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Revision as of 12:17, 11 August 2013 by Sandover (talk | contribs) (add three categories)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Swarts Ruin, also known as the Swarts Ranch Ruin, is an archeological site in New Mexico's Mimbres Valley excavated from 1924 to 1927 by Harriet S. ("Hattie") Cosgrove and Conelius B. ("Burt") Cosgrove. Although the self-taught husband-and-wife team had excavated for decades on their own New Mexico property, Swarts Ruin would be the couple's first professional archaeology endeavor. Although Mimbres pottery was known before, the publication in 1932 of The Swarts Ruin: A Typical Mimbres Site in Southwestern New Mexico gave readers not just the first coherent description of a Mimbres village, but caused a sensation thanks to Hattie's more than 700 painstaking pen-and-ink drawings of Mimbres bowl designs, which provided powerful, highly varied, and enduring visual inspiration to Native American potters and to a wide variety of Southwest artists.
The archeological discovery broadly informed Mary Colter's designs for the Santa Fe Railroad's distinctive "Mimbreño" china, produced for the Super Chief (and later for business class dining cars) from 1936 to 1970. To satisfy collector demands, authorized "Mimbreño" reproductions have been manufactured since 1989.
References
Cosgrove, Harriet S. and C. Burton, The Swarts Ruin: A Typical Mimbres Site in Southwestern New Mexico, with a new introduction by Steven A. LeBlanc. Peabody Museum Press, Cambridge, MA, 2011. ISBN 978-0-87365-214-8
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