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    Whiptail Ruin (AZ BB:10:3 [ASM]): A Classic Period Community in the Northeastern Tucson Basin [No. 203]

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    Author
    Adams, Jenny L.
    Aten, Carl F.
    Beck, Lane Anderson
    Huckell, Lisa W.
    Lombard, James P.
    Myers, Laural
    Urban, Sharon F.
    Editors
    Gregonis, Linda M.
    Hartmann, Gayle Harrison
    Issue Date
    2011
    Keywords
    Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Tucson Basin -- Antiquities.
    Indian pottery -- Arizona -- Tucson Basin.
    Excavations (Archaeology) -- Arizona -- Tucson Basin.
    Excavations (Archaeology)
    Indian pottery.
    Indians of North America -- Antiquities.
    Whiptail Ruin (Ariz.)
    Arizona -- Tucson Basin.
    Arizona -- Whiptail Ruin.
    
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    Other Titles
    Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series No. 203
    Citation
    Gregonis, Linda M. and Hartmann, Gayle Harrison (editors). 2011. Whiptail Ruin (AZ BB:10:3 [ASM]): A Classic Period Community in the Northeastern Tucson Basin. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series No. 203. Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson.
    Publisher
    Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
    Description
    Whiptail Ruin (AZ BB:10:3 [ASM]): A Classic Period Community in the Northeastern Tucson Basin edited by Linda M. Gregonis, Gayle Harrison Hartmann with contributions by Jenny L. Adams, Carl F. Aten, Lane Anderson Beck, Lisa W. Huckell, James P. Lombard, Laural Myers, Sharon F. Urban. Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona, In Collaboration with the Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, Tucson. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 203.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/676944
    Abstract
    In the 1960s and 1970s, Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society volunteers, University of Arizona students, and Pima Community College students excavated Whiptail Ruin, a mid- to late A.D. 1200s village in the northeastern Tucson Basin. This volume presents the results of analyses of the notes and artifacts from work at that site. The village may have been home to hunting specialists. Artiodactyl remains were “stored” in structures in a manner similar to that described for historic O’odham hunting practices. Pottery and lithics from the site show that its residents had strong ties to the Tucson area, as well as to migrants from the Mogollon highlands who moved into the San Pedro Valley in the thirteenth century. And, of interest to chronologists of the region, Whiptail Ruin is one of the first sites in the Tucson Basin to be tree-ring dated. In addition to providing scholars with usable data, the research detailed in this volume shows that information mined from old, archived projects can be relevant and important to today’s archaeological questions.
    En las décadas de 1960 y 1970 los voluntarios de la Sociedad Arqueológica e Histórica de Arizona, los estudiantes de la Universidad de Arizona y también los de Pima Community College excavaron las ruinas de Whiptail, un pueblo ubicado en el noreste de la Cuenca de Tucson a mediados y finales del siglo XIII. Este tomo contiene los resultados del análsis de los apuntes y artefactos del trabajo que hicieron al sitio. El pueblo podría haber sido el lugar donde habitaban cazadores. Los restos del artiodactyl fueron almacenados en una manera semejante a los que venían por medio del estilo de cazar de los O’odham en la época histórica. Céramica y líticos del sitio muestran que sus habitantes tenían lazos fuertes a Tucson, así como también a los migrantes de las tierras altas de Mogollón quienes se radicaron al Valle de San Pedro durante el siglo XIII. De interés a las cronistas de la región, las ruinas de Whiptail son uno de los sitios de la Cuenca de Tucson que han sido datados por medio de los anillos de árboles. Además de proporcionar información útil a los investigadores, las investigaciones divulgadas en este tomo demuestran que los datos que vienen de proyectos antiguos todavía son relevantes e importantes a las cuestiones arqueológicas en la actualidad.
    Type
    Book
    text
    Language
    en
    Series/Report no.
    Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series, XXX
    ISBN
    9781889747880
    Collections
    ASM Archaeological Series

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