1975
DOI: 10.1080/00231940.1975.11757842
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The Road to Hawikuh: Trade and Trade Routes to Cibola-Zuni During Late Prehistoric and Early Historic Times

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…From AD 1350 on, most groups of the northern Southwest participated in the Katchina cult to one degree or another and it provided an information flow structure that united the area in an inter-regional communication network that was in place when the Spanish entered the Southwest in AD 1540. Interestingly, long-distance, inter-regional trade also is reestablished at this time (Riley 1975).…”
Section: The Chaos Of Collapse: Disintegration and Reintegration Of Imentioning
confidence: 89%
“…From AD 1350 on, most groups of the northern Southwest participated in the Katchina cult to one degree or another and it provided an information flow structure that united the area in an inter-regional communication network that was in place when the Spanish entered the Southwest in AD 1540. Interestingly, long-distance, inter-regional trade also is reestablished at this time (Riley 1975).…”
Section: The Chaos Of Collapse: Disintegration and Reintegration Of Imentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The Spanish traversed an area of west-central New Mexico and southern Arizona that was apparently depopulated and called these ''despoblados,'' but it is unlikely that there was no one familiar with these areas or that they were truly empty. The route that de Niza and Coronado followed was not trail blazing-it followed established routes of interaction between the southern Southwest and the Zuni area, including trade routes for baskets, shells, cotton, and parrots (Riley 1975;Vokes and Gregory 2007). Although we think about migratory workers as a product of recent history, some of Coronado's guides were in fact following the routes of Piman speaking people from the southern Southwest who went to Zuni to work in the corn fields (and potentially bringing cotton and other items with them for trade) (Hodge 1937).…”
Section: Indigenous Diversitymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The majority of early scholars such as Bandelier (1892), Winship (1896), Herbert E. Bolton (1930), and many other contemporary scholars, would place the point of entry in the Borderlands at or near the San Pedro River in present-day Arizona. Di Peso (1974), Strout (1958), and to some extent Carroll L. Riley (1975), place the point of entry of both the Marcos de Niza and Coronado expeditions at San Bernardino ( fig. 4.2), with the expedition continuing north on San Simon Creek along the west side of the Peloncillo Mountains and eventually east of the chain to the juncture of the Blue and San Francisco Rivers.…”
Section: Exploration Period: 1534 To 1680mentioning
confidence: 99%