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Subject:
From:
Allen Dart <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 4 Jan 2013 08:13:02 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (1467 lines)
For Immediate Release


Included in this announcement:

(1) Summary of Upcoming Presentations, Classes, Tours, and Other Activities
(2) Details on Upcoming Activities


(1) SUMMARY OF UPCOMING PRESENTATIONS, CLASSES, TOURS, AND OTHER ACTIVITIES

(For details on each activity see DETAILS ON UPCOMING ACTIVITIES below.)

On-going: OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig, OPENOUT archaeology
presentations, and guided tours of archaeological sites for children’s
groups.

January 9, 2013 “Winter Stories” presentation by Phoenix Indian Center
Cultural Specialist Freddie Johnson at Pueblo Grande Museum and
Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

January 9, 2013 “Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator” sponsored by the
nonprofit Pueblo Grande  useum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and
Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

January 10, 2013 "Set in Stone but Not in Meaning:  Southwestern Indian
Rock Art" free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Superstition
Mountain Museum, Apache Junction, Arizona

January 12, 2013 “Petroglyph Discovery Hike #90453: Hieroglyphic Canyon
(Geronimo Trail), South Mountain” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary, Phoenix*

January 15, 2013 “Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and
Social Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at
the Copper Queen Library, 6 Main St., Bisbee

January 17, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“Tree-rings, Documents, and Oral History along Cebolla Creek, New Mexico”
with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner at Mimi's Café (Wilmot), Tucson

January 19, 2013 “Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and
Social Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for
Rim Country Chapter, AZ Archaeological Society, Payson*

January 21, 2013 “University Indian Ruin: Changing Views of the Late
Hohokam Classic period in the Tucson Basin” free presentation by
archaeologists Suzannne K. Fish, Paul R. Fish, and Mark D. Elson at Duval
Auditorium, Tucson*

January 23, 2013 “Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator” sponsored by the
nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary
at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St.,
Phoenix*

January 25, 2013 “Park of Four Waters Tour” sponsored by the nonprofit
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

January 27, 2013 “Recent Archaeological Discoveries at Fort Lowell” with
archaeologist J. Homer Thiel at the historic San Pedro Chapel, 5230 E.
Fort Lowell Road, Tucson*

January 29, 2013 "Statehood with all the Bells and Whistles" brown bag
lecture by Jim Turner at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 2, 2013 "Rock Art and Archaeology of Ventana Cave" carpooling
educational tour with archaeologist Allen Dart departing from Tucson

February 2, 2013 “Archaeology for Kids #90450” sponsored by the nonprofit
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 3, 2013 “Baseball's Earliest Days in Arizona” presentation by
Mike Anderson
at the historic San Pedro Chapel, 5230 E. Fort Lowell Road, Tucson*

January 23, 2013 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces”
free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart For Friends of the Library
at Parker Public Library, Parker, Arizona*

Tuesdays February 5-February 26, 2013 "Archaeology, Cultures, and Ancient
Arts of Southern Arizona" continuing education class with archaeologist
Allen Dart at Recreation Centers of Sun City West in Sun City West,
Arizona*

February 6, 2013 “Rock Art Conservation Efforts in the Gila River Indian
Community” presentation by Chris Loendorf and Barnaby V. Lewis at Pueblo
Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 8, 2013 “Historic Drought and Current Climate Issues”
presentation by State Climatologist Nancy J. Selover at Pueblo Grande
Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 9, 2013 “Annual Fort Lowell Day Celebration” from Fort Lowell
Park westward along Fort Lowell Road to the historic San Pedro Chapel,
Tucson*

February 9, 2013 “Petroglyph Discovery Hike #90454: Beverly
Canyon/Javelina, South Mountain” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary, Phoenix*

February 13, 2013 “Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator” sponsored by the
nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and
Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 15, 2013 “Significance of Microfossils on the Reconstruction of
Past Environments” presentation by Dr. Manuel Palacios-Fest at Pueblo
Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 16, 2013 “Desert Animals Presentation” sponsored by the nonprofit
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 21, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner  &
presentation, “¿Que Pasa Paquimé? Recent Archaeological Research in the
Casas Grandes Region” with archaeologist Paul Minnis at Dragon's View
Restaurant, Tucson

February 21, 2013 “Desert Agriculture” presentation by Jacob Butler,
sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo
Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 22, 2013 “Park of Four Waters Tour” sponsored by the nonprofit
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 23, 2013 “Arizona Archaeological Society Flintknapping Workshop”
at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St.,
Phoenix*

February 23-24, 2013 Explore Southern Arizona Missions and More”
educational tour sponsored by the Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary,
departing from the Pueblo Grande Museum, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*

February 27, 2013 “Lessons from Prehistoric Culture” presentation by
Robert Alling, sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary
at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St.,
Phoenix*

March 1- 6, 2013 “A Dozen Southern New Mexico and West Texas Rock Art
Sites” archaeology tour with Marc Thompson, Glenn Omundson, Bob White, and
Allen Dart in El Paso-Three Rivers-Tularosa Lordsburg areas

March 1-31, 2013 Arizona Archaeology and Heritage Awareness Month
celebration, “Life on the Edge: Feast or Famine in Arizona’s Past”
activities statewide on numerous dates, many of them free*

March 9, 2013 Library Presenters “What is an Archaeologist?” free
children’s presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Ginger Thompson
at Pima County Public Library Mission Branch, Tucson

March 13, 2013 “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by
archaeologist Allen Dart for San Tan Chapter, Arizona Archaeological
Society, at the Queen Creek Museum in Queen Creek Arizona*

March 16, 2013 "Vista del Rio Archaeology Celebration" children's
activities at City of Tucson's Vista del Rio Cultural Resource Park, 7575
E. Desert Arbors St. (at Dos Hombres Road), Tucson

March 16, 2013 “Arizona Archaeology Expo” at the historic Horseshoe Ranch
on Agua Fria National Monument, 2260 East Bloody Basin Road, Mayer,
Arizona*

March 21, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“The Zuni Region across the Lost Century:  AD 1450-1540” with
archaeologist Matt Peeples, Ph.D., at Cody's Beef ‘N Beans Steakhouse,
2708 E. Fort Lowell Rd., Tucson

March 23, 2013  “Art for Archaeology Featuring Dr. Donald Johanson” at the
Arizona State Museum and next-door at the English as a Second Language
Auditorium, University of Arizona, Tucson

April 18, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“The Fiftieth Anniversary of Research at Grasshopper Pueblo, 1963-2013”
with Professor J. Jefferson Reid, at Dragon’s View Asian Cuisine, 400 N.
Bonita Avenue (just west of the Santa Cruz River between St. Mary's Rd. &
Congress St.), Tucson

May 16, 2013 [Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner presentation program will resume in September]

May 26-31, 2013 “Ancient Hands Around the World” 2013 International Rock
Art Congress hosted by the American Rock Art Research Association (ARARA)
at the Marriott Pyramid North, Albuquerque*

June 2013 [Dates TBA] "Mimbres Ruins, Rock Art, and Museums of Southern
New Mexico" archaeology education tour with archaeologist Allen Dart in
New Mexico’s Mimbres-Silver City- Glenwood-Deming area

June 12-14, 2013 “Making Preservation Relevant: The Past in Future Tense”
Arizona Historic Preservation Conference at the Hilton Phoenix East/Mesa,
Mesa, Arizona*

September 26-30, 2013 “Chaco Canyon, Aztec, and Salmon Great Pueblos and
Other Archaeological Sites” educational tour with archaeologist Ronald H.
Towner

October 16-19, 2013 “The Paleoamerican Odyssey Conference” at the Santa Fe
Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy Street, Santa Fe*

October 17, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“Carbon 14 Dating, from the Earliest Dog to the World's Most Mysterious
Manuscript” with Professor Greg Hodgins, at ****[Tucson restaurant TBA]

November 21, 2013 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“Archaeological Resource Crime” with Bureau of Indian Affairs Regional
Archaeologist Garry J. Cantley, at ****[Tucson restaurant TBA]


* Asterisked programs may be sponsored by organizations other than Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center.


(2)  DETAILS ON UPCOMING ACTIVITIES

ON-GOING: OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig, OPENOUT archaeology
presentations, and guided tours of archaeological sites for children’s
groups

	Reservations are being taken for school classes and other children’s
groups to experience the OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig education
program, to have archaeologists come to your classrooms to provide
OPENOUT archaeology outreach presentations, and to take guided tours to
local archaeological sites. Old Pueblo Archaeology Center offers a
hands-on simulated archaeological excavation program field trip in which
students apply social studies, science, and math skills in a practical,
real-life situation, as well as in-classroom archaeology outreach
presentations.

	For more information on the OPEN3 and OPENOUT programs please visit the
following Old Pueblo Archaeology Center web pages:

OPEN3 Simulated Excavation for Classrooms
http://www.oldpueblo.org/open3.html

Classroom Outreach - "Ancient People of Arizona":
http://www.oldpueblo.org/azplp.html

Classroom Outreach "What is an Archaeologist?"
http://www.oldpueblo.org/whatarch.html

Classroom Outreach “Lifesyle of the Hohokam” Classroom outreach presentation
http://www.oldpueblo.org/lifestyles.html

Site Tours for Classrooms
http://www.oldpueblo.org/sitetour.html


Wednesday January 9, 2013
	“Winter Stories” presentation by Phoenix Indian Center Cultural
Specialist Freddie Johnson at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	7:30 to 9 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get
free admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	For many generations, the Diné have celebrated the arrival of winter with
storytelling, games and traditional ceremonies which are only held in the
winter, after the first snow has fallen on the Navajo reservation. One
type of story told is Coyote stories. The Coyote stories are about the
trickster Coyote who plays tricks on the neighboring animals to get their
attention; he is a character who doesn't listen to the wiser and older
animals. The Coyote stories are hilarious to tell and watch, teaching
moral principles to young people about self-respect. Raised for the
majority of his life in Rock Point, Arizona, on the Navajo Indian
Reservation, Johnson moved to Phoenix as an adult and has focused his
energy on sharing the time-honored knowledge given to him by his
grandparents. By sharing the knowledge learned at his grandparents' knees
with those living in the city, Johnson helps to bridge cultures and
generations through an understanding of Navajo language and culture.
During his tenure with the Phoenix Indian Center, Johnson has developed a
series of language classes, created seasonal story programs focusing on
traditions, and hosted cultural events that foster intergenerational
experiences and growth.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Wednesday January 9, 2013
	“Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	2 to 2:30 p.m. General admission prices apply; PGMA and Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center members get free admission to the Museum for PGMA
events
	Join Curator of Collections Holly Young for a “behind the scenes” tour of
the museum.  This is an opportunity to learn about the artifacts that are
not on display on the museum and see how museums care for their
collections.  This is a first come, first serve tour. Space is limited.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday January 10, 2013
	"Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art" free
presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist
Allen Dart, at the Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 North Apache Trail,
Apache Junction, Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	2-3 p.m. Free
	Archaeologist Allen Dart, Executive Director of Tucson, Arizona’s
nonprofit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 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. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Barbara Atkinson in
Apache Junction at 480-983-4888 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]


Saturday January 12, 2013
	“Petroglyph Discovery Hike #90453: Hieroglyphic Canyon (Geronimo Trail),
South Mountain” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary
(PGMA), Phoenix**
	8 to 11 a.m. $8 ($5 for PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members)
	An experienced Pueblo Grande Museum guide will lead participants on a
three-mile, three-hour “difficult” level interpretive hike to rock art
sites in Hieroglyphic Canyon along the Geronimo Trail in South Mountain
Park.  Pueblo Grande Museum offers various hikes to South Mountain Park,
the Superstition Mountains located in the East Valley, and the White Tank
Regional Park in the West Valley.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however,
Old Pueblo members can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount
rates, and vice-versa. Preregistration is required by January 10.  For
details or to register contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at 602-495-0901
or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday January 15, 2013
	“Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social
Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at the
Copper Queen Library, 6 Main St., Bisbee, Arizona. Cosponsored by the
Arizona Humanities Council.
	5:30-6:30 p.m. Free
	The deep time perspective that archaeology provides on natural hazards,
environmental change, and human adaptation not only is a valuable
supplement to historical records, it sometimes contradicts historical
data that modern societies use to make decisions affecting social
sustainability and human safety. What can be learned from archaeological
evidence that virtually all prehistoric farming cultures in Arizona and
the Southwest eventually reach a threshold of unsustainability, which
probably was a factor in the ultimate collapse or reorganization of their
societies? Could the disastrous damages to nuclear power plants damaged
by the Japanese tsunami of 2011 have been avoided if the engineers who
decided where to build those plants had not ignored prehistoric
archaeological evidence of tsunamis? This presentation looks at some of
the archaeological evidence on environmental changes and how human
cultures have adapted to those changes, and discusses the value of a
“beyond history” perspective for modern society. Funding for program
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Liz Hampton-Derivan
at 520-432-4232 or [log in to unmask] in Bisbee; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday January 17, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “Tree-rings, Documents, and Oral History along Cebolla
Creek, New Mexico” with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, Ph.D. at Mimi's
Café, 120 S. Wilmot Rd. (at Broadway Blvd.), Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	The Cebolla Creek area of west-central New Mexico is an isolated area of
lava flows, pinyon-juniper forests, and flat valley bottoms that is part
of the El Malpais National Conservation Area. Completely depopulated
today, in the early 20th century the area was home to Navajo, Hispanic,
and Anglo populations who hunted, gathered, and farmed the canyon’s
resources. Research over the past five years has illuminated aspects of
interaction and land use by these groups during a critical time in
southwestern history. In this month’s Third Thursday presentation our
speaker will discuss heretofore unknown, early 20th century Navajo sites
and the Sue Savage Homestead (LA 74544), a complex of more than 25
archaeological structures and features occupied by a widow and her
children during the Great Depression. The presentation will show how
tree-ring data, historical documents, and oral histories illuminate the
hardscrabble life of Depression-era occupants of the Southwest, place the
occupations in their proper environmental and social contexts, and
suggest how archaeologists can use the Cebolla Creek project’s
information and interpretations for estimating length of occupations and
for comparing different data types.
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program, Ron Towner,
is an Associate Professor at the University of Arizona and an expert in
dendroarchaeology and Early Navajo period archaeology.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday January 16. 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Saturday January 19, 2013
	“Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social
Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Rim
Country Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Church of the Holy
Nativity, 1414 Easy Street in Payson, Arizona
	10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Free
	The deep time perspective that archaeology provides on natural hazards,
environmental change, and human adaptation not only is a valuable
supplement to historical records, it sometimes contradicts historical
data that modern societies use to make decisions affecting social
sustainability and human safety. What can be learned from archaeological
evidence that virtually all prehistoric farming cultures in Arizona and
the Southwest eventually reach a threshold of unsustainability, which
probably was a factor in the ultimate collapse or reorganization of their
societies? Could the disastrous damages to nuclear power plants damaged
by the Japanese tsunami of 2011 have been avoided if the engineers who
decided where to build those plants had not ignored prehistoric
archaeological evidence of tsunamis? This presentation looks at some of
the archaeological evidence on environmental changes and how human
cultures have adapted to those changes, and discusses the value of a
“beyond history” perspective for modern society. Funding for program
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Evelyn Christian in
Payson at 928-476-3092 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]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Monday January 21, 2013
	“University Indian Ruin: Changing Views of the Late Hohokam Classic
Period in the Tucson Basin” free presentation by archaeologists Suzannne
K. Fish, Paul R. Fish, and Mark D. Elson  for Arizona Archaeological and
Historical Society monthly meeting at University of Arizona Medical
Center's Duval Auditorium, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Tucson
	7:30-9 p.m. Free
	The Fishes and Elson will discuss ongoing research conducted by The
University of Arizona School of Anthropology’s archaeological field
school at the University Indian Ruin, which has heightened appreciation
of Hohokam architectural complexity in the Tucson Basin during a time of
population movement, aggregation, and accelerated cultural change.
Differential acquisition of polychrome types, distant obsidian, exotic
chert, consumption of bison, and late Prehispanic pottery of Zuni and
probable Sonoran origins provide new insight into Classic period regional
interaction as well.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact Jon Boyd at Tucson telephone
520-444-6385 or visit www.az-arch-and-hist.org.


Wednesday January 23, 2013
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart for the Friends of the Library at Parker
Public Library, 1001 Navajo Ave., Parker, Arizona. Cosponsored by the
Arizona Humanities Council.*
	1-2 p.m. Free
	Native Americans in the Southwest developed sophisticated skills in
astronomy and predicting the seasons, centuries before Old World peoples
first entered the region. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart
discusses historically known sky-watching practices of various
southwestern peoples, and how their ancestors’ observations of the
heavens may have been commemorated in ancient architecture and rock
symbols. The program illustrates cardinal, solstice, and equinox
alignments and possible calendrical reckoning features at such places as
Arizona’s Casa Grande Ruins and Picture Rocks petroglyphs sites, New
Mexico’s Chaco Canyon archaeological district, the Hovenweep area of
Utah, and the Mesa Verde and Chimney Rock regions of Colorado. Mr. Dart
also offers interpretation of how these discoveries may relate to ancient
Native American ritual. Funding for program provided by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Jeannie Smith in
Parker at 928-669-2622 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]


Wednesday January 23, 2013
	“Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	2 to 2:30 p.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for PGMA
and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	Join Curator of Collections Holly Young for a “behind the scenes” tour of
the museum.  This is an opportunity to learn about the artifacts that are
not on display on the museum and see how museums care for their
collections.  This is a first come, first serve tour. Space is limited.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Friday January 25, 2013
	“Park of Four Waters Tour” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	10 to 11 a.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for PGMA and
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	The Hohokam people lived in the Salt River Area from approximately 450 AD
to 1450 AD.  They were an agricultural society, growing corn, beans,
squash and cotton.  In order to support their extensive agricultural
system, the Hohokam people constructed miles of canals in order to direct
water from the Salt River to their fields.  The Park of Four Waters tour
will take you on a tour through undeveloped, natural desert to the ruins
of some of these canal systems.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed but this is a first come, first served tour for
which space is limited. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Sunday January 27, 2013
	“Recent Archaeological Discoveries at Fort Lowell” with archaeologist J.
Homer Thiel, sponsored by the Old Fort Lowell Neighborhood Association at
the historic San Pedro Chapel, 5230 E. Fort Lowell Road, Tucson*
	3-4 p.m.. Free
	During recent soil remediation work conducted at the Fort Lowell-Adkins
Steel property by the Desert Archaeology consulting firm, 10 prehistoric
pit structures ranging in date from about AD 950 to 1300 were discovered.
Many had artifacts sitting on their floors. Historical Fort-era finds
included the alignment of Cottonwood Row, the edges of the Parade Ground,
the Bakery, and a garden area north of the Officers’ Quarters.
Archaeologist Homer Thiel will describe how these finds provide new
information that will be incorporated into the design and future exhibits
in Fort Lowell Park.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact Lynn Ratener at Tucson
telephone 520-400-3310 or [log in to unmask] or visit
www.OldFortLowellNeighborhood.org.


Tuesday January 29, 2013
	"Statehood with all the Bells and Whistles" brown bag lecture by Jim
Turner, sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA)
and the Arizona Humanities Council at Pueblo Grande Museum and
Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	Noon to 1 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get
free admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	Spend your lunch hour at the Pueblo Grande Museum for a free Brown Bag
Lecture on Arizona statehood, Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities
Council. This program uses historic photographs, political cartoons,
newspaper articles, and anecdotes to describe how Apaches, border issues,
mining, labor unions, Wild West justice, and progressive politics
provided the opportunities and obstacles for Arizona's stormy struggle
for statehood.  This lecture is free and open to the public.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday February 2, 2013
	"Rock Art and Archaeology of Ventana Cave" Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
carpooling educational tour with archaeologist Allen Dart departing from
Pima Community College, 401 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson.
	6:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Fee $35 ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members; no charge for members or
employees of the Tohono O’odham Nation)
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center offers this early-morning carpool tour onto
the Tohono O’odham Nation to visit the Ventana Cave National Historic
Landmark site. During the Arizona State Museum’s 1940s excavations in the
cave, led by archaeologists Emil W. Haury and Julian Hayden, evidence was
found for human occupation going back from historic times to around
10,000 years ago. The cave, which actually is a very large rockshelter,
also contains pictographs, petroglyphs, and other archaeological features
used by Native Americans for thousands of years. Tour leaves Tucson at
6:30 a.m. to ensure the pictographs can be seen in the best morning
light. Fees will benefit the Tohono O’odham Hickiwan District’s efforts
to develop a caretaker-interpretive center at Ventana Cave, and the
nonprofit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s education programs.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Saturday February 2, 2013
	“Archaeology for Kids #90450” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. $15 ($12 for PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center members; members get free admission to the Museum for PGMA events)
	Kids ages 7-12 can become Junior Archaeologists and discover the science
of archaeology by doing a simulated excavation of a Hohokam pit house.
Learn about mapping, recording and other archaeological methods and
concepts.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however,
Old Pueblo members can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount
rates, and vice-versa. Advanced registration is required by January 31 by
contacting the Pueblo Grande Museum at 602-495-0901 or
[log in to unmask]


Sunday February 3, 2013
	“Baseball's Earliest Days in Arizona” presentation by Mike Anderson,
sponsored by the Old Fort Lowell Neighborhood Association at the historic
San Pedro Chapel, 5230 E. Fort Lowell Road, Tucson*
	3-4 p.m.. Free
	While the Earps and cowboys stalked each other on the streets of
Tombstone in 1881, others in the silver camp were busy forming baseball
teams. America's pastime accompanied the westward expansion and was an
integral part of life on the frontier, in a form very much recognizable
to us today. Bisbee baseball historian Mike Anderson will tell the story
of baseball's earliest days in the Arizona Territory, tracing its
evolution as a game and as a part of community life, using photos taken
during the 19th century and early 20th centuries of players and teams in
southern Arizona.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact [log in to unmask] or visit
www.OldFortLowellNeighborhood.org.


Tuesdays February 5, 12, 19, and 26, 2013
	“Archaeology, Cultures, and Ancient Arts of Southern Arizona" adult
education class with archaeologist Allen Dart, RPA, at Recreation Centers
of Sun City West, 19803 R. H. Johnson Blvd., Sun City West, Arizona
	6:30-8:30 p.m. each Tuesday. $40 for all four sessions
	In this four-session class on Tuesday evenings, Mr. Allen Dart, a
Registered Professional Archaeologist and volunteer director of the Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center in Tucson, will provide information about the
archaeology and cultures of Arizona and the Southwest, focusing on the
arts and material culture of southern Arizona’s prehistoric peoples.
	The first session, "Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona," will summarize
and interpret the archaeology of Arizona from the earliest “Paleoindians”
through Archaic period hunters and foragers, the transition to true
village life, and the later prehistoric archaeological cultures
(Puebloan, Mogollon, Sinagua, Hohokam, Salado, and Patayan). Mr. Dart
also will relate the archaeological cultures to the Native American,
European, Mexican, African, and Asian peoples who have been part of our
state’s more recent history.
	In Session 2, "Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam
Indians," artifacts, architecture, and other material culture of southern
Arizona’s ancient Hohokam culture are illustrated and discussed. The arts
and culture that the Hohokam left behind provide archaeologists with
clues for interpreting their relationships to the natural world, time
reckoning, religious practices, beliefs, and deities, and possible
reasons for the eventual demise of their way of life.
	Session 3, "Ancient Native American Pottery of Southern Arizona," focuses
on some of the Native American ceramic styles that characterized specific
eras in southern Arizona prehistory and history, and discusses how
archaeologists use pottery for dating archaeological sites and
interpreting ancient lifeways of the ancient Early Ceramic and Hohokam
cultures, and of the historical Piman (Tohono O’odham and Akimel
O’odham), Yuman (including Mohave and Maricopa), and Apachean peoples.
	Finally, in Session 4, "Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern
Indian Rock Art," Mr. Dart illustrates pictographs (rock paintings) and
petroglyphs (symbols carved or pecked on rocks) found in the Southwest,
and discusses how even the same rock art symbol may be interpreted
differently from popular, scientific, and modern Native American
perspectives.
	For details about the class or to register contact Marie McIntire in Sun
City West at 623-544-6194 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]


Wednesday February 6, 2013
	“Rock Art Conservation Efforts in the Gila River Indian Community”
presentation by Chris Loendorf and Barnaby V. Lewis, sponsored by the
nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum
and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	7:30 to 9 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get
free admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	The Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) Cultural Research Management
Program (CRMP) is actively involved in the protection and management of
the many rock art sites within the community. This presentation
summarizes the results of a recent study of livestock brand petroglyphs
and pictographs in the GRIC that were done in a similar style to
prehistoric Hohokam images in the area. This study documented evidence
for previously unrecognized animal husbandry practices, as well as long
term continuity in cultural traditions from the prehistoric to the
historic periods. An Energy Dispersive X-Ray Florescence (EDXRF) study of
pictographs from Picture Cave in Fort Bliss, Texas is also described.
This analysis documented variation in pigments that may be associated
with different episodes of painting at the site. Chris Loendorf is a
Project Manager for the GRIC CRMP. He earned his Ph.D. and M.A. at
Arizona State University, and his B.A. at the University of Montana. He
has worked on all stages of cultural resource management projects in a
wide variety of locations from the Southwest to the Northern Plains. He
has studied Hohokam archaeology since coming to Arizona in 1989, and
began his career as a professional archaeologist in 1981. Barnaby V.
Lewis has been the Tribal Historic Preservation Officer (THPO) for the
Gila River Indian Community since February 2009. He was previously the
Cultural Resource Specialist for 10 years with the GRIC CRMP. THPO
consults with federal and state agencies concerning matters of religious
and cultural significance regarding historic properties. Mr. Lewis
supervises all aspects of cultural resource consultation in connection
with federal, state, and tribal laws including the Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Friday February 8, 2013
	“Historic Drought and Current Climate Issues” presentation by State
Climatologist Nancy J. Selover, Ph.D., sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	Noon-1 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get free
admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	Part of the Pueblo Grande Museum’s Arizona SciTech Festival Lecture
Series, which features various topics on southwest culture and
agriculture, archaeology, and current anthropological research projects.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]; to learn more about
the Arizona Scitech Festival visit azscitechfest.org.


Saturday February 9, 2013
	“Annual Fort Lowell Day Celebration” sponsored by the Old Fort Lowell
Neighborhood Association from Fort Lowell Park (2900 N. Craycroft Rd.)
westward along Fort Lowell Road to the historic San Pedro Chapel (5230 E.
Fort Lowell Rd.), Tucson*
	10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free
	This 32nd annual celebration starts at 10 a.m. with an Arizona
Territories Vintage Baseball League game between the Bisbee Black Sox and
the Tucson Sahuaros on the baseball field at Fort Lowell Park. Stay for
the triple header, if you like. While you're in the park, be sure to
visit the Fort Lowell Museum. From 12 noon to 4 p.m. enjoy the
neighborhood’s historic sites walking tour, which travels from the park
westward along Fort Lowell Road to the San Pedro Chapel, through the
historic neighborhood known as El Fuerte (The Fort). You'll find
education, food booths, music, hands-on activities, and entertainment
along the route. Highlights include cavalry drills, living history
reenactments, a regimental band concert, adobe-brick making, and docents
stationed at every historic site.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact Lynn Ratener at Tucson
telephone 520-400-3310 or [log in to unmask] or visit
www.OldFortLowellNeighborhood.org.


Saturday February 9, 2013
	“Petroglyph Discovery Hike #90454: Beverly Canyon/Javelina, South
Mountain” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary
(PGMA)**
	8 to 11 a.m. $8 ($5 for PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members)
	An experienced Pueblo Grande Museum guide will lead participants on a
three-mile, three-hour, “moderate difficulty” interpretive hike in South
Mountain Park.  Pueblo Grande Museum offers various hikes to South
Mountain Park, the Superstition Mountains located in the East Valley, and
the White Tank Regional Park in the West Valley.	** This is not an Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however, Old Pueblo members
can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount rates, and
vice-versa. Advanced registration is required by February 7 by contacting
the Pueblo Grande Museum at 602-495-0901 or
[log in to unmask]


Wednesday February 13, 2013
	“Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator”sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	2 to 2:30 p.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for PGMA
and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	Join Curator of Collections Holly Young for a “behind the scenes” tour of
the City of Phoenix’s Pueblo Grande Museum. This is an opportunity to
learn about the artifacts that are not on display on the museum and see
how museums care for their collections.  This is a first come, first
serve tour. Space is limited.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Friday February 15, 2013
	“Significance of Microfossils on the Reconstruction of Past Environments
Associated with Archaeological Sites in North America” presentation by
Dr. Manuel Palacios-Fest, sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum
Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E.
Washington St., Phoenix*
	Noon-1 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get free
admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	Part of the Pueblo Grande Museum’s Arizona SciTech Festival Lecture
Series, which features various topics on southwest culture and
agriculture, archaeology, and current anthropological research projects.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]; to learn more about
the Arizona Scitech Festival visit azscitechfest.org.


Saturday February 16, 2013
	“Desert Animals Presentation” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	10 a.m. to 12 p.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for
PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	Join Pueblo Grande Museum for a presentation by Liberty Wildlife on
desert animals.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum,
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday February 21, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “¿Que Pasa Paquimé? Recent Archaeological Research in the
Casas Grandes Region” with archaeologist Paul Minnis, Ph.D., at Dragon's
View Asian Cuisine Restaurant, 400 N. Bonita Avenue (just west of the
Santa Cruz River between St. Mary's Rd. & Congress St.), Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	Paquimé or Casas Grandes is one of the premier archaeological sites in
the U.S. Southwest/northwestern Mexico. Yet, research has lagged since
the monumental Joint Casas Grandes Project during the middle of the
twentieth century.  Fortunately, there has been a renaissance in research
during the past two decades. Our February guest speaker will discuss the
results of archaeological survey and excavation that he and Michael
Whalen have directed in the Casa Grandes region since 1989.  He will
discuss the size and character of Paquimé, its regional organization, and
its relationships with other ancient communities in the U.S. Southwest
and northwestern Mexico.
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program is Paul
Minnis, a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Oklahoma whose
archaeological research has focused on the New Mexico Mimbres and
northwestern Chihuahua-Casas Grandes regions.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday February 20. 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday February 21, 2013
	“Desert Agriculture” presentation by Jacob Butler, sponsored by the
nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum
and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
	6-7 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get free
admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	Join Pueblo Grande Museum on February 21, 2013, at 6 p.m. for a lecture
on desert agriculture. Jacob Butler, of the SRPMIC will discuss
traditional desert agriculture used by native peoples of Arizona. This
type of agriculture encompasses how the native peoples cultivated foods
in the field and managed food staples in both desert and riparian
ecosystems. Part of the Pueblo Grande Museum’s Arizona SciTech Festival
Lecture Series, which features various topics on southwest culture and
agriculture, archaeology, and current anthropological research projects.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]; to learn more about
the Arizona Scitech Festival visit azscitechfest.org.


Friday February 22, 2013
	“Park of Four Waters Tour” sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	10 to 11 a.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for PGMA and
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	The Hohokam people lived in the Salt River Area from approximately AD 450
to 1450.  They were an agricultural society, growing corn, beans, squash
and cotton.  In order to support their extensive agricultural system, the
Hohokam people constructed miles of canals in order to direct water from
the Salt River to their fields.  The Park of Four Waters tour will take
you on a tour through undeveloped, natural desert to the ruins of some of
these canal systems.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however,
Old Pueblo members can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount
rates, and vice-versa. This is a first come, first served tour. Space is
limited. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at 602-495-0901 or
[log in to unmask]


Saturday February 23, 2013
	“Arizona Archaeological Society Flintknapping Workshop” at Pueblo Grande
Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	10 a.m. to 3 p.m. $20
	Join the Phoenix Chapter of the Arizona Archaeological Society at the
Pueblo Grande Museum for the Chapter’s flintknapping workshop with Chris
Loendorf, Project Manager for the Gila River Indian Community Cultural
Resources Management Program.  Chris will demonstrate the ancient
technology of flintknapping while giving hands-on instruction to
participants.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however,
Old Pueblo members can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount
rates, and vice-versa. Class size is limited to 12 participants. To
register contact Marie Britton 480-390-3491 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday and Sunday February 23-24, 2013
	“Explore Southern Arizona Missions and More” educational tour sponsored
by the Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) departing from the Pueblo
Grande Museum, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	Departs from Pueblo Grande Museum at 8 a.m. on Saturday and returns at
approximately 6 to 6:30 p.m. Sunday. $399/person double occupancy,
$499/person single occupancy (PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
members $349/person double occupancy, $449/person single occupancy); fee
includes a $50/ person tax-deductible gift to PGMA, all admission fees,
Day 1 lunch and lodging in Green Valley, Day 2 breakfast, transportation,
guide services, guide gratuity, bottled water and snacks available on the
vehicle, and sales taxes.  Day 1 dinner and Day 2 lunch are not included.
	The Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) offers this tour of the
missions of southern Arizona.  On Day 1 there will be guided tours of
DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun in Tucson and Mission San Xavier del Bac,
with an overnight stay in Green Valley.  On Day 2, there will be a guided
tour of Tumacacori National Historical Park including a special visit to
the ruins of Guevavi and Calabazas missions, weather permitting.  The
tour will continue with a visit to the Village of Tubac “Where Art Meets
History” and a tour of Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, before
returning to Pueblo Grande Museum in Phoenix. Reservation deadline
January 25.
	** This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event, however,
Old Pueblo members can attend PGMA functions at PGMA‘s member-discount
rates, and vice-versa. For reservations online go to
www.pueblograndestore.com and click on “Tour.” For information about the
tour and accommodations contact Leonardo Gem at Across Arizona Tours,
602-233-1813 or visit www.pueblogrande.org, email [log in to unmask], or
call PGMA at 602-495-0901.


Wednesday February 27, 2013
	“Lessons from Prehistoric Culture” presentation by Robert Alling,
sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at
Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological Park, 4619 E. Washington St.,
Phoenix*
	6 to 7 p.m. Free; PGMA and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members get free
admission to the Museum for PGMA events
	Join Pueblo Grande Museum for a lecture by Robert Alling, lead curator of
our Living in the Desert: Decisions and Consequences exhibit, as he
explores long range views of sustainable living in the desert
environment. Part of the Pueblo Grande Museum’s Arizona SciTech Festival
Lecture Series, which features various topics on southwest culture and
agriculture, archaeology, and current anthropological research projects.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]; to learn more about
the Arizona Scitech Festival visit azscitechfest.org.


Wednesday, February 27, 2013
	“Behind the Scenes Tour with Curator”sponsored by the nonprofit Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary (PGMA) at Pueblo Grande Museum and Archaeological
Park, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix**
	2 to 2:30 p.m. General admission prices apply; free admission for PGMA
and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center members
	Join Curator of Collections Holly Young for a “behind the scenes” tour of
the City of Phoenix’s Pueblo Grande Museum. This is an opportunity to
learn about the artifacts that are not on display on the museum and see
how museums care for their collections.  This is a first come, first
serve tour. Space is limited.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations are needed. For details contact the Pueblo Grande Museum at
602-495-0901 or [log in to unmask]


Friday March 1-Wednesday March 6, 2013
	“A Dozen Southern New Mexico and West Texas Rock Art Sites” archaeology
education tour guided by Marc Thompson, Glenn Omundson, Bob White, and
Allen Dart, starting at Three Rivers Petroglyph site 17 miles north of
Tularosa, NM, and 28 miles south of Carrizozo, NM on US 54; and ending at
a site northwest of Lordsburg, NM.
	1 p.m. MST Friday to 4 p.m. MDT Wednesday (Daylight Saving Time goes into
effect Sunday morning at 2 a.m.) Fee $395 for the full six days of
touring ($375 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum
Auxiliary members), or $70 per day to attend tour on individual days
($65/day for Old Pueblo and PGMA members); cost includes all park entry
fees. Participants are responsible for their own transportation, meals,
and lodging.
	El Paso-area rock-art site guides Glenn Omundson and Bob White team up
with archaeologists Marc Thompson, Ph.D. (Director Emeritus, El Paso
Museum of Archaeology) and Allen Dart, RPA (tour coordinator; Executive
Director, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson) to lead this six-day
tour to twelve of the most spectacular prehistoric and historical
petroglyph and pictograph sites in southern New Mexico and West Texas.
ALL sites to be visited have multiple hundreds of rock art elements.
Tentative schedule is as follows:
•	Friday March 1, Marc will guide us to the famous Three Rivers site near
Tularosa, NM, where more than 25,000 petroglyphs have been recorded.
•	Saturday March 2, Centipede Cave petroglyphs and pictographs, Little
Cunningham Tank petroglyphs (and maybe the site’s four pictographs), and
the Mullen site petroglyphs with Glenn.
•	Sunday March 3, 6-hour tour to Hueco Tanks State Park (90+% pictographs,
less than 10% petroglyphs) with Bob.
•	Monday March 4, Alamo Mountain petroglyphs with Glenn.
•	Tuesday March 5, Jaguar Cave petroglyphs and pictographs, Story Teller
Panel petroglyphs, and a great Archaic period petroglyphs site with Glenn.
•	Wednesday March 6 (last day), Glenn leads us to the Archaic and Jornada
culture petroglyphs and trincheras features on Canador Peak, and to the
petroglyphs and pictographs in Cottonwood Canyon and the Lower Gila Box
petroglyphs northwest of Lordsburg, NM.
	The tour will be based in El Paso Friday (Day 1) through Tuesday (Day 5)
nights and will depart from a hotel there each morning on Days 2-6. On
the evening of Day 6 you can return home or stay in Lordsburg overnight. 
Hotels, camping, and other accommodations (to be arranged individually by
the tour registrants) are available in and near El Paso and Lordsburg.
	Although some sites on Days 1 and 3-5 are accessible in regular cars,
high-clearance vehicles (HCVs) and 4-wheel-drive are highly recommended.
HCVs are essential (4WD highly recommended) for Days 2 and 6, so anyone
without HCVs can tour on those days only if the registrants who do have
the HCVs can take extra riders.
	Most of the rock art is accessible via foot trails, but there will be
some bush-whacking and boulder-hopping. Bring your own picnic lunch and
water each day, and wear comfortable hiking shoes.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Friday March 1-Sunday March 31, 2013
	Arizona Archaeology and Heritage Awareness Month (AAHAM) celebration,
“Life on the Edge: Feast or Famine in Arizona’s Past” (statewide)*
	Activities are offered on numerous dates this month, many of them free.
	For the entire month of March the State Historic Preservation Office
(SHPO, a division of Arizona State Parks) is coordinating activities
throughout the state for the 30th annual celebration of Arizona
Archaeology and Heritage Awareness Month (AAHAM).  These events will
focus on current efforts to preserve our past by protecting our fragile
and non-renewable cultural resources. AAHAM combines education with
entertainment to reach both adults and children in an effort to teach
responsible stewardship of our cultural resources.  Museums, historical
societies, tribes, agencies, parks, and archaeology organizations will be
hosting events across the state; events are also planned in Arizona State
Parks as part of their interpretive programs. Proclaimed by the Governor
each year, the celebration features prehistoric and historic site tours,
exhibits, hikes, open houses, lectures, demonstrations and other
activities throughout Arizona.
	* AAHAM is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.,
although Old Pueblo offers activities to help celebrate AAHAM For a free
listing of AAHAM statewide events and activities (available in January
2013) contact the SHPO at 602-542-4174 or visit www.azstateparks.com.


Saturday March 9, 2013
	Library Presenters “What is an Archaeologist?” free children’s
presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Ginger Thompson at Pima
County Public Library Mission Branch, 3770 S. Mission Road, Tucson
	1-2 p.m. Free.
	“What Is an Archaeologist?” is a presentation designed to give children
an idea of what archaeologists do, how they do it, and how they learn
about people through their work. The presentation includes examples of
the tools archaeologists work with, real and replica artifacts, and
activities to help children experience how archaeologists interpret the
past. Presented by Tucson’s not-for-profit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center.
	For event details contact Children's Librarian Marissa Alcorta in Tucson
at 520-594-5330 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the
presentation subject matter contact Ginger Thompson at Tucson telephone
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Wednesday March 13, 2013
	“Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart, for San Tan
Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at the Queen Creek Museum, 20435
S. Old Ellsworth Road (southeast corner of Ellsworth and Queen Creek
Roads) in Queen Creek Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities
Council.*
	7:30-8:30 p.m. Free
	Many different peoples have contributed to making Arizona such a unique
and fascinating cultural place. In this program archaeologist Allen Dart
summarizes and interprets the archaeology of Arizona from the earliest
“Paleoindians” through Archaic period hunters and foragers, the
transition to true village life, and the later prehistoric archaeological
cultures (Puebloan, Mogollon, Sinagua, Hohokam, Salado, and Patayan). He
also discusses connections between archaeology and history, and provides
an overview of the Native American, European, Mexican, African, and Asian
peoples who have formed our state’s more recent history. Funding for
program provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Henry DeJonge in
Gilbert, Arizona, at 602-206-1752 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]


Saturday March 16, 2013
	"Vista del Rio Archaeology Celebration" children's activities at City of
Tucson's Vista del Rio Cultural Resource Park, 7575 E. Desert Arbors St.
(at Dos Hombres Road), Tucson
 	9 a.m-3 p.m. Free.
 	This Old Pueblo Archaeology Center program, sponsored by Vista del Rio
Residents' Association, is designed to educate children, especially ages
6 to 12, about the ancient Hohokam Indians who lived at Tucson's Vista
del Rio archaeological site and elsewhere in southern Arizona. Includes
hands-on activities including making pottery artifacts to take home,
grinding corn using an ancient metate and mano, and learning to play
traditional Native American games, plus demonstrations of traditional
Native American pottery-making and arrowhead-making crafts. The hands-on
activities, demonstrations, and informational materials will be along
the trails through the Vista del Rio Cultural Park where part of an
ancient Hohokam Indian village is preserved.
	No reservations needed. For more information contact Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center in Tucson at 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday March 16, 2013
	“Arizona Archaeology Expo” at the historic Horseshoe Ranch on Agua Fria
National Monument, 2260 East Bloody Basin Road, Mayer, Arizona*
	9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free
	The Arizona Archaeology Expo is the featured event for Arizona
Archaeology and Heritage Awareness Month. This year’s Expo offers a
special opportunity to learn more about Arizona archaeology and why it is
important to preserve archaeological sites and historic places; what
archaeologists, historians, and tribal members do in their jobs.  The
Expo features archaeology-related hands-on activities, craft
demonstrations, and other fun and educational events. Displays by
archaeological and historical organizations, museums, Native American
tribes, state and federal agencies, and others will allow you to
participate as archaeologists might in their research today, or make
crafts and tools that teach how prehistoric Native Americans and other
early inhabitants survived in the Southwest.  Cultural and historical
demonstrators, talks by archaeologists, and interactive activities will
help make the past come alive, and tours of local rock art and pueblo
archaeological sites will be offered. Free-prize raffles will occur
throughout the day.
	Directions from Interstate 17 Exit 269 (Bloody Basin Road, just south of
Cordes Junction): Drive east on Bloody Basin Road approximately 5 miles
to a "Y" in the road where there is a sign for the Horseshoe Ranch. Turn
left onto the Ranch entrance road and continue east across the Agua Fria
River to the Ranch buildings.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For more
detailed information, contact Kris Dobschuetz in Phoenix at 602-542-7141
or [log in to unmask]


Thursday March 21, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “The Zuni Region across the Lost Century: AD 1450-1540”
with archaeologist Matt Peeples, Ph.D., at Cody's Beef ‘N Beans
Steakhouse, 2708 E. Fort Lowell Rd., Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	The period between A.D. 1450 and the arrival of Coronado in 1540 has
often been depicted as a “lost century” in the Southwest. During this
period, most of the region saw a substantial decline in population, large
scale population movements, and rapid changes in the organization of the
communities that remained. The Zuni region of west-central New Mexico is
one of only a few places in the northern Southwest where large
agricultural villages that were first constructed during the late
prehistoric period continued to be occupied through the “lost century”
and into the historic period.  The construction of the latest prehistoric
Zuni towns in the late 14th and early 15th centuries was accompanied by
major changes in architecture, cooking technology, ceramic design, and
burial practices. These changes suggest the Zuni region was a destination
for migrants from some of the areas to the south that were emptying out
at this time. In this month’s presentation our guest speaker will
summarize several lines of archaeological and biological evidence to
explore the origins, timing, and consequences of immigration into the
Zuni region, and the establishment of the communities encountered by the
Spanish explorers de Niza and Coronado at contact.
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program is Matt
Peeples, an archaeologist specializing in the Zuni-Cibola and Mimbres
regions of the U.S. Southwest.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday March 20. 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Saturday March 23, 2013
	“Art for Archaeology Featuring Dr. Donald C. Johanson” presentation and
fundraising auctions, to benefit the nonprofit Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, at the Arizona State Museum, on the University of Arizona campus
at the northeast corner of University Blvd. and Park Avenue, Tucson
	6 to 9 p.m. Tickets $75 each or 2 for $125
	Dr. Donald C. Johanson will be the guest presenter at this gala event to
raise funds for the nonprofit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s education
programs. The evening’s program offers the opportunity to meet with Dr.
Johanson and hear him discuss our human ancestry, and to support Old
Pueblo’s education programs by contributing an entry fee and by bidding
on beautiful southwestern ethnic arts and crafts and western U.S.-themed
art donated by famous artists. Donald Johanson is the anthropologist who
discovered the 3.2-million-year-old “Lucy” australopithecine skeleton in
Ethiopia, the author of “Lucy: The Beginnings of Human Kind,” the
Founding Director of the Institute of Human Origins, and the Virginia M.
Ullman Chair in Human Origins Professor in the School of Human Evolution
and Social Change at Arizona State University. Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center's mission is to educate children and adults to understand and
appreciate archaeology and other cultures, to foster the preservation of
archaeological and historical sites, and to develop a lifelong concern
for the importance of nonrenewable resources and traditional cultures.
	Reservations required: Tickets available at www.oldpueblo.org after
January 15, or contact Old Pueblo Archaeology Center at 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]


Thursday April 18, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “The Fiftieth Anniversary of Research at Grasshopper
Pueblo, 1963-2013” with Professor J. Jefferson Reid at Dragon’s View
Asian Cuisine, 400 N. Bonita Avenue (just west of the Santa Cruz River
between St. Mary's Rd. & Congress St.), Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	****[Description to be provided later.]
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program is ****TBA.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday April 17. 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Sunday-Friday May 26-31, 2013
	“Ancient Hands Around the World” 2013 International Rock Art Congress,
hosted by the American Rock Art Research Association (ARARA), at the
Marriott Pyramid North, 5151 San Francisco Road NE, Albuquerque*
	All 5 days $150 per person, $110 for spouse/partner, $50 for student;
daily rate $50; banquet $45
	Scientists, researchers, educators, conservators, and all interested
people are invited to the XVII International Congress of the
International Federation of Rock Art Organizations (IFRAO) in conjunction
with the ARARA 2013 Conference. The theme "Ancient Hands Around the
World" is designed to bring together the diverse interests of the many
people who study and work to conserve pictographs and petroglyphs in all
countries; depictions of hands are found in rock art of all cultures and
in all time periods, and their symbolism portrays the conference goal of
assembling people from across the globe to share their experiences and
knowledge. Featured opening ceremonies speaker is Dr. Jean Clottes, Past
IFRAO President and Retired General Inspector for Archaeology and
Scientific Advisor for Prehistoric Rock Art at the French Ministry of
Culture, presenting his talk “From Cave Art to IFRAO.” Field trips will
provide opportunities for all attendees to learn about the rock art of
central New Mexico. The Congress will have four days of oral and poster
presentations in sessions organized by topics, and Wednesday will be
devoted to field trips for all attendees. Other special cultural events
are planned throughout the week including evening lectures open to the
public, dances by local Pueblo groups, and vendor offerings of
rock-art-related merchandise.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.
Registration is required. For more information visit ****
paleoamericanodyssey.com or contact the Center for the Study of the First
Americans at 979-845-4046 or [log in to unmask]
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.
Registration is required. For more information or to register, visit
www.arara.org/2013_ifrao_conference.html or www.ifrao2013.org.


**** A Friday-Tuesday period in June 2013
	"Mimbres Ruins, Rock Art, and Museums of Southern New Mexico" archaeology
education tour with archaeologist Allen Dart, sponsored by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center. Drive your own vehicle and meet tour in Silver City,
NM. Actual touring begins Saturday and continues through Tuesday.
	Fee ****TBA (Discounts available for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members; participants are responsible for
their own transportation, meals, and lodging.
	Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart leads this tour to
Classic Mimbres and Early Mogollon village archaeological sites,
spectacular petroglyph and pictograph sites, and museum displays with
probably the finest Mimbres Puebloan pottery collections in the world,
all in southwestern New Mexico's Silver City, Mimbres, and Deming areas.
Places tentatively to be visited include the original Mogollon Village
and Harris sites excavated by archaeologist Emil W. Haury; sites in the
Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument and vicinity; Classic Mimbres
sites (Cottonwood Park, Galaz, Gattons Park, Lake Roberts Vista,
Mattocks, Old Town, and Woodrow); the Pictograph Canyon Apache and
Mogollon pictographs area; the Frying Pan Canyon and Pony Hills
petroglyph sites; and the Western New Mexico University Museum. The tour
will be based in Silver City and depart from a hotel there each morning.
Hotels, camping, and other accommodations for those who wish to arrange
their own lodging and transport are available in and near Silver City.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Wednesday-Friday June 12-14, 2013
	“Making Preservation Relevant: The Past in Future Tense” Arizona Historic
Preservation Conference at the Hilton Phoenix East/Mesa, 1011 W. Holmes
Avenue, Mesa, Arizona*
	Times TBA. Fee required to register
	For the first time, the Historic Preservation Conference is coming to the
beautiful city of Mesa where great developments in preservation are
underway.  We are anticipating the greatest number of sponsors and
financial partners in the history of the conference in 2013.  The growth
and sustainability of this program, now in its 11th year, depends upon
many partnering organizations, municipalities, non-profits, historic
homeowner associations, museums, archives, archaeologists, city planners,
architects, and countless others.  This is the largest and most
consistent historic preservation conference in the Southwest.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.
Registration is required. For more information or to register, contact
Dave Ryder, Veer Consulting, at 602-568-6277 or
[log in to unmask]


Thursday September 26-Monday September 30, 2013
	“Chaco Canyon, Aztec, and Salmon Great Pueblos and Other Archaeological
Sites” educational tour with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, sponsored by
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center. Drive your own vehicle and meet tour in
Gallup, NM, on Thursday; actual touring begins Friday and continues
through Sunday, with Monday reserved for return trip home
	Fee $195 for the full three days of touring ($175 for Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members), or $70
per day to attend tour on individual days ($60/day for Old Pueblo and
PGMA members). Participants are responsible for their own transportation,
meals, and lodging.
	The archaeological sites in Chaco Canyon are some of the most famous, yet
enigmatic, sites in the Southwest. A World Heritage Site, Chaco attracts
thousands of visitors each year, yet most people see only sand, mud, rock
walls, and a treeless desolate landscape. Old Pueblo’s intensive five-day
tour will take you beyond the simple brochures and photo-ops to explore
the multiple contexts of the people who created these magnificent
structures. We not only will examine sites within Chaco Canyon, but also
will visit outlier sites to the north and, time permitting, to the south
as well. This tour will be led by archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, Ph.D.,
is the Agnese N. Haury Endowed Chair of Archaeological Dendrochronology
at the University of Arizona’s Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. A native
southwesterner, he has 30+ years experience in the archaeology and
history of the Southwest and in guiding tours to archaeological sites.
TRIP ITINERARY: THURSDAY DAY 1: Travel; meet at El Rancho Motel in
Gallup, NM (www.elranchohotel.com). FRIDAY DAY 2: Drive from Gallup to
the South entrance to Chaco Canyon via Twin Lakes and Crownpoint (high
clearance vehicle recommended); tour Great House sites on north side of
the Canyon; travel to Farmington, NM, via the North Chaco road, US 550,
and US 64, stay at the Red Lion Hotel (700 Scott Ave.). SATURDAY DAY 3: 
Morning tour of Salmon Ruins; afternoon tour of Aztec Ruins; return to
Farmington to stay in Red Lion overnight. SUNDAY DAY 4:  Leave at 8 a.m.
for Chaco Canyon via US 64, US550, and north entrance to the canyon; tour
Small House sites and Casa Rinconada; depart for Gallup via South
entrance to Canyon, NM  371 past Crownpoint to Thoreau; tif time allows
we will also take a side trip to Casamero Ruins near Prewitt; stay in El
Rancho Motel, Gallup. MONDAY DAY 5: Check out and return home. Other
hotels, camping, and other accommodations for those who wish to arrange
their own lodging are available in and near Farmington and Gallup;
camping also is available in Chaco Canyon, first come, first served.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Wednesday-Saturday October 16-19, 2013
	“The Paleoamerican Odyssey Conference” at the Santa Fe Community
Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy Street, Santa Fe*
	Wednesday evening (registration) through 5 p.m. Saturday. $225 adult,
$125 student, $75 banquet
       Come explore the mystery and saga of the first people to colonize
the Americas during the last Ice Age, during this historic
conference for everyone interested in archaeology – professional
and avocational archaeologists, Quaternary scientists, students,
and the general public. Leading experts in the field of “First
Americans archaeology” will present and discuss the evidence for
the Ice Age colonization of the Americas.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.
Registration is required. For more information visit
paleoamericanodyssey.com or contact the Center for the Study of the First
Americans at 979-845-4046 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday October 17, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “Carbon 14 Dating, from the Earliest Dog to the World's
Most Mysterious Manuscript” with Professor Greg Hodgins, **** at a Tucson
restaurant to be announced
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	****[Description to be provided later.]
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. the day before the dinner date.
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday November 21, 2013
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “Archaeological Resource Crime” with Bureau of Indian
Affairs Regional Archaeologist Garry J. Cantley, **** at a Tucson
restaurant to be announced
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	Garry Cantley has been an archaeologist with the BIA since 1992. One of
his focuses is the prevention of cultural resources looting.  In this
month’s program he will show photographs of  looted archaeological sites
and discuss strategies for discouraging this practice.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit
Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. The restaurant needs advance notice to
schedule staff and must limit seating to comply with the fire code, so
reservations are due by 5 p.m. the day before the dinner date.
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.

# # #


	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s mission is to educate children and adults
to understand and appreciate archaeology and other cultures, to foster
the preservation of archaeological and historical sites, and to develop a
lifelong concern for the importance of nonrenewable resources and
traditional cultures. Old Pueblo is recognized as a 501(c)(3)
not-for-profit organization under the U.S. tax code, therefore donations
and Old Pueblo membership fees are tax-deductible up to amounts allowed
by the Internal Revenue Service.

	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
would become a member so you can provide more support for our education
and research programs and receive membership benefits. You can become a
member by going to Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s
http://www.oldpueblo.org/member.html web page, scrolling to the bottom of
that page, and following the instructions for using our secure online
membership form or our printable Enrollment/Subscription form.

	Membership fees, and donations, also can be made using cash or check.
Checks may be made payable to “OPAC” and mailed to Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577. (Please do not send cash
through the mail.) You can also donate using your Visa, MasterCard, or
Discover credit card, either by calling Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or by
clicking on “Donation Form” at Old Pueblo’s secure
www.oldpueblo.org/donate.html web page.

	All of us at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center appreciate your support!


Regards,

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

# # #

	Disclosure: Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's Executive Director Allen Dart
volunteers his time to Old Pueblo. Mr. Dart works full-time as a cultural
resources specialist for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
in Arizona. Views expressed in communications from Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center do not necessarily represent views of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture or of the United States.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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