Featured in this lot is this Anasazi textured pottery sherd collection circa 800 to 1100 CE. The pottery sherds is wonderfully and professionally crafted ceramic construction that shows texturing to the sherds that show the original traditional decorations to the sherds. There are two pottery shards that are spherical in nature possibly as oil containers. Anasazi pottery sherds are broken fragments of ceramic vessels made by the Anasazi, an ancient Native American culture more commonly known today as the Ancestral Puebloans. These people inhabited the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States (where modern-day Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico meet) between approximately 100 CE and 1300 CE. The condition of this collection of Anasazi pottery sherds is well preserved with the pottery vessel is in shards called sherds but otherwise is well preserved. The measurements of these sherds range from 3 1/8" x 25/8" x 1/2" to the largest sherd as 5 1/4" x 4" x 4"5/8". The collective weight of this collection of sherds is 8oz.