Wheel that goes around and around and around. I want you to figure out there is a multiplecasion problem in here and i want you to see if you can tell us when we are done what it is. Something will repeat 3 times. [applause] okay. Which one of you figured it out . Yes. 49, hum. I can see how you would say that, why do you say that . There is 49 of something. Okay. Did you notice the turns . The spins . How many were there in one piece . Yes. No. Yes. 9. How many times did we repeat that . How many times . 3. 9 times 3 is 27. We did 27 turns but we were going, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1. Thats a sophisticated math concept, you were not wrong. I bet you will grow up to be a mathematician. I will give you my address you will have to send me your first paycheck because i taught you this. At this point we would like to thank you very much for coming. If you have any questions. I dont know if we want to open it you will for questions. May be just a few . Okay. Yes. Whats your question . How do we get
The mugion rim, to mexico and then into the sierra madre, following people, following routes. Because everything in the desert leaves a route that leads you somewhere. Everything out there is a story. And thats what im following, these stories, looking for ways, looking for grains of sand out of place, looking for stories out in the middle of nowhere. I can open this up for questions if anybody has any questions. I was wondering if they had any sort of metal or did they use hardened rocks of some sort to shape their stones . Most of what they did was stone. Metallurgy was just starting to move up into northern chijuajua at that time and they were working with copper. That was just ornamental, so there was no metal going on at all other than imported bells. And the shells, they went down to cortez not lake the cortez sea to get, was that mostly hard or brittle . It was hard but not tool hard. The Colorado Plateau is covered with chert, a glassy rock that is really really good for making
1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1. Did we end on your 1 . Whoa, you divided 16 into 3 equal parts. Did you know you could do that . Im dizzy. Okay. Well, we are going to end with a t high within a t high like a wheel that goes around and around and around. I want you to figure out there is a multiplecasion problem in here and i want you to see if you can tell us when we are done what it is. Something will repeat 3 times. [applause] okay. Which one of you figured it out . Yes. 49, hum. I can see how you would say that, why do you say that . There is 49 of something. Okay. Did you notice the turns . The spins . How many were there in one piece . Yes. No. Yes. 9. How many times did we repeat that . How many times . 3. 9 times 3 is 27. We did 27 turns but we were going, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1. Thats a sophisticated math concept, you were not wrong. I bet you will grow up to be a mathematician. I will give you my address you will have to send me your first paycheck because i taught you this. At thi
Oldest american deity, the rain deity, lives down in the house of rain and this is a t shape from up on the Colorado Plateau and that is the last picture on these slides, so the t shape, the pottery, i followed Genetic Information that you find in bones and teeth. I followed as many different pieces of information as i could and they sent me walking. I started in chaco canyon and walked north up to mesa verde, around to comb ridge in utah, down into the hopi mesa, across the mugion rim, to mexico and then into the sierra madre, following people, following routes. Because everything in the desert leaves a route that leads you somewhere. Everything out there is a story. And thats what im following, these stories, looking for ways, looking for grains of sand out of place, looking for stories out in the middle of nowhere. I can open this up for questions if anybody has any questions. I was wondering if they had any sort of metal or did they use hardened rocks of some sort to shape their st
The mugion rim, to mexico and then into the sierra madre, following people, following routes. Because everything in the desert leaves a route that leads you somewhere. Everything out there is a story. And thats what im following, these stories, looking for ways, looking for grains of sand out of place, looking for stories out in the middle of nowhere. I can open this up for questions if anybody has any questions. I was wondering if they had any sort of metal or did they use hardened rocks of some sort to shape their stones . Most of what they did was stone. Metallurgy was just starting to move up into northern chijuajua at that time and they were working with copper. That was just ornamental, so there was no metal going on at all other than imported bells. And the shells, they went down to cortez not lake the cortez sea to get, was that mostly hard or brittle . It was hard but not tool hard. The Colorado Plateau is covered with chert, a glassy rock that is really really good for making