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Subject:
From:
Allen Dart <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 9 Jun 2008 08:04:00 -0700
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text/plain
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

	This communication provides information on Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center’s upcoming activities. For details **** except for other
organizations’ offerings and contacts listed below **** please visit Old
Pueblo’s web site http://www.oldpueblo.org or contact Old Pueblo at
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]  A copy of this information can be
faxed or mailed to news media organizations or to current Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center members upon request.
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center is located at 5100 W. Ina Road Bldg. 7 in
the Town of Marana, Arizona (northwestern Tucson metropolitan area).
Please address all U.S. Postal Service correspondence to us at PO Box
40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577.

Allen Dart, RPA, Executive Director
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
PO Box 40577
Tucson AZ 85717-0577   USA
 	(520) 798-1201 office, (520) 798-1966 fax
	Email: [log in to unmask]
 	URL: http://www.oldpueblo.org

****

Wednesday June 18, 2008
	“What Do We Do with Our Ancestors?” free presentation at Arizona Senior
Academy, 13701 E. Old Spanish Trail, Tucson, Arizona.
	2:30-4:30 p.m. Free
	Ever since archaeology became an intellectual pursuit many archaeologists
have held that all materials left behind by ancient peoples – including
human remains – are proper subjects for scientific study and that these
materials should be preserved in museums to keep them accessible for
future studies. However, many Native Americans and others believe human
remains and grave objects should not be subjected to scientific studies,
and that these remains should be respectfully reburied once disturbed.
Drawing on his education and experience as a professional archaeologist,
and on years of working closely with Native Americans in the Southwest,
Allen Dart facilitates a discussion with the audience about some of the
reasoning behind these disparate viewpoints, what to do when human
remains and grave objects come to light in archaeological excavations,
and laws that specify what is to be done when human remains are
discovered. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Kathie Van Brunt at
Tucson telephone 520-647-0980 or [log in to unmask]; for
information about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at
Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday June 19, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation:
“Artifacts of Ancient Americans: An Arrowhead Making and Flintknapping
Demonstration” with flintknapper Sam Greenleaf at Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, 5100 W. Ina Road Bldg. 8 (northwestern Tucson metro area).
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	All known ancient cultures of the Americas created projectile points
(arrowheads or spearpoints) and other objects from stone by
flintknapping, which is the process of intentionally chipping stone
materials to produce artifacts. In this program modern flintknapper Sam
Greenleaf gives a direct demonstration of how arrowheads and spearpoints
are made from stone to better understand how ancient people made and used
stone artifacts.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Friday June 20-Tuesday June 24, 2008
	Reservations required at least 3 days ahead.
	“Mimbres Ruins, Rock Art, and Museums of Southern New Mexico” (ST585)
Pima Community College study tour (CRN 62714 Double Occupancy, CRN 62715
Single Occupancy)), with archaeologist Allen Dart via passenger van
departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson
	3 p.m. Friday to 5 p.m. Tuesday. $749 Double Occupancy, $799 Single
Occupancy
	Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart leads this comprehensive
tour to southwestern New Mexico’s Silver City area to visit Classic
Mimbres pueblo ruins, Early Mogollon village archaeological sites, the
Gila Cliff Dwellings, spectacular petroglyph sites, and a museum with one
of the world’s finest collections of Mimbres Puebloan pottery (the kind
with those spectacular human and animal figures). Tour includes
transportation, lodging and entry fees. Offered by Pima Community College
in affiliation with Old Pueblo Archaeology Center.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College,
Tucson).


Saturday June 21, 2008
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” free
presentation for Grant County Archaeological Society at Mattocks House,
12 Sage Street (at NM Highway 35) in Mimbres, New Mexico.
	7 p.m. (following 6 p.m. potluck dinner). Free
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
illustrates artifacts, architecture, and other material culture of the
ancient Hohokam Indians, and discusses archaeological interpretations of
how these people tamed southern Arizona’s Sonoran Desert for centuries
before their culture mysteriously disappeared.
	No reservations needed. For meeting potluck and details contact Mr.
Carroll Welch at 505-546-8198 in Deming, NM,  or Judy Jones at
[log in to unmask] or 575-313-7022 in Silver City, NM; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Friday July 11, 2008
	“Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art” free
presentation for Gila County Historical Society and Bullion Plaza
Cultural Center & Museum, at the Bullion Plaza Museum, 21 Plaza Circle,
Miami, Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	6-7:30 p.m. Free
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
illustrates pictographs (rock paintings) and petroglyphs (symbols carved
or pecked on rocks), and discusses how even the same rock art symbol may
be interpreted differently from popular, scientific, and modern Native
American perspectives.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Lynn Haak, Program
Chair, at 928-425-4344 or [log in to unmask] in Miami; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday July 15, 2008
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” free
presentation for Friends of Picture Rocks at Picture Rocks Community
Center, 5615 N. Sanders Road, west of Tucson. Cosponsored by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	6:30 p.m. iced tea social, 7 to 8:30 p.m. presentation. Free
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
illustrates artifacts, architecture, and other material culture of the
ancient Hohokam Indians, and discusses archaeological interpretations of
how these people tamed southern Arizona’s Sonoran Desert for centuries
before their culture mysteriously disappeared. Directions from I-10 and
Ina Road: Go west on Ina, south/left on Wade Road, west/right onto
Picture Rocks, south/left on Sandario, west/right on Rudasill, south/left
on Sanders just past the school. Funding for program provided by the
Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Albert Lannon at
622-3561 or [log in to unmask] in Tucson; for information about the
presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday July 17, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation.
Program title, speaker, and location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday August 21, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation: “The
Art History of Arizona: Cultural Encounters with the Southwest” with
Arizona State University Professor of Art History Betsy Fahlman, Ph.D.,
location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	Arizona has a rich art history, and many of the visiting and resident
artists who recorded the landscape and native peoples helped create a
national image of the state. This presentation explores Arizona’s
identity against the backdrop of the larger history of the art of the
American West, and illustrates what "The West" was for those who had
never visited. Material relating to archaeology, tourism, movies, pulp
magazines, mining, industry, and the iconography of the state seal will
also be discussed.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday August 28, 2008
	“Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation at Pima County
Public Library, 101 N. Stone Ave., Tucson. Cosponsored by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	Noon to 1 p.m. Free.
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
illustrates and discusses Arizona’s earliest Paleoindians and Archaic
period hunters and foragers, the development of archaeological villages,
the Puebloan, Mogollon, Sinagua, Hohokam, Salado, and Patayan
archaeological cultures, and the connections between those ancient
peoples and Arizona’s historical cultures. Funding for program provided
by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Librarian Coni
Weatherford at 520-791-4391 or [log in to unmask] in Tucson; for
information about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at
Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday September 18, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation:
“Archaeological Excavations at Las Capas” with archaeologist Stephanie
Whittlesey, Ph.D., location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Sunday September 21, 2008
	Arrowhead-making and flintknapping workshop at Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, location to be announced.
	Noon to 3 p.m. $35; $28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members
	Flintknapper Sam Greenleaf teaches hands-on workshop on making arrowheads
and spearpoints out of stone to better understand how ancient people made
and used stone artifacts. Class is designed to help modern people
understand how prehistoric Native Americans made and used artifacts, and
is not intended to train students how to make artwork for sale. Class
limited to 8 registrants age 16 and older.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Sundays October 5 through November 16, 2008
	Traditional Pottery Making Level 1 Workshop with John Guerin at Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center, locations to be announced, Tucson.
	2 to 5 p.m. each Sunday. Fee $79; $63.20 for Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members; includes all materials
except clay, which participants will collect during class field trip.
	A series of 7 pottery-making class sessions will be offered by artist
John Guerin each Sunday afternoon beginning October 5 and ending November
16, 2008, including a clay-gathering field trip on October 12. The class
is designed to help modern people understand how prehistoric Native
Americans made and used pottery, and is not intended to train students
how to make artwork for sale.  The Level 1 class demonstrates pottery
making techniques the instructor has learned from modern Native American
potters, using gourd scrapers, mineral paints, and yucca brushes instead
of modern potters’ wheels and paint. The course introduces some history
of southwestern Ancestral and Modern Puebloan, Mogollon, and Hohokam
pottery-making, includes a field trip in which participants dig their own
clay, and demonstrates initial steps in forming, shaping and smoothing,
and completion of bowls, jars, canteens, ladles, and rattles of both
smooth and corrugated pottery, by scraping, sanding, polishing, slipping
and painting. The paddle-and-anvil handbuilding method is also
demonstrated. Arizona Archaeological Society certification may be offered
to persons who complete Traditional Pottery Making workshop Levels 1, 2,
& 3 (Levels 2 and 3 offered when there is enough demand); certification
requirements include 60 hours of instruction and hands-on work.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday October 16, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation: “The
‘Deep Structure’ of Early Archaic Rock Art: Human Universals” with
Professor Ekkehart Malotki, location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	On a global scale, all earliest art-making traditions consist of
abstract-geometric motifs and nonfigurative patterns, regardless of
whether they occur on portable objects or on rock surfaces. This is also
true for the rock art of the American West, which houses a wealth of
nonrepresentational images, both painted and engraved. To shed light on
this most enigmatic yet fascinating imagery, which to many rock art
researchers is of little interest since it seems to offer no insights
into the minds of its creators, Professor Malotki resorts to human
universals and cutting-edge ideas gleaned from neuroscience and
evolutionary psychology. In addition to presenting novel ideas, he hopes
to heighten awe and respect for the area's rock art legacy through
striking photographs.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Sunday October 19, 2008
	Arrowhead-making and flintknapping workshop at Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, location to be announced.
	Noon to 3 p.m. $35; $28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members
	Flintknapper Sam Greenleaf teaches hands-on workshop on making arrowheads
and spearpoints out of stone to better understand how ancient people made
and used stone artifacts. Class is designed to help modern people
understand how prehistoric Native Americans made and used artifacts, and
is not intended to train students how to make artwork for sale. Class
limited to 8 registrants age 16 and older.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday October 28, 2008
	“Tucson-Marana Rock Art and Archaeology” (ST149) Pima Community College
study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via passenger van departing from
Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson
	8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. $69
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
van tour to Hohokam petroglyph, agricultural, and village sites (one with
a “ballcourt” and bedrock mortars, another with a housing compound).
Bring a lunch and water.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Saturday November 15, 2008
	“White Tank Mountains: Waterfall Canyon & Mesquite Canyon Petroglyphs”
guided fundraising tour with Allen Dart and Shelley Rasmussen, starting
location to be announced.
* 	7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.  Fee to be announced
* 	Archaeologist Allen Dart and Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger
Shelly Rasmussen (an archaeological Site Steward) guide this tour to see
hundreds of ancient petroglyphs in the 30,000-acre White Tank Mountain
Regional Park west of Phoenix.
* 	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Sunday November 16, 2008
	Arrowhead-making and flintknapping workshop at Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, location to be announced.
	Noon to 3 p.m. $35; $28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members
	Flintknapper Sam Greenleaf teaches hands-on workshop on making arrowheads
and spearpoints out of stone to better understand how ancient people made
and used stone artifacts. Class is designed to help modern people
understand how prehistoric Native Americans made and used artifacts, and
is not intended to train students how to make artwork for sale. Class
limited to 8 registrants age 16 and older.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday November 18, 2008
	“Ventana Cave and Tohono O’odham Nation Archaeology and Culture” (ST146)
Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via
passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave.,
Tucson.
	8 a.m. to 6 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
this van tour, which focuses on the Ventana Cave National Historic
Landmark archaeological site and rock art, includes visits to nearby
villages and the Tohono O'odham Nation government complex in Sells, and
opportunity to purchase arts and crafts at the Wiwpul Du `ag Arts Trading
Post. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, wear comfortable hiking
shoes.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Thursday November 20, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation:
“Voices from Inside a Black Snake:  Religious Monuments along Arizona and
Sonora Highways” with anthropologist Dr. James S. “Big Jim” Griffith,
Ph.D. location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday December 2, 2008
	“Casa Grande Ruins and Middle Gila Valley Archaeology and History”
(ST147) Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart
via passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita
Ave., Tucson
	8 a.m. to 5 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
van tour to Coolidge-Florence area. Tour includes an extended visit to
archaeological features in the Casa Grande Ruins National Monument in
Coolidge plus visits to the Grewe site (early Hohokam village),
Adamsville Ruin (late Hohokam village with platform mound and ballcourt),
historic Adamsville Cemetery and settlements along the Gila River, and
Pinal County Historical Society Museum in Florence. Bring your own picnic
lunch and water.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Saturday December 6, 2008
	“Deer Valley & Spur Cross Ranch Petroglyphs” guided fundraising tour with
Allen Dart and Shelley Rasmussen, starting location to be announced.
* 	8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.  Fee to be announced.
* 	Archaeologist Allen Dart and Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger
Shelly Rasmussen (an archaeological Site Steward) guide this tour to see
hundreds of ancient petroglyphs at Deer Valley Rock Art Center north of
Phoenix and in Spur Cross Ranch Regional Park near Carefree, Arizona.
* 	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday December 11, 2008
	“Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art” free
presentation at Pima County Public Library, 101 N. Stone Ave., Tucson.
Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	Noon to 1 p.m. Free.
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
illustrates pictographs (rock paintings) and petroglyphs (symbols carved
or pecked on rocks), and discusses how even the same rock art symbol may
be interpreted differently from popular, scientific, and modern Native
American perspectives.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Librarian Coni
Weatherford at 520-791-4391 or [log in to unmask] in Tucson; for
information about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at
Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Sunday December 14, 2008
	Arrowhead-making and flintknapping workshop at Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, location to be announced.
	Noon to 3 p.m. $35; $28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members
	Flintknapper Sam Greenleaf teaches hands-on workshop on making arrowheads
and spearpoints out of stone to better understand how ancient people made
and used stone artifacts. Class is designed to help modern people
understand how prehistoric Native Americans made and used artifacts, and
is not intended to train students how to make artwork for sale. Class
limited to 8 registrants age 16 and older.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday December 16, 2008
	“Ventana Cave and Tohono O’odham Nation Archaeology and Culture” (ST146)
Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via
passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave.,
Tucson.
	8 a.m. to 6 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
this van tour, which focuses on the Ventana Cave National Historic
Landmark archaeological site and rock art, includes visits to nearby
villages and the Tohono O'odham Nation government complex in Sells, and
opportunity to purchase arts and crafts at the Wiwpul Du `ag Arts Trading
Post. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, wear comfortable hiking
shoes.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Thursday December 18, 2008
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation:
Program title, speaker, and location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m. Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday January 6, 2009
	“Casa Grande Ruins and Middle Gila Valley Archaeology and History”
(ST147) Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart
via passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita
Ave., Tucson
	8 a.m. to 5 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
van tour to Coolidge-Florence area. Tour includes an extended visit to
archaeological features in the Casa Grande Ruins National Monument in
Coolidge plus visits to the Grewe site (early Hohokam village),
Adamsville Ruin (late Hohokam village with platform mound and ballcourt),
historic Adamsville Cemetery and settlements along the Gila River, and
Pinal County Historical Society Museum in Florence. Bring your own picnic
lunch and water.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Thursday January 15, 2009
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation: 
Program title, speaker, and location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday January 20, 2009
	“Ventana Cave and Tohono O’odham Nation Archaeology and Culture” (ST146)
Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via
passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave.,
Tucson.
	8 a.m. to 6 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
this van tour, which focuses on the Ventana Cave National Historic
Landmark archaeological site and rock art, includes visits to nearby
villages and the Tohono O'odham Nation government complex in Sells, and
opportunity to purchase arts and crafts at the Wiwpul Du `ag Arts Trading
Post. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, wear comfortable hiking
shoes.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Tuesday February 10, 2009
	“Ventana Cave and Tohono O’odham Nation Archaeology and Culture” (ST146)
Pima Community College study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via
passenger van departing from Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave.,
Tucson.
	8 a.m. to 6 p.m. $79
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
this van tour, which focuses on the Ventana Cave National Historic
Landmark archaeological site and rock art, includes visits to nearby
villages and the Tohono O'odham Nation government complex in Sells, and
opportunity to purchase arts and crafts at the Wiwpul Du `ag Arts Trading
Post. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, wear comfortable hiking
shoes.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)


Thursday February 19, 2009
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursdays” free presentation: 
Program title, speaker, and location to be announced.
	7:30 to 9 p.m Free.
	No reservations needed. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


February 21, 2009
	“Ventana Cave and Tohono O’odham Nation Villages” fundraising tour with
archaeologist Allen Dart via carpools departing from southeast corner of
Pima Community College parking lot, 401 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson
	8 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Fee $25 per person ($20 for Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center & Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members)
	Ventana Cave, a National Historic Landmark archaeological site on the
Tohono O'odham Reservation, is a rockshelter with rock art and other
archaeological features used by Native Americans for 10,000 years. This
carpool tour will also visit the Tohono O'odham government complex in
Sells, Tohono O'odham villages in the Santa Rosa, Kaka, and Quijotoa
valleys, and a reservation trading post. Tour fees will benefit Old
Pueblo's education programs and the Tohono O'odham Hickiwan District's
efforts to develop a caretaker-interpretive center at Ventana Cave. BRING
YOUR OWN PICNIC LUNCH AND WATER, WEAR COMFORTABLE HIKING SHOES.
	Advance reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday March 3, 2009
	“Tucson-Marana Rock Art and Archaeology” (ST149) Pima Community College
study tour with archaeologist Allen Dart via passenger van departing from
Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson
	8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. $69
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s director, archaeologist Allen Dart, leads
van tour to Hohokam petroglyph, agricultural, and village sites (one with
a “ballcourt” and bedrock mortars, another with a housing compound).
Bring a lunch and water.
	Advance reservations required: 520-206-6468 (Pima Community College, Tucson)

# # #

	If you are a member of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, THANK YOU FOR YOUR
SUPPORT!

	If you are not an Old Pueblo member we would be grateful if you could
help provide support for our education and research programs. Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center is recognized as a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit
organization under the U.S. tax code so donations and Old Pueblo
membership fees are tax-deductible up to amounts allowed by the Internal
Revenue Service. Donations by check can be made payable to “OPAC” and
mailed to Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ
85717-0577. Or, you can donate using your Visa or Mastercard by calling
Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or by clicking on “Donation Form” at Old
Pueblo’s www.oldpueblo.org/donate.html web page.

	Please help Old Pueblo Archaeology Center if you can!

	If you do not wish to receive further email ACTIVITY ANNOUNCEMENTS from
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center but are willing to receive emails on other
topics please send an email to [log in to unmask] with the words PLEASE
STOP SENDING ACTIVITY ANNOUNCEMENTS in the Subject line. If you do not
wish to receive any more emails from Old Pueblo Archaeology Center for
any reason you can send an email to [log in to unmask] with the word
REMOVE in the subject line.


Yours truly,

Allen Dart, RPA, Executive Director
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
PO Box 40577
Tucson AZ  85717-0577   USA
 	(520) 798-1201 office, (520) 798-1966 fax
	Email: [log in to unmask]
 	URL: www.oldpueblo.org

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