Cover image for The Carnegie Maya IV : Carnegie Institution of Washington Theoretical Approaches to Problems, 1941-1947.
The Carnegie Maya IV : Carnegie Institution of Washington Theoretical Approaches to Problems, 1941-1947.
Title:
The Carnegie Maya IV : Carnegie Institution of Washington Theoretical Approaches to Problems, 1941-1947.
Author:
Weeks, John M.
ISBN:
9781607321590
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (2210 pages)
Contents:
THE CARNEGIE MAYA -- Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Preface -- Introduction -- Tables -- 1.0. Administrative -- 2.0. Art and Architecture -- 3.0. Environment -- 4.0. Ceramics -- 5.0. Textiles -- 6.0. Hieroglyphic Writing -- 7.0. Linguistics -- 8.0. Ethnography -- 9.0. Ethnohistory -- 10.0. Physical Anthropology -- 11.0. Belize -- 12.0. Baking Pot -- 13.0. Pusilhá -- 14.0. San José -- 15.0. Campeche -- 18.0. Chiapas -- 19.0. Bonampak -- 20.0. Yaxchilán -- 21.0. El Salvador -- 22.0. Guatemala -- 23.0. Kaminaljuyú -- 24.0. Sites near Lake Petén -- 25.0. La Muralla -- 26.0. Piedras Negras -- 27.0. Quiriguá -- 28.0. Uaxactún -- 29.0. Zacualpa -- 30.0. Honduras -- 31.0. Copán -- 32.0. Nicaragua -- 33.0. Quintana Roo -- 34.0. Cobá -- 35.0. Tabasco and Veracruz -- 36.0. Yucatán -- 37.0. Chacchob -- 38.0. Chichén Itzá -- 39.0. Ek Balam -- 40.0. Mayapán -- 41.0. Uxmal -- 42.0. Yaxuná -- Appendix 1 -- Appendix 2 -- Appendix 3 -- Appendix 4 -- Appendix 5 -- Appendix 6 -- Appendix 7 -- Glossary -- References -- Index -- THE CARNEGIE MAYA II -- Contents -- Figures -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Preface -- No 1. Map of the Ruins of Mayapán,Yucatán, Mexico -- No. 2. The Great Wall of Mayapán -- No. 3. Residential Property Walls at Mayapán -- No. 4. Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapán -- No. 5. Cenote X-Coton at Mayapán -- No. 6. Chacchob, Yucatán -- No. 7. Archaeological Reconnaissance in Tabasco -- No. 8. A Portal Vault and Temple at Mayapán -- No. 9. Some Small Ceremonial Structures of Mayapán -- No. 10. Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapán II -- No. 11. The X-Coton Temples at Mayapán -- No. 12. Cenote Exploration at Mayapán and Telchaquillo -- No. 13. Boundary Walls and House Lots at Mayapán -- No. 14. Three Temples and Their Associated Structures at Mayapán -- No. 15. The Northern Terminus of the Principal Sacbe at Mayapán.

No. 16. A Round Temple at Mayapán, Yucatán -- No. 17. Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapán III -- No. 18. Exploration on the Outskirts of Mayapán -- No. 19. A Presumed Residence of the Nobility at Mayapán -- No. 20. The Temple of Kukulcan at Mayapán -- No. 21. Excavations in Three Ceremonial Structures at Mayapán -- No. 22. Colonnaded Buildings at Mayapán -- No. 23. Exploration in Quintana Roo -- No. 24. An Archaeological Reconnaissance of Northern Quintana Roo -- No. 25. A Noble's Residence and Its Dependencies at Mayapán -- No. 26. Early Ceramic Horizons at Mayapán and Santa Cruz -- No. 27. Another Round Temple at Mayapán, Yucatán -- No. 28. An Altar and Platform at Mayapán -- No. 29. A Residential Quadrangle: Structures R-85 to R-90 -- No. 30. A Vaulted Temple at Mayapán -- No. 31. Excavation of a Colonnaded Hall at Mayapán -- No. 32. Three Serpent Column Temples and Associated Platforms at Mayapán -- No. 33. A Dwelling and Shrine at Mayapán -- No. 34. A Round Temple and Its Shrine at Mayapán -- No. 35. Exploration of the Cave of Dzab-na, Tecoh, Yucatán -- No. 36. Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapán IV -- No. 37. The Southern Terminus of the Principal Sacbe at Mayapán, Group Z-50 -- No. 38. Skeletal Remains from Mayapán -- No. 39. House Types in the Environs of Mayapán and at Uxmal, Kabah, Sayil, Chichen Itza, and Chacchob -- No. 40. Deities Portrayed on Censers at Mayapán -- No. 41. Notes on Vertebrate Animal Remains from Mayapán -- Editor's Note -- Appendix -- Glossary -- References -- Index -- THE CARNEGIE MAYA III -- Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Introduction -- Preface -- No. 1. Clay Heads from Chiapas, Mexico -- No. 2. Pottery from Champerico, Guatemala -- No. 3. The Ruins of Culuba, Northeastern Yucatan -- No. 4. The Missing Illustrations of the Pomar Relación -- No. 5. An Ethnological Note from Cilvituk, Southern Campeche.

No. 6. The Prototype of the Mexican Codices Telleriano-Remensis and Vaticanus A -- No. 7. Observations on Glyph G of the Lunar Series -- No. 8. A New Pottery Style from the Department of Piura, Peru -- No. 9. Archaeological Specimens from Yucatan and Guatemala -- No. 10. The Payment of Tribute in the Codex Mendoza -- No. 11. A Note on Aztec Chronology -- No. 12. Representations of Tezcatlipoca at Chichen Itza -- No. 13. A Theory of Maya tš-Sounds -- No. 14. A Reconnaissance on Isla de Sacrificios, Veracruz, Mexico -- No. 15. Pottery from the Pacific Slope of Guatemala -- No. 16. Spindle Whorls from Chichen Itza, Yucatan -- No. 17. Some Sculptures from Southeastern Quezaltenango, Guatemala -- No. 18. The Initial Series of Stela 14, Piedras Negras, Guatemala, and a Date on Stela 19, Naranjo, Guatemala -- No. 19. Representations of Tlalchitonatiuh at Chichen Itza, Yucatan, and at El Baul, Escuintla -- No. 20. Maya Epigraphy: Directional Glyphs in Counting -- No. 21. Notes on Sculpture and Architecture at Tonala, Chiapas -- No. 22. Maya Epigraphy: A Cycle of 819 Days -- No. 23. The Periods of Tribute Collection in Moctezuma's Empire -- No. 24. Notes on Glyph C of the Lunar Series at Palenque -- No. 25. A Figurine Whistle Representing a Ball Game Player -- No. 26. Notes on a West Coast Survival of the Ancient Mexican Ball Game -- No. 27. Animal-Head Feet and a Bark-Beater in the Middle Usumacinta Region -- No. 28. New Photographs and the Date of Stela 14, Piedras Negras -- No. 29. Grooved Stone Axes from Central America -- No. 30. A Vase from Sanimtaca, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala -- No. 31. A Human-Effigy Pottery Figure from Chalchuapa, El Salvador -- No. 32. A Preconquest Tomb on the Cerro del Zapote, El Salvador -- No. 33. A Tentative Identification of the Head Variant for Eleven -- No. 34. A Possible Lunar Series on the Leyden Plate.

No. 35. Stucco Decoration of Early Guatemala Pottery -- No. 36. Certain Pottery Vessels from Copan -- No. 37. Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala -- No. 38. Jottings on Inscriptions at Copan -- No. 39. The Dating of Seven Monuments at Piedras Negras -- No. 40. Archaeological Finds near Douglas, British Honduras -- No. 41. The Vienna Dictionary -- No. 42. Ixtla Weaving at Chiquilistlan, Jalisco -- No. 43. Worked Gourds from Jalisco -- No. 44. The Graphic Style of the Tlalhuica -- No. 45. Variant Methods of Date Recordingsin the Jatate Drainage, Chiapas -- No. 46. The Venus Calendar of the Aztec -- No. 47. An Inscription on a Jade Probably Carved at Piedras Negras -- No. 48. Costumes and Wedding Customs at Mixco, Guatemala -- No. 49. Combinations of Glyphs G and F in the Supplementary Series -- No. 50. Moon Age Tables -- No. 51. A Second Tlaloc Gold Plaque from Guatemala -- No. 52. Rock Paintings at Texcalpintado, Morelos, Mexico -- No. 53. A Pyrite Mirror from Queretaro, Mexico -- No. 54. Informe sobre la existencia de jugadores de pelota mayas en la cerámica escultórica de Jaina -- No. 55. Un sello cilindrico con barras y puntos -- No. 56. The Inscription on the Altar of Zoomorph O, Quirigua -- No. 57. Archaeological Discovery at Finca Arizona, Guatemala -- No. 58. The Initial and Supplementary Series of Stela 5 at Altar de Sacrificios, Guatemala -- No. 59. Mausolea in Central Veracruz -- No. 60. Archaeological Material from theClub Internacional, El Salvador -- No. 61. Some Uses of Tobacco among the Maya -- No. 62. Observations on Altar Sites in the Quiche Region, Guatemala -- No. 63. Tattooing and Scarification among the Maya -- No. 64. The Tamiahua Codices -- No. 65. The Malinche of Acacingo, Estado de Mexico -- No. 66. Three Zapotec Stones -- No. 67. Blowguns in Guatemala -- No. 68. A Reconnaissance of El Rincon del Jicaque, Honduras.

No. 69. "Rim-Head" Vessels from Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala -- No. 70. Some Mexican Figurines of the Colonial Period -- No. 71. The Dating of Structure 44, Yaxchilan, and Its Bearing on the Sequence of Texts at That Site -- No. 72. The Codex of the Derrumbe del Templo Mayor -- No. 73. Some Examples of Yeztla-Naranjo Geometric Ware -- No. 74. The Treble Scroll Symbol in the Teotihuacan and Zapotec Cultures -- No. 75. The Book of Chilam Balam of Ixil -- No. 76. The "Tortuga" of Coatlan del Rio, Morelos -- No. 77. Drawings of Tajumulco Sculptures -- No. 78. Otomi Looms and Quechquemitls from San Pablito, State of Puebla, and from Santa Ana Hueytlalpan, State of Hidalgo, Mexico -- No. 79. Maya Calendar Round Dates Such as 9 Ahau 17 Mol -- No. 80. Stone Objects from Cocula and Chilacachapa, Guerrero -- No. 81. Easter Ceremonies at San Antonio Palopo, Guatemala -- No. 82. Cuchumatan Textiles: The Course of an Error -- No. 83. Representations of Temple Buildings as Decorative Patterns on Teotihuacan Pottery and Figurines -- No. 84. The Codex of Tonayan -- No. 85. Elements of Maya Arithmetic with Particular Attention to the Calendar -- No. 86. Certain Types of Stamped Decoration on Pottery from the Valley of Mexico -- No. 87. Observation of the Sun among the Ixil of Guatemala -- No. 88. Some Remarks on Maya Arithmetic -- No. 89. Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala: Addenda and Corrienda -- No. 90. Did the Maya Have a Zero? The Meanings of Our Zero and the Maya "Zero" Symbols -- No. 91. Jades from Guatemala -- No. 92. Certain Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala I -- No. 93. Some New Discoveries at Coba -- No. 94. Tlaloc Incensarios in the Baratta Collection, El Salvador -- No. 95. Certain Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala II -- No. 96. Tlaloc Effigy Jar from the Guatemala National Museum.

No. 97. Rim-Head Vessels and Cone-Shaped Effigy Prongsof the Preclassic Period at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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