 1994. Archaeological data recovery excavations at the Sanders Great House and six other sites along US Highway 191, south of Sanders, Apache County, Arizona. Zuni (NM): Zuni Archaeology Program. Report 471.Google Scholar
Fowler, A.P. 1990. Archaeological studies along the Arizona Interconnection Project transmission line corridor. Zuni (NM): Zuni Archaeology Program. Report 293.Google Scholar
Fowler, A.P. 1991. Brownware and redware pottery: an Anasazi ceramic tradition, The Kiva 56(2): 123–44.Google Scholar
Green, E.L. (ed.). 1984. Ethics and values in archaeology. New York (NY): The Free Press.Google Scholar
Hall, S.A. & Ferguson, T.J.. In press. Pollen, sediments, and radiocarbon chronology of Zuni Pueblo, The Kiva.Google Scholar
Hardin, M.A. 1983. Gifts of mother earth: ceramics in the Zuni tradition. Phoenix (AZ): Heard Museum.Google Scholar
Hardin, M.A. 1989. Zuni pottery: the roots of revival, in Bean, (ed.): 133–63.Google Scholar
Hart, E.R. (ed.). 1991. Zuni history, victories in the 1990s. Seattle (WA): Institute of North American West.Google Scholar
Hart, E.R. (ed.). 1995. Zuni and the courts: a struggle for sovereign land rights. Lawrence (KS): University Pressof Kansas.Google Scholar
Hart, E.R. & Othole, A.L.. 1993. The Zuni Salt Lake area: potential impacts to Zuni traditional cultural properties by the proposed Fence Lake Mine, in Hart, E.R. & Ferguson, T.J. (ed.), Traditional cultural properties of four tribes: the Fence Lake Mine Project 1: 1185. Seattle (WA): Institute of the North American West.Google Scholar
Hugiite, P. 1994. A Zuni artist looks at Frank Hamilton Cushing, cartoons by Phil Hughte. Zuni (NM): Pueblo of Zuni Arts and Crafts, and A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center.Google Scholar
Hugiite, P. 1995. A Zuni artist looks at Frank Hamilton Cushing, American Anthropologist 97(1): 1013.Google Scholar
Isham, D. 1973. Zuni Archaeological Survey and Training Program 1972. Tucson (AZ): Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. Archaeological Series 32.Google Scholar
Judd, N. 1954. The material culture of Pueblo Bonito. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution. Miscellaneous Collections 124.Google Scholar
Kintigh, K. 1982. Settlement patterns in late Zuni prehistory. Ph.D dissertation, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms.Google Scholar
Kintigh, K. 1985. Settlement, subsistence, and society in late Zuni prehistory. Tucson (AZ): University of Arizona Press. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona 44.Google Scholar
Kintigh, K. 1991. Archaeological work at Heshot Ula, in Hart, (ed.): 26.Google Scholar
Klesert, A.L. & Downer, A.S. (ed.). 1990. Preservation on the reservation: Native Americans, Native American lands and archaeology. Window-Rock (AZ): Navajo Nation. Papers in Anthropology 26.Google Scholar
Leonard, R.D. 1991. The change from small villages to large pueblos after AD 1275, in Hart, (ed.): 26.Google Scholar
Leonard, R.D. & Reed, H.E.. 1993. Population aggregation in the prehistoric American Southwest: a selectionist model, American Antiquity 58(4): 648–61.Google Scholar
Merrill, W.L., Ladd, E.J. & Ferguson, T.J.. 1993. The return of the Ahayu:da, lessons for repatriation from Zuni Pueblo and the Smithsonian Institution, Current Anthropology 34(5): 523–67.Google Scholar
Mills, B.J. 1991. Zuni ceramic production and distribution during the 15th through 17th centuries, in Hart, (ed.): 27.Google Scholar
Mills, B.J. 1995a. The organization of protohistoric Zuni ceramic production, in Mills, B.J. & Crown, P.L., Ceramic production in the American Southwest: 200–30. Tucson (AZ): University of Arizonna Press.Google Scholar
Mills, B.J. 1995b. Gender and the reorganization of Zuni craft production: implications for archaeology, Journal of Anthropological Research 51: 149–72.Google Scholar
Mills, B.J., Holmes, B.E. & Ferguson, T.J.. 1982. Performance report for an architectural and historical study of the Zuni farming villages. MS on file at the Zuni Archaeology Program, Pueblo of Zuni.Google Scholar
National Park Service. 1990. Keepers of the treasures: protecting historic properties and cultural traditions on Indian lands. Washington (DC): National Park Service.Google Scholar
Nichols, D., Klesert, A.L. & Anyon, R.. 1989. Ancestral shrines, sites and graves: Native American perspectives on the ethics of collecting cultural properties, in Messinger, P.M. (ed.), The ethics of collecting cultural properties: 2738. Albuquerque (NM): University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Othole, A.L. & Anyon, R.. 1993. A tribal perspective on traditional cultural property consultation, CRM 16: 42–5.Google Scholar
Pandey, Trilokinath. 1972. Anthropologists at Zuni, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 116(4): 321–37.Google Scholar
Pueblo of Zuni. 1992. Pueblo of Zuni, New Mexico, policy statement regarding the protection and treatment of human remains and associated funerary objects, November 1992. Pueblo of Zuni.Google Scholar
Rick, J. 1991. The Zuni Stanford Anthropology/Archaeology Project, in Hart, (ed.): 1118.Google Scholar
Roberts, F.H..H. 1931. The ruins at Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 100.Google Scholar
Roberts, F.H..H. 1932. The Village of the Great Kivas on the Zuñí Reservation, New Mexico. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 111.Google Scholar
Robertson, L.B. 1983. Achiya: Dekyap’ bowa: alliance and polity in the development of Cibola. Ph.D dissertation, Brown University. Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms.Google Scholar
Rodee, M. & Ostler, J.. 1990. The fetish carvers of Zuni. Albuquerque (NM): Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque, and Pueblo of Zuni Arts and Crafts, Zuni.Google Scholar
Rothschild, N.A. 1991. Incorporating the outdoors as living space, ethnoarchaeology at Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico, Expedition 31: 2432.Google Scholar
Rothschild, N.A., Mills, B.J., Ferguson, T.J. & Dublin, S.. 1993. Abandonment at Zuni farming villages, in Cameron, C.M. & Tomka, S., The abandonment of settlements and regions: 123–37. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sant, M.B. & Marek, M.. 1994. Excavations at eariv puebloan sites in the Puerco River Valley, Arizona. Zuni (NM): Zuni Archaeology Program. Report 271.Google Scholar
Shears, B.L. & Wyaco, R.. 1990. Hawikku: a fabled city of Cibola, Native Peoples 3(4): 2026.Google Scholar
Smith, W., Woodbury, R.B. & Woodbury, N.F.S.. 1966. The excavation of Hawikuh by Frederick Webb Hodge, Report of the Hendricks Hodge Expedition, 1917–1923. New York (NY): Contributions to the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.Google Scholar
Spier, L. 1917. An outline for a chronology of Zuni ruins, American Museum of Natural History Anthropological Papers 18(3): 210331.Google Scholar
United States Senate. 1990. Native American Grave and Burial Protection Act (Repatriation); Native American Repatriation of Cultural Patrimony Act; and Heard Museum Report. Hearing before the Select Committee on Indian Affairs, United States Senate, May 14, 1990. Washington (DC): US Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Vierra, B.J. (ed.). 1992. Current research in late prehistoric and early historic New Mexico. Albuquerque (NM): New Mexico Archaeological Council.Google Scholar
Young, M.J. 1982. Images of power, images of beauty: contemporary Zuni perceptions of rock art. Ph.D dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Young, M.J. 1988. Signs from the ancestors. Albuquerque (NM): University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar