![]() ![]() Her more recent work has focused on studies of the production and exchange of glaze-painted pottery from the late precontact Southwest. In 1996, she received a multi-year NSF grant to explore the application of lead isotope analysis to the sourcing of Southwestern glaze-painted ceramics. ![]() A poster based on this research was awarded the Outstanding Poster Award at the 1998 Meetings of the Society for American Archaeology. Habicht-Mauche and her lab group have published a series of papers in the Journal of Archaeological Science outlining the successful results of this innovative research effort. ROBB FUNTER ARCHITECTURAL TIJERAS NM SERIES In 2006, with her colleagues Suzanne Eckert and Deborah Huntley, she edited the volume, The Social Life of Pots: Glaze Wares and Cultural Dynamics in the Southwest, AD 1250-1680 (University of Arizona Press), which highlighted the work of a number of young scholars engaged in cutting edge research on the technology of the Southwestern Glaze Wares. In 2012, she co-edited with Linda Cordell a second related volume, Potters and Communities of Practice: Glaze Paint and Polychrome Pottery in the American Southwest. In 2009, the Society for American Archaeology presented Prof. ![]() Habicht-Mauche with its Award for Excellence in Archaeological Analysis, which honors an archaeologist whose “innovative and enduring research has made a significant impact on the discipline.” This award highlighted Prof. Habicht-Mauche’s specific contributions to the field of ceramic materials analysis in archaeology. Habicht Mauche had NSF funding to study the pottery from Tijeras Pueblo, with particular attention to what can be learned from that site about the early development and spread of glaze paint technology to the Rio Grande pueblos from the Western Pueblo region around the turn of the fourteenth century. In 2010, she spent six months as a Visiting Researcher in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico where she analyzed the extensive ceramic collections from Tijeras Pueblo that are housed at the Maxwell Museum. Publication of that research is on-going.Īdditional petrographic, NAA, lead isotope and LA-ICP-MS analyses of the glaze wares from Tijeras were completed at UCSC. ROBB FUNTER ARCHITECTURAL TIJERAS NM SERIES. ![]()
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