Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Volume 84, 2013 Page: 64
270 p. : ill.View a full description of this periodical.
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64 Texas Archeological Society
Figure 23. Distribution of Group 10C members.
and Carvajal Crossing, the prehistoric samples are
from sites along the Balcones Escarpment, like Group
10, in addition to two untyped plain members from
the TP&L site in McLennan County near Waco.
One clay sample from Burnet County has a very
slight probability of membership, but this is likely
coincidental and without significance. At present, the
production area for this group is unknown, although
it is possible it was in the Wilcox Formation outcrop
in the San Antonio-Austin area.
Group 14
This group has 11 members, eight of which
are from Mission Refugio (six Goliad Plain and
two untyped sandy paste plain). The remaining
members are one Goose Creek Plain sherd from
the Sandbur site in Fayette County, one Leon Plain
from the Beyer site in Williamson County, and one
untyped plain sherd (with bone and sand temper)
from 41TV441 in Travis County (Figure 25). Were
it not for the members from Mission Refugio, the
occurrence of the other samples in the area ofTravis, Williamson, and Fayette counties could
suggest production somewhere in that vicinity.
Historic Period Compositional Groups
Not included in the preceding discussion of
clusters and compositional groups are four site-
specific groups of historic ceramics. Two of the
groups have members (in this sample only) from
Mission San Saba in Menard County (Groups 2 and
6), one group is from Carvajal Crossing in Karnes
County (Group 3), and the other is from Mission
Refugio (Group 5).
There are two groups specific to Mission San
Saba in Menard County, one with two burnished
red ware sherds (Group 2), the other with six
Goliad Plain members (Group 6). Both groups
represent ceramics believed to have been brought
to the mission at its founding (see discussion of
Goliad Plain below). Interestingly, there is one
other Goliad Plain sample from Mission San Saba,
and it is assigned to Group 1, a group with mostly
Leon Plain probably produced in the Mission San0 OiO
Group 10c
o 10
0 2
Classic Toyah Area
Shared Toyah Area
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Texas Archeological Society. Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Volume 84, 2013, periodical, 2013; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1222741/m1/68/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Archeological Society.