* Piro is generally assumed to be a Tiwan language
** Various scholars have posited that the Jumano language belonged to the Tiwan branch, though this hypothesis is challenged.[1]
Greyed out pueblos speak non-Tanoan languages, faded colors represent extinct Tanoan languages.
Sources
Bletzer, Michael. "The Long and the Short Road to Socorro: A Piro Pueblo and Settlement Cluster in the Contact and Early Colonial Period, c. 1540-1640" [2][3]
Bletzer, Michael. "‘A church in every town’: early colonial settlement dynamics on the southern Pueblo frontier." [4][5][6]
Duwe, Samuel. "The Prehispanic Tewa World: Space, Time, and Becoming in the Pueblo Southwest."[7]
Stack, Adam David. "A People Apart: Factionalism and Conversion in Pueblo Mission Villages, A.D. 1620–1680."[8] (pg. 79)
Hickerson, Nancy. "The Linguistic Position of Jumano"[9]
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