Now showing items 21-40 of 83

    • The 1982-1984 Excavations at Las Colinas: Syntheses and Conclusions [No. 162 Vol. 6]

      Teague, Lynn S.; Deaver, William L. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989)
      This is the sixth in a series of seven volumes reporting results of archaeological investigations at Las Colinas, a predominantly Sedentary and Classic period settlement on the Salt River within the boundaries of what is today urban Phoenix. Excavations at Las Colinas were funded by the Arizona Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway administration, with the additional support of the University of Arizona during report preparation and publication phases of the project. Work was conducted under Arizona State Permit S-82-16. Earlier volumes in this series presented data summaries and interepretation by project analysts, and a final volume (7) provides basic data and results of some specialized studies. The present volume synthesizes results of the various studies within the larger context of the project research design (Volume 1 in this series), in order to interpret the relevance of this site for better understanding the prehistoric Hohokam of central Arizona. Specific topics addressed include the implications of archaeomagnetic dating for regional chronology, the development and structure of Las Colinas itself, implications of project data for problems of social organization and economy, relationships within central and southern Arizona during the occupation of the site, and the inferences that may be drawn from Las Colinas data, in conjunction with other information, regarding the end of a recognizably Hohokam presence in central Arizona after about A.D. 1450.
    • The 1982-1984 Excavations at Las Colinas: Special Studies and Data Tables [No. 162 Vol. 7]

      Gregory, David A.; Murphy, Barbara A.; Deaver, William L.; Lange, Richard C.; Sullenberger, Martha; Szuter, Christine R.; Bernard-Shaw, Mary; Vokes, Arthur W.; Euler, R. Thomas; Fish, Suzanne K.; et al. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989)
      Excerpt from Preface: This is last of the seven volumes collectively designated Archaeological Series 162. In Part I of this volume. the provenience system used during the 1982-1984 excavatjons at Las Colinas and the computer procedures used in processing the enormous volume of data that resulted from those excavations are explained, and the results of some special analyses are presented. Artifact data are provided in tabular form jn Part II.
    • The 1982-1984 Excavations at Las Colinas: The Mound 8 Precinct [No. 162 Vol. 3]

      Gregory, David A.; Abbott, David R.; Seymour, Deni J.; Bannister, Nancy M.; Gregory, David A. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1988)
      The principal focus of this volume is a reconsideration of the construction history and organization of the Mound 8 precinct at Las Colinas. Seven stages of mound construction were identified, with some changes in construction methods and mound configuration over time. As a consequence, Mound 8 provides a record of the transition from an earlier mound form, similar to some stages of the pre-Classic mound at the Gatlin Site, to a later form similar to patterns evident in other Classic period sites. The organization of the Mound 8 precinct as a whole changes with these modifications of the central feature. From these physical changes, shifts in the function and use of Mound 8 have been inferred. Among these is an apparent transition from a predominantly ritual function to one of residence, probably by an elite group within the general population. A comparison of these aspects of the Mound 8 precinct with characteristics of other known platform mounds is made. Although no precise parallel to Stage VI at Las Colinas is identified, strong similarities of the remaining construction stages to those at other sites indicate that there was a shared concept of the appropriate formal organization of the mounds, which might be presumed to reflect similarities in their function within the society.
    • Early Puebloan Occupations in the Chaco Region: Volume I: Excavations and Survey of Basketmaker III and Pueblo I Sites, Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Part 2 [No. 214 Vol. I Part 2]

      Windes, Thomas C.; Crane, Robert; Doleman, William; Hayes, Alden; Loose, Richard; Truell, Marcia (Newren); Wilshusen, Richard (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2018)
    • Early Puebloan Occupations in the Chaco Region: Volume I: Excavations and Survey of Basketmaker III and Pueblo I Sites, Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Part 1 [No. 214 Vol. I Part 1]

      Windes, Thomas C.; Crane, Robert; Doleman, William; Hayes, Alden; Loose, Richard; Truell, Marcia (Newren); Wilshusen, Richard (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2018)
    • Building Transnational Archaeologies / Construyendo Arqueologías Transnacionales: the 11th Southwest Symposium / El XI Simposio del Suroeste, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico [No. 209]

      Altschul, Jeffrey H.; Alvarez, Maribel L.; Beltrán Medina, José Carlos; Caretta, M. Nicolás; Carpenter, John; Clark, Jeffery J.; Ferguson, T. J.; de la Luz Gutiérrez M., María; Hill, J. Brett; Joaquin, Joseph T.; et al. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2014)
      Excerpt from Preface: The Centro INAH Sonora hosted the 11th biennial Southwest Symposium in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, January 8th and 9th, 2010. In the tradition of past meetings, the 21st Southwest Symposium provided a forum for archaeologists and other scholars to discuss innovative ideas and to develop networks for anthropological research in the U.S. Southwest and Mexican Northwest. We built the symposium around the theme of building transnational archaeologies. The Hermosillo meeting was the most diverse of the Southwest Symposiums held so far. The participants included U.S., Mexican, and indigenous researchers who worked in museums, universities, governmental agencies and contract archaeology. The 11th Southwest Symposium had four presented sessions and a series of themed poster sessions on transnational topics. Two of the presented sessions, West and North Mexico, and The Lost Century: A.D. 1450-1540 focused on substantive issues that expand our understanding of the Southwest/Northwest in space and time. The other two presented sessions Collaborating Across Cultures, and Archaeology and Society, discussed methods and goals in transnational archaeologies. The poster sessions included Violence in the Southwest/Northwest, Coastal Archaeology, Relations between the Southwest/Northwest and Mesoamerica, Cliff Dwellings, and Contract Archaeology. This volume includes 14 chapters from three of the presented sessions.
    • New Perspectives on the Rock Art and Prehistoric Settlement Organization of Tumamoc Hill, Tucson, Arizona [No. 208]

      Fish, Suzanne K.; Fish, Paul R.; Christopherson, Gary; Pitezel, Todd A.; Watson, James T.; Leckman, Phillip O.; Heidke, James; Hernbrode, Janine; Cerino, Katherine M.; Hartmann, Gayle Harrison; et al. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2013)
      Excerpt from Preface: Tumamoc Hill, the prominent, flat-topped, black volcanic hill just west of the Santa Cruz River near downtown Tucson, Arizona, has been revealing its secrets for decades. This hill, the most prominent of the cerro de trincheras in the Tucson Basin, continues to teach us about the long temporal range and complexity of prehistoric life in the Tucson area. A cerro de trincheras is generally defined as a hill with linear stone walls, usually near the summit, as well as other stone features such as bedrock mortars, stone-ringed structures, trails, and frequently rock art. The three papers published here present new data on Cienega-phase and Tortolita-phase village organization in a hilltop community, the universe of rock art found on the hill, and petroglyphs that seem likely to be functioning as solar markers. The research on which the first paper is based began in the 1980s and continued through the excavation of the community structure in 2008. The rock art recording effort was conducted between 2006 and 2009. The solar marker research grew out of the rock art recording project.
    • Power and Economy in Early Classic Period Hohokam Society: An Archaeological Perspective from the Marana Mound Site [No. 207]

      Bayham, Frank E.; Bayman, James M.; Beck, Margaret E.; Boley, Michael J.; Castro-Reino, Sergio F.; Descantes, Christopher; Fish, Paul R.; Fish, Suzanne K.; Glascock, Michael D.; Grimstead, Deanna; et al. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2013)
      Foreword: This volume introduces the research design for investigations undertaken at the Marana Mound site (AZ AA:12:251 [ASM]) following the conclusion of the Northern Tucson Basin Survey (NTBS) in 1990, a brief summary of major fi ndings at this Early Classic center, and selected studies on more focused topics. Results of the previous NTBS survey have been published in a variety of venues, including journal articles, book chapters, monographs, and graduate student theses and dissertations. Comprehensive summary publications are The Marana Community in the Hohokam World edited by Suzanne K. Fish, Paul R. Fish, and John H. Madsen (1992a), The Northern Tucson Basin Survey: Research Directions and Background Studies edited by John H. Madsen, Paul R. Fish, and Suzanne K. Fish (1993), and Between Desert and River: Hohokam Settlement and Land Use in the Los Robles Community by Christian E. Downum (1993). The selected studies in this volume are an outgrowth of archaeological field classes and field schools that were held at the Marana Mound site during spring semesters between 1990 and 2003. The contributions were initially presented at a symposium at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology (SAA) in Montreal, Canada, in 2004, and have been modified over the intervening years. As of this writing, studies of Marana collections continue and some of the findings reported here undoubtedly will be refined by this ongoing research as well as future analyses. In the meantime, these studies offer valuable insights on the organization of Hohokam society during the Early Classic Period (ca. AD 1150-1300) from the perspective of one uniquely well-preserved locale—the Marana Mound site.
    • Kinishba Lost and Found: Mid-Century Excavations and Contemporary Perspectives [No. 206]

      Altaha, Mark T.; Ciolek-Torello, Richard; Ferguson, T. J.; Halbirt, Carl D.; Laluk, Nicholas C.; Lyons, Patrick D.; Reid, J. Jefferson; Riggs, Charles R.; Shaeffer, James B.; Shaeffer, Margaret M.; et al. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2013)
    • A Landscape of Interactions During the Late Prehispanic Period in the Onavas Valley, Sonora, México [No. 205]

      Gallaga, Emiliano (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2013)
    • Excavations at Cerro de Trincheras, Sonora, México - Volume II [No. 204 Vol. II]

      McGuire, Randall H.; Villalpando, Elisa; Tchorzynski, Stacy A.; Acuto, Félix; Groleau, Amy; McGuire, Randall H.; Villalpando, Elisa (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2011)
    • Excavations at Cerro de Trincheras, Sonora, México - Volume I [No. 204 Vol. I]

      Tchorzynski, Stacy A.; Acuto, Félix; Groleau, Amy; McGuire, Randall H.; Villalpando, Elisa (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2011)
    • A Preliminary Report of the Excavations at Las Colinas [No. 154]

      Hammack, Laurens C. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1969-04)
    • Salt-Gila Aqueduct, Central Arizona Project: Archaeological Data Collection Studies and Supplemental Class 3 Survey: Review Meeting Agenda and Reference Material [No. 150 Supplement]

      Teague, Lynn S.; Miksicek, Charlie; Bernard-Shaw, Mary; Crown, Patricia L.; Abbott, David R.; Sires, Earl W.; Fish, Suzanne K.; Rogge, A.E. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1982-11-09)
      Includes "preliminary summaries of some of the project data that have not been presented in the first and second annual reports."
    • The Cabeza Prieta Game Range Fenceline Survey [No. 130]

      Rozen, Kenneth (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1979-04)
      During late January, 1979, and early February, 1979, the Cultural Resource Management Section of the Arizona State Museum, under the sponsorship of the United States Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, conducted an archaeological survey of a 16 mile length of the eastern boundary of the Cabeza Prieta Game Range, located about 4 miles west of Ajo in southwestern Arizona. The purpose of the survey was to locate all archaeological remains which could be disturbed by the construction of a fence along the boundary. As a result of the survey, 11 sites were identified. These included three historic mining sites and eight prehistoric sites; all were assigned Arizona State Museum site numbers. In addition, two small lithic scatters and numerous isolated artifacts were found along the proposed fenceline, but were not assigned site status. Recommendations for the management of the archaeological resources are provided, and an opinion is given regarding their eligibility for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places and the Arizona State Register of Historic Places.
    • The Coronet Real Project: Archaeological Investigations on the Luke Range, Southwestern Arizona [No. 129]

      Huckell, Bruce B.; Rose, Jerome C.; Million, Michael G.; Fournier, Dale M.; Brandau, Betty Lee; Huckell, Lisa W.; Bass, Charles (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1979-04)
      This report deals with the investigation of three prehistoric archaeological sites on the North Tac portion of Range 1, Luke Air Force Bombing and Gunnery Range. These sites were located within the impact area of facilities associated with the Coronet Real Project, a target construction and rebuilding operation. Largest of the three was AZ Y:8:3 which.was cut by a proposed road right-of-way; investigation indicated that it was a Patayan I site with some later Classic period utilization. AZ Y:8:1 was a small site with two spatially and temporally separate components at the northeastern corner of the main target airfield; one represented the Patayan I period and the other a late Classic period Hohokam-related occupation. Smallest of the sites, AZ Y:8:2 proved to be of late preceramic age; it was situated at the southwestern end of the main target airfield. Each of these sites is described in terms of location, environment, artifact content, and significance, and an attempt is made to integrate the information from these sites into current models of the prehistory of the area. Finally, proposals for future research are presented.
    • The Record of Native People on Gulf of California Islands [No. 201]

      Bowen, Thomas (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2009)
      A century ago it was common knowledge among historians and anthropologists with research interests in northwestern Mexico that Indians had inhabited four large islands in the Gulf of California. Three of these islands—Cerralvo, Espíritu Santo, and San José—are in the far southern Gulf off the coast of Baja California. The fourth island, Isla Tiburón, is located on the mainland side more than 400 km to the northwest, in the constricted region of the Gulf known as the Midriff. At the turn of the twentieth century, Isla Tiburón was well known as the homeland of the Seri Indians and was the only Gulf island still inhabited by native people. Since 1900, ethnohistorical and archaeological research has greatly expanded our knowledge of Indians on both sides of the Gulf. Much of that information, however, pertains to the people living on the peninsula and mainland, and touches on the islands only incidentally. Consequently, few historians or anthropologists are aware that Indians made use of many islands in addition to Cerralvo, Espíritu Santo, San José, and Tiburón. Scholars in other fi elds may not even know that there were Indians on the Gulf islands other than Tiburón. This is particularly unfortunate for ecologists because native people have been in the region for thousands of years and may have played a signifi cant role in shaping the island ecosystems we see today. Although indigenous humans were by far the largest native terrestrial mammal on all but two islands, and the most voracious omnivore on all of them, Homo sapiens does not appear on island species lists, and the potential effects of native people on insular ecosystems have seldom been considered. Discoveries made just in the past decade show that researchers in all fi elds have seriously underestimated the extent to which native people made use of the islands. Reports of early Spanish navigators have established the presence of Indians on many islands in addition to the four listed above. Recent archaeological research on several islands, along with fortuitous observations on others, have revealed evidence of native people on islands with no known documentary record of Indians. Chronological data from the southern Gulf establishes a time depth for indigenous people spanning at least ten millennia. New information from Seri oral history alludes to Seri voyages far beyond Isla Tiburón and greatly expands the picture of indigenous people in the Midriff region. Collectively, these results show that the traditional assumption, that most islands were beyond the range of native people, is dead wrong. It is now clear that Indians knew and exploited nearly every signifi cant island in the Gulf. This study reviews the evidence of native people on each of 32 major Gulf islands. The list includes all 22 islands larger than 2 km2 and 10 smaller islands for which some data exist (summarized in Table 3.2). The data are drawn from historical documents, oral history, and the archaeological record. To the extent possible these data are given as quotations from the original sources. Collectively, the evidence suggests that native people were familiar with at least 29 of the 32 islands. For 19 of the islands the evidence can be considered unequivocal, consisting of unambiguous historical documentation, credible oral history, and/or a clear archaeological record. For ten islands there is some evidence of human use, but it is limited, weak, or equivocal, and therefore, in need of corroboration. There are no data of any kind for two islands, and one small island has produced no evidence of native people despite a comprehensive archaeological survey (these data are summarized in Table 4.1). Of course, Indians made greater use of some islands than others. In general, large islands, with a greater diversity of resources (including fresh water), were exploited more than small islands, and several supported permanent or seasonal communities of people. However, native visitors may have been drawn seasonally or intermittently to even very small islands with special resources, such as nesting seabirds, sea lion colonies, concentrations of cactus fruit, and abundant seed crops that appear after a rain. Historic and ethnographic sources show that islands did not need permanent water to sustain native visitors, who were quite capable of bringing water with them, subsisting on temporary water in tinajas, or utilizing water substitutes. Distance was apparently no barrier to native use of islands. The cane balsa was the universal watercraft, and historic sources suggest that balsa traffi c was extensive throughout the Gulf. In the hands of the Indians, the balsa was a swift and seaworthy craft, and navigation was no doubt facilitated by expert knowledge of winds and currents. All but two islands were within a day’s paddle, and in most cases the overwater distance to the more remote islands could have been reduced by island hopping. Although we now know that native people exploited nearly every signifi cant island, we need much more information about the time span over which those visits took place. Indians were certainly making use of many islands during the seventeenth century when European navigators began keeping careful records. Seri oral history fi rmly places Seri ancestors on several Midriff Islands during the nineteenth century and conceivably earlier. Archaeology is potentially capable of extending island chronologies into the prehistoric past, but there has been only limited progress on this front. Fewer than half of the 32 islands considered in this study have been systematically surveyed, and controlled excavations have been conducted on only three islands. Unfortunately, the archaeological record for many islands consists only of surface remains, and includes few or no time-sensitive artifacts or structures, and little or no organic material suitable for radiocarbon analysis. Clovis projectile points from both the Sonora mainland and the Baja California peninsula indicate that humans were present in the Gulf region by 13,000 years ago, which means that native people have been potential island visitors since that time. So far, radiocarbon dates have been secured for only five islands, and for four of these islands the few dates that are currently available all post-date AD 700. However, a series of 179 radiocarbon dates from 40 sites on Isla Espíritu Santo have clearly established this island’s long occupational sequence, which extends from about 9000 BC to the fi fteenth century AD. Although one site on this island produced spectacular radiocarbon ages on shells from approximately 36,550 to greater than 47,500 BP, these shells were probably already ancient when people collected them. During the late Pleistocene and early Holocene it is likely that not all of today’s islands existed, or existed as islands. Some small volcanic islands may not yet have emerged from the sea, while some of today’s islands were connected to the shore by land bridges because sea level was much lower than it is today. Any island without a landbridge connection at that time would have been accessible only by watercraft. These non-landbridge islands should be considered prime places to search for early evidence of navigation. This in turn raises the question of whether initial human entry into the Americas took place by boat along a Pacifi c coastal route, and whether subsequent dispersal involved the Gulf. In most coastal entry and dispersal scenarios, it is assumed that coastally-adapted boat people arriving at the southern tip of Baja California crossed the mouth of the Gulf to the Mexican mainland, making landfall in Sinaloa or even farther south. However, as R. James Hills has pointed out, this is highly unlikely. People arriving at the southern tip of the peninsula would have seen seemingly endless ocean in all directions except along the peninsular coast leading into the Gulf. There would have been no reason for people adapted to coastal resources to set out into an apparently empty sea. Instead, they would have followed the coastline into the Gulf, presumably exploring the islands along the way. The fi rst reasonable place to cross the Gulf would have been the Midriff, where they could have island-hopped to the mainland with no overwater distance exceeding 17 km. In Hills’ scenario, the Gulf would occupy a pivotal position in human dispersal in the Americas, and it is possible that evidence of this process has been preserved on some of the Gulf islands.
    • Hohokam Archaeology Along Phase B of the Tucson Aqueduct Central Arizona Project, Volume 1: Syntheses and Interpretations, Part II [No. 178, Vol. 1 Part II]

      Czaplicki, Jon S.; Ravesloot, John C. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989)
    • Hohokam Archaeology Along the Salt Gila Aqueduct Central Arizona Project - Volume VII: Environment and Subsistence [No. 150 Vol. 7]

      Teague, Lynn S.; Crown, Patricia L. (Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1984)
      This seventh volume in the nine-volume series showing results of archaeological studies along the Salt-Gila Aqueduct, focuses upon studies of environmental conditions and subsistence practices at the 45 Hohokam sites investigated by the project. These represent an important element of project research and a level of attention to these studies unprecedented in Hohokam archaeology. It is in this volume that the final results of botanical, faunal, and palynological work are reported. In addition, there are summary statements on SGA Project work related to agricultural technology, broader agricultural strategies, and strategies for the exploitation of natural resources of the Sonoran Desert. This work, taken as a whole, reflects the extraordinary diversity and flexibility of Hohokam subsistence strategies. While drought and floods are the inevitable enemies of agricultural populations, the Hohokam appear to have developed the means of coping with their environment early in their history.