Mogollon Bowl – ca. 1100-1200 A.D.
Have you ever heard of first day covers and first day of issue stamps? First day covers are stamped envelopes or postcards with a postmarked postage stamp on the first day of issue authorized for use. With the postmark applied, it prevents the postage stamp from being reused, but also indicates the city and date where the item was first issued, and so first day of issue refers to the postage stamp bearing this postmark.

The Mogollon were a mountain people who lived in what is today northwestern Mexico and parts of the southwestern states of Arizona, Texas, and New Mexico. They lived in the rugged mountain and canyon country and were similar in many ways to the Pueblo cultures in the southwestern US, but they had a different cultural identity with unique architectural traditions, religion, and burial practices. The Mogollon also developed a distinct form of pottery with an easily recognizable style.

The Mogollon were renowned for their polychrome ceramics with geometric designs.  One particular style, called Casas Grande style, was a specialized artform often using iconography of painted animals as well as human figures engaged in daily tasks, religious rituals, and social behaviors. This style of pottery has been found at Casas Grandes, the largest and most advanced Mogollon settlement which flourished between 1130 and 1450 AD.

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