. Cultural chronology and change as reflected in the ceramics of the Virú Valley, Peru. Pottery -- Viru Valley, Peru; Mounds -- Peru Viru Valley; Viru Valley, Peru -- Antiquities. DESCRIPTION OF POTTERY 7 YPES 201 1) )j ^ r B. // (. I'.I Fig. 67. Rim profiles; rim exteriors to the right. .\ E, Guafiape Polished Red; F-I, Ancon Polished Black. X Hoyle (1941, figs. 77, B, and 78, A) as typicalof Cupisniquc and Cupisnique Transitorio. 4. Small jars with flarins; rims and rounded l)ottoms. A rim sherd (fig. 67, D), with lip diameter of 15 cm., came from V-171C, Level 10, and a shoulder sherd


. Cultural chronology and change as reflected in the ceramics of the Virú Valley, Peru. Pottery -- Viru Valley, Peru; Mounds -- Peru Viru Valley; Viru Valley, Peru -- Antiquities. DESCRIPTION OF POTTERY 7 YPES 201 1) )j ^ r B. // (. I'.I Fig. 67. Rim profiles; rim exteriors to the right. .\ E, Guafiape Polished Red; F-I, Ancon Polished Black. X Hoyle (1941, figs. 77, B, and 78, A) as typicalof Cupisniquc and Cupisnique Transitorio. 4. Small jars with flarins; rims and rounded l)ottoms. A rim sherd (fig. 67, D), with lip diameter of 15 cm., came from V-171C, Level 10, and a shoulder sherd from V-171C, Level 8. Exterior surfaces and lips are polished. 5. Globular bottles with flat bases, prol)al)ly with cylindrical neck or spout (rims and necks not found). A body sherd with a portion of the base came from V-272A, Level 6, and a base sherd (different vessel) from Level 5 (fig. 67, E). Exterior walls and bases are polished. Relationships oj Type: 1. Guafiape Polished Red is related to Guanape Red Plain, but the paste is finer, vessel walls are thinner, and the oxidizing atmosphere was more carefully controlled during firing. It shares bowl forms with Red Plain, but otherwise its shapes are diff"erent. 2. It shares polishing and bowl shapes with Huacapongo PoHshed Plain but does not have other shapes in common; the polishing is l)eiter and lacks the patterned polishing tracks of Huacapongo. It has no con- tinuity with Gloria Polished Plain, which does not appear until the end of the Puerto Moorin period. 3. It shares shapes, color, and polishing with Cupisnique Transitorio vessels in Chicama (Larco Hoyle, 1941 and 1945b). 4. It is related to Ancon Polished Red (and possibly to Ancon Red vSlipped) of the Early Ancon period (VVilley and Corbett, 1954, pp. 53-54).. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble


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