HISTARCH Archives

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

HISTARCH@COMMUNITY.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Allen Dart <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 5 Jun 2011 12:02:02 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (1042 lines)
For Immediate Release

Included in this announcement:

(1) Special Awards Being Presented this Month
(2) Apology for Rescheduled Programs
(3) Summary of Upcoming Presentations, Classes, Tours, and Other Activities
(4) Details on Upcoming Activities


(1) SPECIAL AWARDS BEING PRESENTED THIS MONTH

Old Pueblo Archaeology Center offers our congratulations to several
organizations and persons who have been selected to receive awards at the
annual Arizona Historic Preservation Conference later this month. The
Governor’s Archaeology Advisory Commission (GAAC) Awards in Public
Archaeology have been presented since 1996 in several categories, to
individuals and programs that have contributed significantly to the
protection and preservation of, and education about, Arizona’s
nonrenewable archaeological resources. This year’s GAAC award categories
and recipients are:

	Professional Archaeologist: Scott Wood
	Avocational Archaeologist: Cherie Freeman
	Site Stewards: Roger and Lesley McPeek
	Lifetime Achievement: Raymond H. Thompson, Ph.D.
	Tribe: The Hopi Tribe
	Government Agency: Kim Savage and the Archaeological Research Institute
	Program, Private Sector: The Redemptorist Society of Arizona

Also at this year’s conference, the Governor's Heritage Preservation Honor
Award for Lifetime Achievement is being presented to archaeologist John
Madsen, who just recently retired from the Arizona State Museum. Since
1982, the Arizona Preservation Foundation and Arizona State Historic
Preservation Office/Arizona State Parks have collaborated to present the
Governor’s Heritage Preservation Honor Awards to recognize people,
organizations, and projects that represent outstanding achievements in
preserving Arizona’s prehistoric and historic resources.

We are especially gratified that The Redemptorist Society of Arizona is
this year’s recipient of the GAAC Award in Public Archaeology in the
Program, Private Sector category. Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
several others nominated the Society for the award this year for its
efforts to preserve and protect significant cultural resources on its
properties in Pima County, Arizona, and for its efforts to educate the
public and add to scientific knowledge about these heritage resources.
Since 1967, the Redemptorist Society has purchased several parcels of land
along Picture Rocks Road northwest of Tucson, to establish the religious
retreat facilities now known as the Picture Rocks Redemptorist Renewal
Center and the Desert House of Prayer. The parcel on which the Picture
Rocks Center was constructed encompasses the Picture Rocks petroglyphs
archaeological site, one of the Tucson area’s most spectacular arrays of
Hohokam pecked rock symbols. Ever since acquiring the property, the
Redemptorists have allowed free public access to the petroglyphs for
visitation, education, and meditation, and since at least the mid 1980s
they also have had signs posted at the site to direct visitors to the
petroglyphs, and to discourage vandalism and climbing on the rocks. The
Society also has given Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pima Community
College permission to conduct guided tours to the petroglyphs site,
allowing archaeologists to explain to visitors the importance of this
archaeological site and others in Arizona, and encourage people to
preserve and protect our state’s heritage resources. The Society is now
supporting Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s effort to nominate the Picture
Rocks petroglyphs and related archaeological sites on its properties and
others (for example, in Saguaro National Park) to the National Register of
Historic Places.


(2) APOLOGY FOR RESCHEDULED PROGRAMS

As many of you know, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center had to cancel our
"Third Thursday Food for Thought" dinner and presentation by archaeologist
Henry D. Wallace that was scheduled for Thursday May 19 in Oro Valley,
Arizona,  due to last-minute difficulties that we had with the restaurant
where the program was scheduled. Mr. Wallace has agreed to reschedule his
presentation, "The Ballcourt Society and the Ritual Creation of Hohokam
Culture," to September 15, 2011, which is the regular September date for
Old Pueblo's "Third Thursday Food for Thought" program.

Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's "Prehistory of the Southwest" class that
originally was scheduled for Tuesday evenings July 5-September 6 is being
postponed two weeks due to a schedule conflict for the instructor. The
revised dates for this class are Tuesday evenings July 19 through
September 20, 2011.

We apologize for any inconveniences that these schedule revisions may have
caused anyone. Old Pueblo Archaeology Center values your support and your
interest in our programs.


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

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

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

June 7, 2011 Library Presenters free presentation:  “Set in Stone but Not
in Meaning: Southwestern Indian  Rock Art” by archaeologist Allen Dart 
for Pima County Public Library’s Murphy-Wilmot Branch, Tucson

June 16, 2011 “Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock
Art” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Arizona
Archaeological Society Yavapai Chapter at Smoki Museum, Prescott, Arizona*

June 16-18, 2011 Biennial Conference on Archaeoastronomy of the American
Southwest at the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque*

June 18, 2011 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart, for Rim Country Chapter, Arizona
Archaeological Society, in Payson, Arizona*

June 22, 2011 "Lifestyle of the Hohokam"  free children’s presentation for
Caviglia-Arivaca Branch Summer Reading Program, Pima County Public
Library, at Arivaca Community Center, Arivaca, Arizona*

June 22-24, 2011 “Valuing Historic Perspectives” Arizona Historic
Preservation Conference at the University Park Marriott Hotel in Tucson*

June 24-28, 2011 "Mimbres Ruins, Rock Art,  and Museums of Southern New
Mexico"  educational tour with archaeologist Allen Dart, sponsored by Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center

June 30, 2011 Library Presenters free presentation: “Food for Thought:
Arts and Culture  of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians”  with
archaeologist Allen Dart, at Tucson Main Library*

July 2, 2011 Library Presenters free presentation: "Southwestern Rock
Calendars & Ancient Time Pieces" with archaeologist Allen Dart  at Pima
County  Public Library, Wheeler Taft Abbett Sr. Branch, Marana, Arizona*

[The "Prehistory of the Southwest" class that originally was scheduled for
July 5-September 6 has been rescheduled to July 19-September 20 – See
updated listings below.]

July 15, 2011 Library Presenters  free children’s presentation "What is an
Archaeologist?" at Pima County Public Library, Joyner-Green Valley Branch,
Green Valley, Arizona*

July 19-September 20, 2011 Tuesdays "Prehistory of the Southwest" class
with archaeologist Allen Dart at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center

July 20, 2011 Library Presenters free presentation: “Set in Stone but Not
in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art” by archaeologist Allen Dart for
Pima County Public Library - Mission Branch, Tucson*

August 6, 2011 “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation
byarchaeologist Allen Dart for Pima County Natural Resources Parks and
Recreation at Brandi Fenton Memorial Park, Tucson*

August 11-14, 2011  Pecos Archaeological Conference at Mile-and-a-Half
Lake Large Group Campsite in the Kaibab National Forest near Jacob Lake,
Arizona*

September 15, 2011 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food
for Thought” dinner & free presentation, Tucson: “The Ballcourt Society
and the Ritual Creation of Hohokam Culture” with archaeologist Henry D.
Wallace (rescheduled from May 19)

Sept. 17, Oct. 22, Nov. 19, & Dec. 17, 2011 plus 5 Saturdays between Jan.
7 & May 19, 2012 “Cultural Resources Survey Techniques and Practice” 60-hr
class at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center & at fieldwork areas within 70
miles of Tucson

September 23, 2011 “Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Fall
Equinox Archaeological Sites”  guided tour with archaeologist Allen Dart, 
northwest Tucson metro area

October 4-December 6, 2011 Tuesdays "Prehistory of the Southwest: The
Hohokam Culture  of Southern Arizona" class with archaeologist Allen Dart 
at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center

October 13, 2011 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces”
free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Arizona Archaeological
Society Phoenix Chapter at Pueblo Grande Museum, Phoenix*

October 20, 2011 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s  “Third Thursday Food for
Thought”  dinner & free presentation, Tucson: (Guest speaker & Tucson
restaurant to be announced)

November 12, 2011 "Deer Valley & Spur Cross Ranch Petroglyphs & Pueblo
Ruins”  guided archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen
Dart, Phoenix area

November 17, 2011 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner & free presentation, Tucson: “Soil Changes in Ancient
Agricultural Systems of the American Southwest” with archaeologist Jeffrey
Homburg, Ph.D.

December 3, 2011 “White Tank Mountains –  Petroglyphs of Waterfall Canyon
& Mesquite Canyon” guided archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen
and Allen Dart, Waddell-Buckeye-Goodyear area, Arizona

December 15, 2011 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s  “Third Thursday Food
for Thought”  dinner & free presentation, Tucson: (Guest speaker & Tucson
restaurant to be announced)

December 22, 2011 “Winter Solstice Tour  of Los Morteros and Picture Rocks
Petroglyphs Archaeological Sites” with archaeologist Allen Dart, northwest
Tucson metro area

January 10, 2012 “Arts and Culture of  Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam
Indians” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Agua Fria
Chapter,  Ariz. Archaeological Society, at Glendale Public Library,
Glendale*

January 26, 2012 “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart  for Verde Valley Chapter, Arizona
Archaeological Society, at Sedona Public Library, Sedona, Arizona*

March 14, 2012 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Desert Foothills Chapter,
Arizona Archaeological Society, Cave Creek, Arizona*


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


(4) 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 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


Tuesday June 7, 2011
	Library Presenters free presentation: “Set in Stone but Not in Meaning:
Southwestern Indian Rock Art” by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's
director, archaeologist Allen Dart, for Pima County Public Library at
Murphy-Wilmot Branch Library, 530 N. Wilmot Rd. (Wilmot and Fifth St.),
Tucson
	1:30 to 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. Sponsored by the Pima County Public Library.
	For event details contact Librarian Karen Barber in Tucson at
520-594-5420 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the activity
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 June 16, 2011
	“Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art” free
presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist
Allen Dart, for Arizona Archaeological Society Yavapai Chapter at the
Smoki Museum - Pueblo Building, 147 N. Arizona St., Prescott, Arizona.
Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	7 to 8:30 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 Paul Long in Prescott
at 928-445-1843 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-Saturday June 16-18, 2011
	Biennial Conference on Archaeoastronomy of the American Southwest (CAASW)
at the Hibben Center, Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New
Mexico, Albuquerque
	$75/person for 3 days. Make check or money order payable to CAASW 2011
Conference and mail to NMAC, PO Box 25691, Albuquerque NM 87125
	The CAASW’s purpose is to advance the study and practice of
archaeoastronomy of the American Southwest by recognizing significant
contributions to knowledge and the importance of research, professional
standards and excellence in the study of archaeoastronomy, effective
dissemination and presentation of archaeoastronomical knowledge, and
innovation and originality of approach. Besides including presentation of
papers on various aspects of archaeoastronomy, CAASW 2011 will include an
outreach lecture by Dr. Edward C. Krupp, director of the Griffith
Observatory in Los Angeles, on the evening of June 16. Most of the papers
are expected to address the following themes:
	> Mesoamerican and South American connections to the Southwest: Did
cosmologies transport?
	> Intervisibility:Do shrine-to-shrine or structure-to-structure
visibility constraints extend (or relate) to archaeoastronomy? Is
astronomy used to define azimuth?
	> Is there anything we can learn about cosmologies from languages and
cultures of the American Southwest?
	> Insights into ceremonial practice from rock art and archaeoastronomy
	> What percentage of a society’s effort was applied to astronomical
building or astronomical practices?
	> Has astronomy influenced where people settled and features of that
settlement?
	> Is there an astronomy of navigation in the historic and prehistoric
Southwest?
	> Theory of archaeoastronomy:What criteria are available to evaluate if
results are meaningful?
	> How should a researcher construct a research design?
	> How should academics and public institutions evaluate research?
	> Resources, tools and methods: What is available for southwestern
archaeoastronomy?
	This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For more
information visit www.caasw.org/2011Conference.html or contact the
conference administrator at [log in to unmask] or Conference on
Archaeoastronomy of the American Southwest, PO Box 20578, Sedona, AZ
86341


Saturday June 18, 2011
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
for Rim Country Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, monthly meeting
at Church of the Holy Nativity, 1414 Easy Street, Payson, Arizona.
Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	10-11:30 a.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 the petroglyphs at Picture Rocks, the architecture of the
"Great House" at Arizona's Casa Grande Ruins, and other archaeological
evidence of ancient astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and interprets
how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native American
rituals. Funding for this program is being 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]


Wednesday June 22, 2011
	Library Presenters free children’s presentation: "Lifestyle of the
Hohokam" for the Pima County Public Library, Caviglia-Arivaca Branch at
the Arivaca Community Center, 16012 W. Universal Ranch Rd. (at Mesquite
Rd.), Arivaca, Arizona.
	1 to 2 p.m. Free.
	The “Lifestyle of the Hohokam” presentation is designed to give children
an idea of how the ancient Hohokam lived and how some aspects of everyday
life have changed and others have stayed the same. The program includes
real and replica artifacts, and numerous color illustrations to help
children experience how the prehistoric Native Americans of southern
Arizona lived and to appreciate the arts they created. Presented by
Tucson’s not-for-profit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center.
	Directions from Tucson: Go south on I-19 towards Nogales. Take Exit 48 at
Arivaca Road/Amado. Turn right off the freeway, and right again at the
frontage road stop sign. Go one block. Turn left between the Cow Palace
Restaurant and the Amado Minimarket. You should now be on Arivaca Road.
Travel west on Arivaca Road about 22 miles. Turn left (east) on Universal
Ranch Rd. The Arivaca Community Center is about a half mile, just past
the Fire Department. Address is 16012 W. Universal Ranch Rd., on the
south side of the road at Mesquite Rd. Community Center phone is
520-398-3010.
	For event details contact Librarian Mary Kasulaitis in Arivaca at
520-594-5239 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-Friday June 22-24, 2011
	Ninth Annual Arizona Historic Preservation Conference at the University
Park Marriott Hotel in Tucson.
	Fees to be announced. Early registration Jan. 10-March 1; regular
registration March 2-June 10; late & on-site registration June 11-22
	This year’s conference, on the theme of “Valuing Historic Perspectives”
is to bring together preservationists from around the state to exchange
ideas and success stories, to share perspectives and solutions to
preservation issues and to foster cooperation between the diverse Arizona
preservation communities. Keynote presentations include “Folk Baroque:
The Art & Architecture of San Xavier del Bac” by historic architect Bob
Vint and“Historic Preservation: An English Perspective” by Ian George,
Inspector of Ancient Monuments, English Heritage, UK.
	This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For more
information visit www.azpreservation.com or contact Dave Ryder at Veer
Consulting in Scottsdale at 602-568-6277 or [log in to unmask]


Friday June 24-Tuesday June 28, 2011
	**** TOUR IS FULL. We have created a waiting list in case we have
cancellations. ****
	"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 $195 for the full four-day tour ($175 for Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members), or $50 per day to
attend tour on individual days ($45/day for Old Pueblo and PGMA 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 a museum with probably
the finest Mimbres Puebloan pottery collection 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
(Beauregard-Montezuma, Cottonwood, Gattons Park, Lake Roberts Vista,
Mattocks, Old Town, and Woodrow); 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]
	**** 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 June 30, 2011
	Library Presenters free presentation: “Food for Thought: Arts and Culture
of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” with archaeologist Allen
Dart, at Joel D. Valdez Main Library, 101 N. Stone Ave., Tucson
	12-1 p.m. Free
	The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from
the sixth through fifteenth centuries. Hohokam artifacts, architecture,
and other material culture provide archaeologists with clues for
identifying where the Hohokam lived, for interpreting how they adapted to
the Sonoran Desert for centuries, and explaining why the Hohokam culture
mysteriously disappeared. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart
illustrates the material culture of the Hohokam and presents possible
interpretations about their relationships to the natural world, their
time reckoning, religious practices, beliefs, and deities, and possible
reasons for the eventual demise of their way of life. The program
features slides of Hohokam artifacts, rock art, and other cultural
features, a display of authentic prehistoric artifacts, and recommended
readings for more information about the Hohokam. Sponsored by the Pima
County Public Library.
	 For event details contact Librarian Matt Landon at Tucson telephone no.
520-594-5500 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the activity
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.


Saturday July 2, 2011
	Library Presenters free presentation: "Southwestern Rock Calendars and
Ancient Time Pieces" with archaeologist Allen Dart, at Pima County Public
Library, Wheeler Taft Abbett Sr. Branch, 7800 N. Schisler Drive in
Marana, Arizona (just south of Cortaro Road & west of I-10)
	2 to 3 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 the petroglyphs at Picture Rocks, the architecture of the
"Great House" at Arizona's Casa Grande Ruins, and other archaeological
evidence of ancient astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and interprets
how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native American
rituals. Sponsored by the Pima County Public Library.
	For event details contact Librarian April Gering in Marana at
520-594-5203 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the activity
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.


Tuesdays July 5-September 6, 2011
	The "Prehistory of the Southwest" class that originally was scheduled for
July 5-September 6 has been rescheduled to July 19-September 20. Please
see the updated listing below.


Friday July 15, 2011
	Library Presenters free children’s presentation by Sherry Eisler, Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center: "What is an Archaeologist?" at the Pima County
Public Library, Joyner-Green Valley Branch Library, 601 N. La Canada
Drive, Green Valley, Arizona
	2-3 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 Michelle Creston in Green
Valley at 520-594-5295 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.


Tuesdays July 19 through September 20, 2011
	(Rescheduled from July 5-September 6)
	"Prehistory of the Southwest" class with archaeologist Allen Dart at Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street at Tucson Unified School
District’s Ajo Service Center, just west of La Cholla Blvd., ½-mile north
of John F. Kennedy Park, Tucson.
	6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Tuesday July 19 through Sept. 20, 2011 Fee $50
($40 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary
members), not counting cost of the recommended text. Minimum enrollment
8, maximum 32.
	A series of 10 "Prehistory of the Southwest" class sessions will be
offered by archaeologist Allen Dart in this Tuesday series of "Prehistory
of the Southwest" is an introductory course in the study of the American
Southwest, developed by the Arizona Archaeological Society to provide a
basic overview of this region's archaeology and cultures. The class
includes discussions of cultural sequences, dating systems, subsistence
strategies, development of urbanization, abandonments of different areas
at different times, and the general characteristics of major cultural
groups that have lived in the Southwest over the past 13,000-plus years.
Besides offering an up-to-date synthesis of Southwestern prehistory for
anyone interested in the archaeology of the Southwest, the class can be
used as prerequisite for all other courses offered to members of the
Arizona Archaeological Society (AAS) enrolled in or interested in
enrolling in the AAS Certification Program.
	Reservations required, registration deadline June 28: 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask] to register or for more information.
	**** 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 July 20, 2011
	Library Presenters free presentation: “Set in Stone but Not in Meaning:
Southwestern Indian Rock Art” by archaeologist Allen Dart for Pima County
Public Library - Mission Branch, 3770 S. Mission Road, Tucson
	1:30 to 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. Sponsored by the Pima County Public Library.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Librarian Lupita
Guerrero in Tucson at 520-594-5325 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.


Saturday August 6, 2011
	Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart, for Pima County
Natural Resources Parks and Recreation at Brandi Fenton Memorial Park,
3482 E. River Road, Tucson. Cosponsored by Arizona Humanities Council.
	10-11 a.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 Meg Quinn at Tucson
telephone 520-615-7855 ext 6 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-Sunday August 11-14, 2011
	2011 Pecos Archaeological Conference is being held on August 11-14 at
"Mile-And-A-Half Lake" Large Group Campsite in the Kaibab National Forest
near Jacob Lake, Arizona.
	Thursday evening conference registration and reception; Friday and
Saturday field reports and symposium on recent archaeological research;
Sunday archaeological site tours
	Registration fee $40 before July 1, 2011, thereafter $45 ($32 per student
any time); camping at the conference site $5/night; Saturday evening
dinner & dance $20 per person
	This annual conference, begun in 1927, brings southwestern professional
and avocational archaeologists, the general public, and media
organizations together under open skies at a different place in the
Southwest every year, to share findings of recent archaeological research
and to discuss problems of the field and challenges of the profession.
Open to all, the Pecos Conference is an important opportunity for
students and others interested in archaeology and prehistory to meet with
professional archaeologists one-on-one to learn about the profession,
gain access to resources and to new research opportunities, and test new
methods and theories related to archaeology. This year’s conference site
is 8 miles south of Jacob Lake and 2.5 miles west of Arizona State Route
67 on Forest Road 212. Jacob Lake is at the intersection of US89A and
SR67; FR 212 is a gravel, all-weather road. For more information visit
www.swanet.org/2010_pecos_conference/index.html or contact 2011
Conference Chair David Purcell at [log in to unmask]


Thursday September 15, 2011 [Rescheduled from May 19, 2011]
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: "The Ballcourt Society and the Ritual Creation of Hohokam
Culture" with archaeologist Henry D. Wallace at ****[ restaurant to be
announced]**** , Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	A host of major changes in pottery decoration, as well as new ceremonies,
ritual architecture, and ballcourts with raised embankments, all showed
up in southern Arizona around A.D. 800. Just within the span of a
generation, these changes appear to have affected an ethnically diverse
range of populations all across southern and central Arizona. Our speaker
this month will discuss how this may have come about through a
revitalization movement and the creation of social networks that bound
the region together with a common ideology and ritual framework,
fostering economic interrelationships and population growth.
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program, Henry D.
Wallace, is a Senior Research Archaeologist at Desert Archaeology, Inc.
in Tucson. He has 30 years of archaeological experience in Mexico, Costa
Rica, and especially southern and central Arizona, and is the author of
“Hohokam Beginnings” in the recent volume The Hohokam Millennium edited
by Suzanne and Paul Fish.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
general 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 September 14.
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.


Saturdays Sept. 17, Oct. 22, Nov. 19, & Dec. 17, 2011
plus five Saturdays TBA between Jan. 7 & May 19, 2012
	“Cultural Resources Survey Techniques and Practice” 60-hour class with
Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart; classroom sessions (20
hours) at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street at Tucson
Unified School District’s Ajo Service Center, just west of La Cholla
Blvd., ½-mile north of John F. Kennedy Park, Tucson; fieldwork sessions
(40 hours) in undeveloped areas within 70 miles of Tucson.
	Classroom sessions 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. each Saturday September 17,
October 22, November 19, and December 17, 2011; plus any five of the
following ten 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday fieldwork sessions:  Jan. 7,
Jan. 21, Feb. 4, Feb. 18, March 3, March 17, April 7, April 21, May 5,
and May 19, 2012 (sign up in advance, first come first served).
	Thanks to an anticipated grant from Joseph and Mary Cacioppo Foundation
we expect to be able to offer this class at a reduced-rate fee of only
$60 per person. Under our ageement for the grant, persons who register
for this class must also maintain at least a $40-per-year membership with
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center or Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary during
the full class term. Maximum enrollment is 12 persons.
	Cultural resources survey is the process of initial discovery,
evaluation, determination of location, and preliminary mapping and
recording of archaeological sites. Accordingly, this course includes four
5-hour classroom sessions and five 8-hour fieldwork sessions led by Allen
Dart, a Registered Professional Archaeologist (see www.rpanet.org), to
teach participants how different types of surveys are organized, to
provide training and experience in recognizing and evaluating
archaeological sites, and to teach basic orienteering, site recording,
and mapping techniques. Course objectives are to ensure that the student
is qualified to participate in cultural resources surveys directed by
professional archaeologists. Training will be provided in archaeological
site identification, recording, and interpretation; use of degree-reading
compass and global positioning systems (GPS) equipment; interpretation of
aerial photographs and topographic maps; and field photography.
	Persons who complete the class satisfactorily are eligible for the
“Survey Techniques” certification from the Arizona Archaeological Society
(AAS) provided that they are current members of the AAS (a separate
organization from Old Pueblo Archaeology Center) and are enrolled in the
AAS Certification Program. For AAS Certification the student must
successfully complete all written and administrative work assigned,
submit a brief final report of fieldwork undertaken, and pass an
instructor's evaluation of classroom and field work. For full course
description and AAS certification requirements visit the following
Arizona Archaeological Society web pages:
	www.azarchsoc.org/
	www.azarchsoc.org/certification.htm
	www.azarchsoc.org/cert_courses.htm
	www.azarchsoc.org/cert_manual.htm
	www.azarchsoc.org/cert_manual.htm
Registration deadline September 14, 2011. Reservations required:
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask] to register or for more information.
	**** 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 September 23, 2011
	“Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Fall Equinox Archaeological
Sites” guided tour departing from northeast corner of Silverbell Road &
Linda Vista Blvd. in Marana, Arizona
	8 a.m. to noon. $15 ($12 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members)
	To celebrate the autumnal equinox, archaeologist Allen Dart (Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center’s executive director) leads this tour to Los Morteros,
an ancient village site that includes a Hohokam ballcourt and bedrock
mortars, and to Picture Rocks, where ancient petroglyphs include a
solstice and equinox marker, dancing human-like figures, whimsical
animals, and other rock symbols made by Hohokam Indians between A.D. 650
and 1450.
	LIMITED TO 32 PEOPLE. 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.


Tuesdays October 4 through December 6, 2011
	"Prehistory of the Southwest: The Hohokam Culture of Southern Arizona"
class with archaeologist Allen Dart at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center,
2201 W. 44th Street at Tucson Unified School District’s Ajo Service
Center, just west of La Cholla Blvd., ½-mile north of John F. Kennedy
Park, Tucson.
	6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Tuesday evening October 4 through December 6,
2011. Fee $50 ($40 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande
Museum Auxiliary members), not counting cost of text recommended for the
course. Minimum enrollment 8, maximum 32.
	A series of ten 2-hour class sessions will be offered by archaeologist
Allen Dart in this "Advanced Prehistory of the Southwest" class, which
explores the archaeology of the Hohokam culture of the American
Southwest. Developed by the Arizona Archaeological Society (AAS) for its
Certification Program (see www.azarchsoc.org/certification.htm), the
class includes discussions of Hohokam origins, subsistence and settlement
systems, social and organizational systems, material culture including
ceramics, other artifacts, and architecture, interaction within and
beyond the Hohokam culture’s regional boundaries, and ideas on religion
and trade. The AAS’s basic “Prehistory of the Southwest” class is
recommended as a prerequisite but this is negotiable with the instructor.
Each student is expected to prepare a BRIEF research report to be
presented orally or in written form.
	Reservations required, registration deadline Oct. 1: 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask] to register or for more information.
	**** 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 October 13, 2011
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
for the Arizona Archaeological Society Phoenix Chapter at Pueblo Grande
Museum, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix. Cosponsored by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	7:30-9 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 the petroglyphs at Picture Rocks, the architecture of the
"Great House" at Arizona's Casa Grande Ruins, and other archaeological
evidence of ancient astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and interprets
how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native American
rituals. Funding for this program is being provided by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Ellie Large in
Phoenix at 480-461-0563 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 October 20, 2011
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: ****[Program title & speaker to be arranged] at ****[
restaurant to be announced]**** , 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
general 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 October 19.
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday November 12, 2011
	"Deer Valley & Spur Cross Ranch Petroglyphs & Pueblo Ruins” guided
archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen Dart, starting
at Deer Valley Rock Art Center, 3711 W. Deer Valley Road, Phoenix.
	10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fee $35 ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members) includes all park entry fees
	Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger Shelley Rasmussen (an
archaeological Site Steward) and archaeologist Allen Dart guide this tour
to see hundreds of ancient petroglyphs and the rock art museum at Deer
Valley Rock Art Center north of Phoenix, and more petroglyphs in Spur
Cross Ranch Regional Park near Carefree, Arizona. Deer Valley Rock Art
Center features a museum with video, artifacts, interpretive signs, and a
gift shop. Along its outdoor, quarter-mile-long rock art trail we’ll view
some of the 47-acre preserve’s 1,571 known petroglyphs, which range from
700 to 10,000 years old and represent the Archaic, Hohokam, and Patayan
cultures. The Spur Cross Conservation Area intermediate-level hike is
about 3 miles roundtrip and takes about 3 hours of hill-climbing to a
Hohokam pueblo and two petroglyph sites. Bring your own picnic lunch and
water, 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.


Thursday November 17, 2011
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “Soil Changes in Ancient Agricultural Systems of the
American Southwest” with archaeologist Jeffrey Homburg, at [restaurant to
be announced], Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	Although numerous southwestern archaeological studies have focused on
irrigation canals, the soils that were irrigated with those canals have
received far less attention. Soil studies of irrigation systems along the
Gila and Santa Cruz rivers of Arizona now underway will help fill this
research gap. In this presentation our guest speaker will discuss
archaeological traces of ancient agricultural field systems that persist
and remain intact, allowing archaeologists to recognize that soil changes
are highly variable, ranging from degradation to minimal net change to
enhanced soil quality.
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program is Jeffrey A.
Homburg, Ph.D., Director of Geosciences for the Tucson-based Statistical
Research cultural resource management company.
	Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s
general 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 November 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 December 3, 2011
	“White Tank Mountains – Petroglyphs of Waterfall Canyon & Mesquite
Canyon” guided archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen
Dart, starting at White Tank Mountain Regional Park Visitor Center, 13025
N. White Tank Mountain Road in Waddell.
	10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fee $30 ($24 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members) includes all park entry fees
	Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger Shelly Rasmussen (an
archaeological Site Steward) and archaeologist Allen Dart guide this tour
to see hundreds of ancient petroglyphs in the 30,000-acre White Tank
Mountain Regional Park west of Phoenix. Tour includes a 3-hour walk along
the 2.5-mile-roundtrip, fairly flat Black Rock Loop Trail to see and
photograph dozens of Archaic and Hohokam petroglyphs; lunch at ramadas
with picnic facilities; then afternoon visits to three petroglyph sites
with Archaic and Hohokam rock art in a 3-hour, 2.5-mile-roundtrip hike
along the Mesquite Canyon trail, which includes some bush-whacking and
boulder-hopping. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, 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.


Thursday December 15, 2011
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: ****[Program title & speaker to be arranged] at ****[
restaurant to be announced]**** , 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
general 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 December 14.
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday December 22, 2011
	“Winter Solstice Tour of Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs
Archaeological Sites” departs from northeast corner of Silverbell Road &
Linda Vista Blvd. in Marana, Arizona
	8 a.m. to noon. $15 ($12 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members)
	To explore ancient people’s recognition of solstices and other
calendrical events, archaeologist Allen Dart (Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center’s executive director) leads this tour to Los Morteros, an ancient
village site that includes a Hohokam ballcourt and bedrock mortars, and
to Picture Rocks, where ancient petroglyphs include a solstice and
equinox marker, dancing human-like figures, whimsical animals, and other
rock symbols made by Hohokam Indians between A.D. 650 and 1450. LIMITED
TO 32 PEOPLE.
	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.


Tuesday January 10, 2012
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” free
presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist
Allen Dart, for Agua Fria Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at
Glendale Public Library, 5959 W. Brown St., Glendale, Arizona;
Cosponsored by Arizona Humanities Council
	6-7 p.m. Free
	The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from
the sixth through fifteenth centuries. Hohokam artifacts, architecture,
and other material culture provide archaeologists with clues for
identifying where the Hohokam lived, for interpreting how they adapted to
the Sonoran Desert for centuries, and explaining why the Hohokam culture
mysteriously disappeared. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart
illustrates the material culture of the Hohokam and presents possible
interpretations about their relationships to the natural world, their
time reckoning, religious practices, beliefs, and deities, and possible
reasons for the eventual demise of their way of life. The program
features slides of Hohokam artifacts, rock art, and other cultural
features, a display of authentic prehistoric artifacts, and recommended
readings for more information about the Hohokam. Funding for program
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	 For event details contact Vince Waldron in Glendale at 602-543-6634 or
[log in to unmask]; for information about the activity subject
matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]


Thursday January 26, 2012
	“Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart, for Verde Valley
Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Sedona Public Library, 3250
White Bear Road, Sedona, Arizona. Cosponsored by Arizona Humanities
Council.
	7-8 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 Linda Krumrie in
Sedona at 928-451-4790 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 March 14, 2012
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
for Desert Foothills Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, monthly
meeting at Good Shepherd of the Hills Episcopal Church, 6502 E. Cave
Creek Road, Cave Creek, Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	7-8 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 the petroglyphs at Picture Rocks, the architecture of the
"Great House" at Arizona's Casa Grande Ruins, and other archaeological
evidence of ancient astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and interprets
how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native American
rituals. Funding for this program is being provided by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Kathryn Frey in
Carefree at 480-695-2609 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]

# # #


	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

# # #

	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 message
“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 please feel free to send an email to [log in to unmask]
with the word REMOVE in the subject line.
	Before you contact us with a “stop sending” or “remove” request, however,
please note that if you received our communication through a listserve,
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center cannot remove your email address from that
listserve. The listserves to which Old Pueblo occasionally posts
announcements include:

	Archaeological Society of New Mexico <[log in to unmask]>
	Arizona Archaeological Council <[log in to unmask]>
	Arizona State University Rock Art <[log in to unmask]>
	Arizona State University Historical Archaeology <[log in to unmask]>
	New Mexico Archaeological Council <[log in to unmask]>
	Rock Art News <[log in to unmask]>
	Society for American Archaeology Public Archaeology Interest Group
<[log in to unmask]>
	University of Arizona Anthropology Department
<[log in to unmask]>

ATOM RSS1 RSS2