Document Type
Presentation
Publication Date
4-30-2026
Abstract
This poster examines ceramic assemblages from El Rancho de las Golondrinas (LA 127375), an eighteenth- to nineteenth-century Hispanic rancho in New Mexico, to investigate daily consumption practices, regional exchange networks, and identity formation. Ceramic attributes, vessel forms, and temper characteristics were analyzed to identify communities of practice and distinguish locally produced wares from imported goods. Results demonstrate a strong reliance on locally produced Indigenous ceramics, particularly from Tewa and Pecos traditions, highlighting sustained interethnic relationships and exchange networks within the Rio Grande Valley. Imported ceramics, including majolica and refined earthenwares, illustrate the growing influence of broader colonial market systems connected through trade routes such as the El Camino Real and the Santa Fe Trail. Together, these patterns reveal how ceramic consumption reflects the negotiation of Hispanic identity, Indigenous interaction, and economic participation in colonial and early territorial New Mexico.
Community Engaged/Serving
Part of the UMass Boston Community-Engaged Teaching, Research, and Service Series. //scholarworks.umb.edu/engage
Recommended Citation
Noel, Tara. 2026. Utilizing Ceramic Attributes to Explore Local Consumption Practices and Relationship Building at an Eighteenth- to Nineteenth- Century Hispanic Rancho in New Mexico. Poster presented at the 91st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, April 29- May 3, 2026. San Francisco, CA. https://scholarworks.umb.edu/fiskecenter_pubs/1004
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International License.
Comments
Free and open access to this work is made available to the UMass Boston community by ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. Those not on campus and those without a UMass Boston campus username and password may gain access to this work through Interlibrary Loan. If you have a UMass Boston campus username and password and would like to download this work from off-campus, click on the “Off-Campus Users” button.