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Chapin
B/W (AD
575-800)
The following are some representative
examples of Chapin B/W sherds:


(Click on image to enlarge.)
Type Ceramics
Provenience Info
Type sites:
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Mesa Verde N. P.: Site 101, Deep Pithouse; Site 117, Pithouse B; Site 283, Pithouse C;
Site 118, Pithouse A; Site 145. La Plata District B III sites. Alkali Ridge. Mancos Canyon.
(Breternitz et al
1974:26).
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Dating:
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Basketmaker III Pueblo I. AD 575
800.
AD 575 800 (some found to 900) (Varien, 1999: Appendix
A(1)).
B III contexts AD 575 thru early 700s,
P I contexts thru AD 800 and (rarely) to 900,
during 800s Chapin and Piedra characteristics are mixed
(Wilson and Blinman
1995:46).
B III, AD 600-750 (Lucius and Breternitz
1992:17).
B III PI (Hayes and Lancaster
1975:111).
AD 500 850 (Abel
1955, cited in Cattenach
1980:210).
AD 600 750 in La Plata pithouses (Hayes and
Lancaster:114).
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Texture:
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Medium to coarse (Breternitz et
al:25).
Fine-textured bowl interiors (Cattenach:211).
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Temper:
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Crushed igneous rock, coarse to very coarse
(Cattenach:
211).
Crushed igneous or metamorphic, some with fine sand (Hayes and Lancaster:
112).
Crushed igneous, andesite or diorite (Shepard 1939, OBryan 1950, in
Breternitz et
al:25).
Crushed igneous (Breternitz et
al:25); most common (Varien:Appendix
A(1)).
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Slip:
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None (Cattenach:211;
Hayes and
Lancaster:112; Breternitz et
al:25).
Very rare (Varien:Appendix
A(1)).
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Paint:
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Mineral, organic (44%), or mixture (Hayes and
Lancaster:112).
Mineral, some carbon (Cattenach:210;
Varien:Appendix
A(1)).
Fugitive red occurs (Varien: Appendix
A(1)); on 11% (Hayes and
Lancaster:114);
frequent on bowl exteriors (Wilson and
Blinman:46).
Paint on bowls only (Hayes and
Lancaster:112).
Mineral paint often fired brown or red; showed green-black glaze in 15%
(Hayes and
Lancaster:112, Breternitz et
al:25).
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Polish:
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At Puzzle House, none.
Not usually (Breternitz et
al:25).
None or light (Varien:Appendix
A(1)).
Spotty, seldom. Low polish from rubbing and wiping on 1/3 of interiors and 1/5 of
exteriors; the rest, matte (Cattenach:211).
Light (Hayes and
Lancaster:112).
Despite the lack of slip and conventional polish, Chapin finish should not be under-rated. Bowl surfaces at FLC range from fairly rough to flawlessly smooth. One sherd
(from Site 5MT4251) has a self-slipped, uniform, matte surface, perfectly smooth to the touch. There is no
gleam or streaking.
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Rims:
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Usually plain. Sometimes solid painted line. Tip very tapered to rounded (Breternitz et
al:25).
Solid paint 59% at Badger House (Hayes and
Lancaster:112).
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Shape:
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Bowl is primary shape, walls range from steep to hemispherical
(Hayes and
Lancaster:113-115;
Wilson and
Blinman:46).
Basket-impressed ware occurs (Hayes and
Lancaster:112).
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Design:
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Common elements:
-Small elements, often dots, between parallel lines
-Ticked, T-ticked, or flagged lines
-Lines or large design elements, radiating from bowl center
-Design element or circle in bowl center
-Two, three, or four floating, simple design units,
sometimes connected,
usually closing
matching
-Repeated tiny, z-like squiggles, closely stacked, often in parallel lines
suggestive of basketry or weaving stitch
Given a sufficiently large sherd, design placement is more telling than
actual designs, which
exhibit considerable variety and overlap with Piedra. Six classic Chapin whole vessels
are shown in: (Lucius and Breternitz:18). Examples from Badger House
(Hayes and
Lancaster:115) show:
-Large motifs floating below the rim including a thunderbird-/kachina-like figure
and an elaborated, equal-legged cross
-Feathered lines, forming a triangle with a feathered portion of rim repeated
in each quarter
-Large-feathered, lightning-like zigzags bisecting a bowl
-Wide bands of slim parallel lines crossing a bowl at right angles
-Double lines of the stitch-motif quartering a bowl
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Chapin B/w I Return
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