Skip to content

Search Term Record

Metadata

Related Records

  1. Archaeology

    Pub2021-028

    Record Type: Library

    Pub2021-028
  2. Archaeology

    Pub2021-029

    Record Type: Library

    Pub2021-029
  3. Cover, First Day - 2020-02-024

    White envelope. Original watercolor painting labeled "Calusa Shell Gorget" on the left side of the envelope. The circular gorget is symmetrical and features a red, blue, and green sunburst pattern surrounded by a green and brown striped square with looped corners and four bird heads, one on each side of the square. The artist's signature is at the bottom left and reads "Kribbs Kover." Four lines and "First Day Of Issue" stamped on the proper...

    Record Type: Object

    2020-02-024 (1)
  4. Cover, First Day - 2020-02-028A

    White envelope. Original painting with an American Indian patterned ceramic pot with stylized deer above a patterned border in red, black, and yellow is surrounded by a brown watercolor background covering the entire front of the envelope. Postmark in the right center reads "San Juan. PR Oct 12 1989 00936." Color stamp in the proper left top corner of the Key Marco cat artifact with a blue background. Text on the stamp reads "USAirmail 45, Pu...

    Record Type: Object

    2020-02-028a (1)
  5. Cover, First Day - ED5

    White envelope. Brown artistic image of a Calusa man standing and rowing a canoe and the Key Marco cat and deer head carvings. Text around the images reads "First Day of Issue, Puas America, Calusa Indians, 1200 A.D., South Florida, Pre-Columbian Art." Four lines and "First Day Of Issue" stamped on the proper left side. Postmark in the center reads "San Juan. PR Oct 12 1989 00936." Color stamp in the proper left top corner of the Key Marco cat...

    Record Type: Object

    ED5 (1)
  6. Pub2023-002
  7. Label, Identification - 2020-02-028B

    White paper explaining the history behind the artwork on the first day cover (2020-02-028A) on one side and sources for this history on the other. The text reads: "The Zuni Indian tribe in Arizona and New Mexico have been able to maintain and pass on their tribal traditions from one generation to the next. Their legends and myths are incorporated into the designs of belts and pottery. A typical design in Zuni pottery uses the deer enclosed in ...

    Record Type: Object

    2020-02-028b (1)
  8. Pub2022-006 (1)
  9. Pub2022-007 (1)

Thank You!

Confirmation Message Here....