Lot 150, Auction 4/26/2024: Lg. Prehistoric Salado Corrugated Pottery Olla
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Lot 150, Auction 4/26/2024: Lg. Prehistoric Salado Corrugated Pottery Olla

$828.75

In stock

Native American, Southwestern United States, Salado culture, ca. 1250 to 1450 CE. A large redware olla vessel made via the coil-and-scrape technique with a corrugated exterior surface. Rather than completely smoothing the exterior coils, the corrugation marks are made by pressing a stylus-like tool into the wet clay before firing. While interesting to look at and touch, the corrugation likely served a useful purpose, it is surmised the texture helped create a firmer grip when wet from carrying water or cooking. The Salado (Spanish for “salty”) peoples migrated to the Salt River in Southeastern Arizona. They resided in the center of three major cultures of the Southwest of the time period: Ancestral Puebloan to the North, Mogollon to the East and South, and the Hohokam to the West and Southwest. Size: 10″ Diameter x 9.5″ H (25.4 cm x 24.1 cm)

Native American / STOP act: Please note this item falls under the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act and is not eligible for international shipping. Native American, Alaska Native, & Native Hawaiian objects are only eligible to ship within the United States.

Condition: Professionally repaired and restored from many pieces. Infill with new material along breaks and to gaps. Repairs are well done and almost indiscernible. Approximately 70% or more original material.

Provenance: private Reinsmoen collection, Clear Lake, Iowa, USA, acquired through descent from Robert Anderson, acquired prior to 2000

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

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