Skip to main content
Stanford University
Stanford
University Archaeology Collections
School of Humanities and Sciences
    • Mission
    • History
    • Partnerships
    • Staff
    • Visit & Contact
      • Contact Us
    • Make a Gift
    • Policies & Procedures
  • SUAC Online
    • Collections Home
    • Collections Online
    • Spotlight Gallery
    • For Stanford Faculty
    • For Stanford Students
    • Guides to Object Study
    • Get Involved
    • For Tribes & Descendent Communities
    • For External Researchers
    • For K-12 Groups
    • For the Public
    • Exhibitions
    • Events & On View
    • Past Events
    • African Collections Project
      • African Project Supporting Scholars
    • In the News
    • On the Table: The SUAC Blog

Collections

  • Collections Home
  • Collections Online
  • Spotlight Gallery

Spotlight Gallery

Burden basket, northern California?
California basket
Detail, textile fragment, Peru, Chancay culture?
Peruvian textile
Chert axehead, Denmark, Neolithic period
Neolithic axehead
Mask of the being Bookwus (cockle hunter), painted red cedar, Vancouver Island, Canada
Bookwus mask
Puebloan pitcher
Miniature ceramic effigy vessel depicting Tlaloc, Nayarit, Mexico
Tlaloc effigy vessel

 

San Francisco Red type Ceramic effigy vessel, southwestern United States, Mogollon culture
Mogollon vessel
Stone handaxe, India, Acheulian period
Acheulian handaxe
Molded glass bottle, “Jackson's Napa Soda Spring's,” Jasper Ridge Preserve, California
Soda water bottle
Fan of woven and dyed vegetable fiber with feathers, Oceania
Feathered fan
Back to Top

Tribal Land Acknowledgement

The Stanford University community recognizes that the university is established within the Puichon Thámien Ohlone-speaking tribal ethnohistoric territory, which includes the ancestral lands of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay Area. This land was and continues to be of great importance to the Ohlone people. Consistent with our values of community and diversity, we have a responsibility to honor and make visible the university’s relationship to Native peoples.

Stanford developed this statement in collaboration with the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe.

Connect With Us

Visit
Collections
Contact

   

SUAC is a part of the Stanford Archaeology Center.

All content is by the Stanford University Archaeology Collections of the Stanford Archaeology Center unless otherwise noted and are intended for educational purposes. All student work is used with permission. Downloading for commercial purposes is prohibited. Certain materials and works presented on this page may be protected by copyright and/or may be subject to other third party rights or restrictions, including trademarks and the rights of privacy and publicity. SUAC disclaims any additional warranties about its rights in materials and works.

School of Humanities and Sciences logo

SUNet Login

Stanford
University
  • Stanford Home
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search Stanford
  • Emergency Info
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Trademarks
  • Non-Discrimination
  • Accessibility
© Stanford University.   Stanford, California 94305.