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Subject:
From:
Allen Dart <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 3 Apr 2014 22:43:50 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
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For Immediate Release

Included in this announcement:
(1) Our Announcements and Opt-Out Options.
(2) Summary of Upcoming Presentations, Classes, Tours, and Other Activities.
(3) Details on Upcoming Activities.


(1) OUR ANNOUNCEMENTS and OPT-OUT OPTIONS

Some of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s email announcements are posted on
archaeology listserves rather than being sent to individual addresses. If
you do not wish to receive additional email messages from a listserve, you
will need to contact the list administrator to opt out. Details about the
kinds of announcements and other emails we send out and your opt-out
options are provided at the end of this message.


(2) 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.

LOOKING AHEAD: October 24, 2014 is deadline to purchase tickets for the
November 13, 2014 Jeep Cherokee Fundraising Raffle that benefits Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center and other charities. See November 13
announcement for this event, below.

April 5, 2014 “Texas Canyon 10K Trail Run, Local Foods Fest, Vino and Brew
Festival, and Spring Fling” at and near the Amerind Foundation, 2100 N
Amerind Rd, Dragoon, Arizona*

April 5, 2014 "Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock
Art" free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart sponsored by Friends of
Sonoita Creek at Sonoita Creek State Natural Area Visitor Center near
Patagonia*

April 6, 2014 "Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam
Indians" and "Modern and Historical O'odham Culture" free presentations 
at Colossal Cave Mountain Park, 16721 E. Old Spanish Trail, Vail, Arizona*

April 9, 2014 “The Environmental Impact of Hohokam Irrigation, from Salt
Build Up to Silt Fill” free presentation by archaeologist Dr. Jerry Howard
for Arizona Archaeological Society, Desert Foothills Chapter at Good
Shepherd of the Hills Episcopal Church, 6502 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave
Creek, Arizona*

April 10, 2014 “Genetics and African Prehistory: Possibilities and
Challenges” free presentation by archaeologist Scott MacEachern for
Archaeological Institute of America Central Arizona Society, Arizona State
University, Tempe*

April 10, 2014 “Identifying Nested Social Groups: The Pioneer Period in
the Tucson Basin” free presentation by archaeologist Eric Klucas for
Phoenix Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at  Pueblo Grande Museum,
Phoenix*

April 11, 2014 “Butterfly Warriors and Priestly Rites: Examining
Teotihuacan Collections in US Museums and the Art Market” free
presentation by Marc N. Levine for ASU Museum of Anthropology, Wrigley
Hall 101, ASU, Tempe*

Friday & Saturday April 12 & 13, and Saturday April 26, 2013 “Ancient
Native American Pottery Replication Workshop: Decorated Wares of the
1300s” with ceramist Andy Ward at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center

April 12, 2014 “Guided Tours of University Indian Ruin” and “University
Indian Ruin Residential Scholar Talks” sponsored by University of Arizona
School of Anthropology at the University Indian Ruin, Tucson*

April 17, 2014 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner & presentation,
“Shell Jewelry and Ornaments in the Ancient Southwest” with archaeologist
Arthur W. Vokes at Dragon's View Asian Cuisine, 400 N. Bonita Ave., Tucson

April 21, 2014 “New Perspectives on the Rock Art of Tumamoc Hill” free
presentation by Gayle Harrison Hartmann and Peter Boyle at Arizona
Archaeological and Historical Society meeting, Tucson*

April 25, 2014 "Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Florence Community Library,
1000 S Willow St, Florence, Arizona*

May 4, 2014 "Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Red Rock State Park, 4050 Red
Rock Loop Rd., Sedona, Arizona *

May 8, 2014 “Teotihuacan: Researching Ancient City Life in Central Mexico”
free presentation by archaeologist Dr. George L. Cowgill for Phoenix
Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Pueblo Grande Museum, Phoenix*

May 10, 2014 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Pima County Public Library at
Old Arivaca Schoolhouse, 17180 W. Fourth St., Arivaca, Arizona*

Thursday- Tuesday May 15-20, 2014 “Western New Mexico Missions and
Cultures Tour” offered by the nonprofit Southwestern Mission Research
Center departing from and returning to Tucson*

May 15, 2014 “National Park Service Southwest Border Resource Protection
Program Partnership Building Meeting” at Western Archeological and
Conservation Center or University of Arizona, Tucson*

May 19, 2014 “The Ties that Bind: The Social and Religions Context of
Building Murals in the Western Mesa Verde Region” free presentation by
Benjamin A. Bellorado at Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society
meeting, Tucson*

June 6-8, 2014 “Conference on Archaeoastronomy in the American Southwest”
sponsored by the Society for Cultural Astronomy in the American Southwest
at the School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University,
Tempe.*

June 14, 2014 “Protohistoric Archaeology in Southern Arizona” workshop led
by archaeologist Dr. Deni J. Seymour for the 12th Annual Arizona Historic
Preservation Conference at Esplendor Resort, 1069 Camino Caralampi, Rio
Rico, Arizona*

June 14-20, 2014 “Scientific Illustration Workshop at Q-Ranch” taught by
John W. Hohmann and Bryan Donahue sponsored by the Arizona Archaeological
Society at Q-Ranch near Young, Arizona*

June 16, 2014 “Can’t We All Just Get Along? Domestic Disputes and Warfare
in the Prehistoric Sonoran Desert” free presentation by James T. Watson at
Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society meeting, Tucson*

June 19, 2014 "Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for the Arizona Archaeological
Society Yavapai Chapter at the Smoki Museum, 147 N. Arizona St., Prescott,
Arizona*

June 20-24, 2014 "Mimbres Ruins, Rock Art, and Museums of Southern New
Mexico" archaeology education tour with archaeologist Allen Dart offered
by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center. Drive your own vehicle & meet tour in
Silver City, NM

July 5, 2014 "Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam
Indians" & "Modern and Historical O'odham Culture" free presentations by
archaeologist Allen Dart at Colossal Cave Mountain Park, Vail, Arizona*

July 21, 2014 “La Frontera: A History of the Borderlands in Cochise
County” free presentation by Rebecca Orozco at Arizona Archaeological and
Historical Society meeting, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Tucson*

Thursday-Sunday August 7-10, 2014 Annual Pecos Archaeological Conference,
this year at the Blue Mountain Scout Camp on the Manti-LaSal National
Forest north of Blanding, Utah*

August 29-31, 2014 NEW MEXICO: “Southwest Kiln Conference” at Tijeras
Ranger Station, 11776 New Mexico 337, Tijeras, New Mexico*

September 18, 2014 “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner &
presentation, “Chiricahua Apaches in Myth and History” with Cochise
College’ Rebecca Orozco at a Tucson restaurant to be announced

November 13, 2014 “Fundraising Raffle of a 2014 Jeep Cherokee” by Tucson’s
Jim Click Automotive Team.  Old Pueblo Archaeology Center keeps 100% of
the proceeds from all raffle tickets it sells. Tickets 5 for $100 or $25
each. 520-798-1201.


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


(3)  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 or children’s group activities 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


*****


LOOKING AHEAD: October 24, 2014 Deadline to purchase tickets for the
November 13 “Fundraising Raffle of a 2014 Jeep Cherokee” to benefit Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center and other charities. See November 13
announcement for this event, below.


Saturday April 5, 2014
	“Texas Canyon 10K Trail Run, Local Foods Fest, Vino and Brew Festival,
and Spring Fling” at and near the Amerind Foundation, 2100 N Amerind Rd,
Dragoon, Arizona*
	Times listed below. Fee for Trail Run $30 adults, $15 youth if
preregistering, or $50 on event day; $3 for parking or a donate a can of
food for the Community Food Bank of Southern AZ
	At the Texas Canyon 10K Trail Run, enjoy running or walking a scenic
trail not normally open to the public! Race begins at 9 a.m.. At
Amerind's Local Foods Fest, taste local foods and visit with local food
vendors while basking in the warm spring sunshine in beautiful Texas
Canyon. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The Triangle T Ranch Vino and Brew Festival offers
food, wine, beer, entertainment, horseback riding, and more! Enter the
cooking contest at 2 p.m. and win a prize for your best chocolate,
coffee, and chili concoction. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. At the Spring Fling, browse
the many delicious offerings of baked goods as well as lots of other
items for sale at the Dragoon Women's Club. 8 a.m.-1 p.m.
		* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For Trail Run
registration or more information visit www.bisbee1000.org/other-events;
for information on the other events visit contact the Amerind Foundation
at 520-586-3666 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday April 5, 2014
	"Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art" free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart sponsored by Friends of Sonoita
Creek at Sonoita Creek State Natural Area Visitor Center near Patagonia,
Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities*
	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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations needed. For meeting details contact Patrick Rhoads in
Patagonia at 520-287-2791 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]


Sunday April 6, 2014
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” and
“Modern and Historical O'odham Culture” free presentations by
archaeologist Allen Dart for the “Sunday in the Park” series at Colossal
Cave Mountain Park, 16721 E. Old Spanish Trail, Vail, Arizona.
Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.*
	2-4 p.m. Free
	The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from
the sixth through fifteenth centuries, and the Akimel O'odham (Pima) and
Tohono O'odham (Papago) occupied this region historically. Ancient
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 Hohokam discussion is followed by
information about the historical and modern O'odham cultures of southern
Arizona, and how they relate to the Hohokam. Funding for the program is
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For event
details contact Lauren Hohl at the Park at 520-647-7121 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]


Wednesday April 9, 2014
	“The Environmental Impact of Hohokam Irrigation, from Salt Build Up to
Silt Fill” free presentation by archaeologist Dr. Jerry Howard for
Arizona Archaeological Society, Desert Foothills Chapter at Good Shepherd
of the Hills Episcopal Church, 6502 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek,
Arizona*
	7 p.m. Free
	The prehistoric Hohokam culture transformed the local Sonoran Desert into
agricultural landscapes. In this newly created lecture Dr. Jerry Howard
discusses how Hohokam irrigation canals and fields caused significant
impacts on theHohokam environment.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information visit http://bit.ly/1aYMEY2.


Thursday April 10, 2014
	“Genetics and African Prehistory: Possibilities and Challenges” free
presentation by archaeologist Scott MacEachern sponsored by
Archaeological Institute of America Central Arizona Society in Business
Administration Building C Wing, Room 116  (BAC 116), Arizona State
University, Tempe*
	6 p.m. Free
	There has been less archaeology done in Africa than on any other
continent, and the prehistory of much of this vast continent remains more
or less unknown. Historical genetics provides us with a new and extremely
powerful way of looking at population movements and contacts in the past,
and the comparison of archaeological and genetic data offers the
prospects of immense improvement in our understanding of African
prehistory. At the same time, there are dangers involved in such
interdisciplinary undertakings: archaeological and genetic data offer
insights into different aspects of human history, and each approach has
its own strengths and weaknesses. In particular, genetics can reinforce
assumptions that African populations are ‘people without history’,
remnants of humanity’s past. This lecture will offer a discussion of
these issues, with examples drawn from the Lake Chad Basin and other
parts of the continent. Scott MacEachern, Professor of Anthropology at
Bowdoin College, specializes in African archaeology, ethnoarchaeology,
state formation processes, and archaeology and genetics.  He has
conducted fieldwork in Cameroon, Chad, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and Canada
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Almira Poudrier at [log in to unmask]


Thursday April 10, 2014
	“Identifying Nested Social Groups: The Pioneer Period in the Tucson
Basin” free presentation by archaeologist Dr. Eric Klucas for Phoenix
Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Pueblo Grande Museum, 4619 E.
Washington St., Phoenix*
	7-8 p.m. Free
	This talk explores the kinds of social groups that may have composed the
early village sites of the northern Tucson Basin, including Pioneer
period sites in both its northern and central areas. Through examination
of residential and burial features, site structure, and the use of space,
archaeological correlates were derived that are used to offer
interpretations of how these groups were integrated into an emerging,
broader Hohokam society. In addition, the ways in which the composition
and structure of these groups may have set the stage for the development
of later Hohokam social, political, and economic organization will be
discussed. Eric Klucas is a principal investigator in the Tucson Office
of Statistical Research Inc.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Ellie Large at 480-461-0563 or [log in to unmask]


Friday April 11, 2014
	“Butterfly Warriors and Priestly Rites: Examining Teotihuacan Collections
in US Museums and the Art Market” free presentation by Marc N. Levine for
ASU Museum of Anthropology in Wrigley Hall 101, Arizona State University,
Tempe*
	3:30 p.m. Free
	University of Oklahoma assistant professor of anthropology Marc Levine
presents a three-pronged analysis seeking to better understand links
between the Mesoamerican antiquities trade and museum collecting
practices in the U.S. His study focuses on archaeological material from
Teotihuacan, ancient Mexico’s pre-eminent Classic period capital. His
interlocking studies of a single collection of Teotihuacan-style
artifacts from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, a survey that
sought to document all Teotihuacan-attributed material in U.S. museums,
and Mesoamerican archaeological material auctioned at Sotheby’s over the
past 40 years provides important insights regarding the Mesoamerican
antiquities trade, the connection between collectors and museums, and the
research potential of Teotihuacan material in U.S. museums.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Julie Russ at 480-727-6571 or [log in to unmask]


Friday & Saturday April 12 & 13,
and Saturday April 26, 2014
	“Ancient Native American Pottery Replication Workshop: Decorated Wares of
the 1300s” with ceramist Andy Ward at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201
W. 44th Street, just west of La Cholla Blvd., ½-mile north of John F.
Kennedy Park, Tucson.
	9 a.m. to noon & 1-4 p.m. on first two days; 9 a.m. to noon on second
Saturday. Fee $57 ($46 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members); each participant must provide a small
water bowl , hand towel, & 2 plastic grocery bags; clay & all other class
materials are provided
	This workshop will focus on replicating the pottery types produced by
Pueblo peoples in southern Arizona between AD 1270 and 1450. Some of this
region’s most elaborately decorated and widely traded pottery types
including those known as Tucson Polychrome, Gila Polychrome, and Tonto
Polychrome were introduced by Ancestral Pueblo immigrants who came here
from northern Arizona and southern Utah. Workshop participants will learn
the history of these pottery types and experience the entire process of
reproducing them including processing raw materials, and forming and
decorating vessels, culminating in an authentic outdoor pottery firing.
This exciting and fast paced workshop will take place over the course of
one weekend during which the pots are created completely then left to
dry, followed later by a Saturday morning in which we will fire all the
pottery produced. Each participant will leave with a beautiful,
authentic, finished reproduction of a prehistoric pot. Any participants
who are unable to attend the later firing can arrange to have their pots
fired and shipped to them (student pays for shipping).
	Instructor Andy Ward is a diligent student of  southwestern prehistory
and archaeology who has worked with archaeologists to locate resources in
field surveys and in excavations. He began working to reproduce
prehistoric pottery while still in high school and has successfully
recreated many of the prehistoric pottery types of southern Arizona.
	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 April 12, 2014
	“Guided Tours of University Indian Ruin” by archaeologists Paul Fish,
Suzanne Fish, and Mark Elson, and “University Indian Ruin Residential
Scholar Talks” following the tour, sponsored by University of Arizona
School of Anthropology at 2799 N. Indian Ruins Road, Tucson*
	2-5 p.m. Free
	The University Indian Ruin (UIR) was one of the largest villages in the
Tucson Basin during the Hohokam Classic period between A.D. 1200 and
1400. It was a Hohokam platform mound community that played a significant
role in settlement of the northeastern Tucson Basin area in ancient
times. From 2 to 4 p.m. on April 12, Dr. Paul R. Fish, Dr. Suzanne K.
Fish, and Dr. Mark D. Elson will lead tours of the UIR and discuss their
archaeological research there. Then from 4 to 5 p.m. following the tours
this year’s UIR residential scholars from Southern Methodist University,
Dr. Kacy Hollenback and Dr. Chris Roos, will give short talks in the
backyard of the UIR Caretaker’s house to share their research with the
public. Dr. Hollenback will speak on “What Things Can Tell Us about
Disasters: Lessons from Smallpox on the Northern Plains” and Dr. Roos’s
topic is “What can Ancient Southwesterners Teach Us about Living with
Forest Fires and Climate Change?” Light refreshments will be served.
Parking at UIR is limited so neighborhood residents are encouraged to
walk to the site.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For
directions and more information contact Dr. T. J. Ferguson at the UA
School of Anthropology: 520-626-9684 or [log in to unmask]


Thursday April 17, 2014
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
& presentation: “Shell Jewelry and Ornaments in the Ancient Southwest”
with archaeologist Arthur W. Vokes at Dragon's View Asian Cuisine, 400 N.
Bonita Ave., Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	Old Pueblo’s guest speaker for this “dinner-format” program is Arthur W.
Vokes, one of the foremost experts in the analysis of shell artifacts
found in southwestern archaeological sites. Based on his years of
experience analyzing shell items recovered from excavation projects he
will provide an overview of the kinds of shells used by which peoples and
discuss routes and social networks involved in ancient shell transport
and exchange.
	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. Because seating is limited in order for
the program to be in compliance with the Fire Code, those wishing to
attend must call 520-798-1201 and must have their reservations confirmed
before 5 p.m. Wednesday April 16.


Monday April 21, 2014
	“New Perspectives on the Rock Art of Tumamoc Hill” free presentation by
Gayle Harrison Hartmann and Peter Boyle at Arizona Archaeological and
Historical Society (AAHS) meeting, University of Arizona Medical Center
Duval Auditorium, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Tucson*
	7:30 p.m. Free
	This presentation focuses on AAHS’s 2006-2009 survey of the rock art on
Tumamoc Hill in Tucson, which recorded 734 rock art elements and 450
graffiti. Most of the rock art is of the Hohokam culture, made between AD
450 and 1450, but a small number of the glyphs apparently are of the
Western Archaic tradition most likely dating between ca. 800 BC and AD
150. The speakers will discuss previous rock art recording projects on
Tumamoc; describe the universe of rock recorded during the survey; offer
interpretations of the art’s temporal and cultural affiliations,
elaborations among anthropomorphs, preferred art locations, and the
pervasiveness of graffiti (including some with historical significance);
and summarize recommendations for future management.
	* 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.


Friday April 25, 2014
	"Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart at Florence Community Library, 1000 S Willow
St, Florence, Arizona, cosponsored by Arizona Humanities*
	5:30-6:30 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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Library Assistant Barb Scoby in Florence at
520-868-8311 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]


Sunday May 4, 2014
	"Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free presentation
for Astronomy Month by archaeologist Allen Dart at Red Rock State Park,
4050 Red Rock Loop Rd., Sedona, Arizona, cosponsored by the Arizona
Humanities Council*
	2-3 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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations needed. For meeting details contact Eric Buzonas in Sedona
at 928-282-6907 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 May 8, 2014
	“Teotihuacan: Researching Ancient City Life in Central Mexico” free
presentation by archaeologist Dr. George L. Cowgill for Phoenix Chapter,
Arizona Archaeological Society, at Pueblo Grande Museum, 4619 E.
Washington St., Phoenix*
	7-8 p.m. Free
	Teotihuacan is one of the most spectacular ancient cities of the
Americas, and Arizona State University has played a major part in
fieldwork at the site. The people of Teotihuacan achieved a sustainable
way of life that flourished for centuries before its eventual collapse.
In this presentation ASU Professor George Cowgill, an anthropological
archaeologist with field experience in central Mexico and the Maya
lowlands, will describe the city’s ruins and what they tell us about
daily life, ritual, and rulership.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Ellie Large at 480-461-0563 or [log in to unmask]
Saturday May 10, 2014
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart sponsored by Pima County Public Library's
Caviglia-Arivaca Branch at the Old Arivaca Schoolhouse, 17180 W. Fourth
St. (1 block north of Main Street's Arivaca Mercantile) in Arivaca,
Arizona*
	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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Pima County Public
Library.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Librarian Leesa
Jacobson in Arivaca at 520-594-5235 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 May 10, 2014
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart sponsored by Pima County Public Library's
Caviglia-Arivaca Branch at the Old Arivaca Schoolhouse, 17180 W. Fourth
St. (1 block north of Main Street's Arivaca Mercantile) in Arivaca,
Arizona*
	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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Pima County Public
Library.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Librarian Leesa
Jacobson in Arivaca at 520-594-5235 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-Tuesday May 15-20, 2014
	“Western New Mexico Missions and Cultures Tour” offered by the nonprofit
Southwestern Mission Research Center, departing from and returning to
Tucson*
	Times TBA. Fee of $1,200 per person double-occupancy (add $200 for single
supplement) includes coach transportation, 5 nights accommodations, 4
breakfasts, 5 lunches (including 2 traditional Pueblo Indian meals with
Zuni and Acoma families), 3 dinners, and all entrance fees.
	This six-day tour visits outstanding New Mexico Spanish Colonial missions
and Native American communities. Places to be visited include the Western
New Mexico University Museum (which has the finest collection of Mimbres
Black-on-white pottery in the world) and historic Silver City; Gallup for
overnight stay at the historic El Rancho Hotel; Our Lady of Guada¬lupe
Spanish Mission Church at the Pueblo of Zuni; either the Village of the
Great Kivas or Hawikuh Pueblo archaeological site near Zuni; the mesa-top
Acoma Pueblo and Spanish mission; the Acoma Cultural Center Museum; El
Morro Na¬tional Monument’s In¬scrip¬tion Rock, Atsinna Pueblo, Box
Canyon, gift shop and museum; the Sandstone Bluffs Overlook and La
Ventana Arch at El Malpais National Monument; Laguna Pueblo and its
Spanish mission; and Las Cruces and Old Mesilla.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Registration
deadline is April 20.  For reservations contact Gail Bornfield at
520-797-8825 or [log in to unmask] For more information visit
www.southwestmissions.org.


Thursday May 15, 2014
	“National Park Service Intermountain Region Southwest Border Resource
Protection Program (NPS IMR SWBRPP) Partnership Building Meeting” at
Western Archeological and Conservation Center, 255 North Commerce Park
Loop, Tucson, or at a University of Arizona location to be determined.
	The mission of the NPS IMR SWBRPP is to provide assistance to parks and
protected lands along the U.S.-Mexico border that encourages
collaborative efforts between the U.S. and Mexico to mitigate impacts on
cultural and natural resources. To help accomplish this mission, NPS
seeks input from persons who have experience or ideas in a
partnership-building meeting in Tucson on May 15. This is an opportunity
to meet with current and prospective partners, share important work you
are doing, find out how others doing similar work can help as well as to
network, brainstorm and enhance your partnerships. Discussion topics will
include:
•         Cross-Border Meeting Administration
•         Interpretation
•         Natural Resource Inventory and Monitoring
•         Cultural Resource Preservation
•         Migratory Species Conservation
•         Partnership Building
•         U.S. and Mexican Governmental Structures related to natural and
cultural resource management
•         NPS International Affairs office assistance for Sister Park
Opportunities
	The audience for this event is land management, conservation, research,
and cultural resource preservation professionals from Mexico and the
United States including, but not limited to, representatives from U.S.
land management agencies, Mexican protected land management agencies, and
U.S. and Mexican nongovernmental organizations.
 	Workshop logistics will be sponsored by the NPS IMR SWBRPP. Participants
are responsible for all travel costs including transportation to and
from the meeting and any necessary lodging and per diem in Tucson.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information or to RSVP for the event contact Krista Muddle at
303-969-2356 or [log in to unmask]


Monday May 19, 2014
	“The Ties that Bind: The Social and Religions Context of Building Murals
in the Western Mesa Verde Region” free presentation by Benjamin A.
Bellorado at Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society meeting,
University Medical Center DuVal Auditorium, 1501 N. Campbell Ave.,
Tucson*
	7:30-9 p.m. Free
	Bellorado will discuss research on use of complex woven technologies to
signal people’s participation in distinct social networks with shared
cosmologies.  Combining with data on pottery manufacture and circulation
patterns, he used a cross-media approach to reconstruct the distributions
of overlaying communities of weavers, potters, builders, and rock art and
mural artists in the region that contributed to the complex ways that
peoples signaled their religious and social identities through time.
	* 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.


Friday-Sunday June 6-8, 2014
	“Conference on Archaeoastronomy in the American Southwest” sponsored by
the Society for Cultural Astronomy (SCA) in the American Southwest in the
School of Earth and Space Exploration’s Marston Exploration Theater,
Arizona State University, Tempe.*
	Times and registration fees to be announced. SCA members receive a 15%
discount.
	The theme for this third southwestern archaeoastronomy conference,
cochaired by Ric Alling (Marston Exploration Theater Manager), Todd
Bostwick, (Director of Archaeology at Verde Valley Archaeology Center
[VVAC] and Senior Research Archaeologist at PaleoWest Archaeology), and
Ken Zoll (VVAC Executive Director) is “Charting a Formal Methodology for
Cultural Astronomy Research.” A Pre-Conference Workshop on June 6 will
explore basic formulas, common pitfalls, and the wealth of computer-based
resources available to the contemporary cultural astronomy researcher.
Presentation of papers and posters will be on June 7. Contributed Papers
discuss the results of fieldwork or lab research.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. Online
and mail conference registration will be available in January 2014.  
Additional information about the conference and membership in SCA can be
obtained at www.scaas.org or by email to [log in to unmask]


Saturday June 14, 2014
	“Protohistoric Archaeology in Southern Arizona” workshop led by
archaeologist Dr. Deni J. Seymour for the 12th Annual Arizona Historic
Preservation Conference, at Esplendor Resort at Rio Rico, 1069 Camino
Caralampi, Rio Rico, Arizona*
	8 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Fee included in full conference registration package;
$35 for those not attending conference
	This workshop provides a summary of the latest new information on the
protohistoric and Native American historical archaeology in southern
Arizona. Dr. Deni Seymour will focus on the indigenous occupants,
including the settled farmers, some of whom resided in Spanish missions
and presidios, as well as those groups who did not settle down during the
mission period. The workshop will cover the archaeology of the
Sobaipuri-O'odham, Apache, and Canutillo complex (Jano Jocome, Manso,
Suma). Lectures will be included, and the extensive six loci of a series
of Sobaipuri occupations around Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi
will be visited for a hands-on encounter. Attendees will examine and
learn about Sobaipuri cultural material and, if time permits, will visit
the ruins of the Guevavi Spanish Mission. If the site visit is possible
guests are encouraged to bring their own vehicles with high road
clearance.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For Historic
Preservation Conference information contact Dave Ryder, Veer Consulting,
at 602-568-6277 or [log in to unmask]


Monday-Friday June 14-20, 2014
	“Scientific Illustration Workshop at Q-Ranch” taught by archaeologist Dr.
John W. Hohmann and professional artist/scientific illustrator Bryan
Donahue, sponsored by the Arizona Archaeological Society (AAS) at Q-Ranch
near Young, Arizona*
	8 a.m. Monday-4 p.m. Friday (5 days classes, 6 nights accommodations);
$895 per person (double occupancy; $1150 single occupancy) includes
lodging, meals, and course registration fee (and AAS membership is
required)
	In this workshop each student will learn about the importance and value
of scientific illustration and will have the opportunity to illustrate
various artifacts and cultural features from Q Ranch. The workshop goals
are to learn basic scientific illustration techniques, produce an
accurate and detailed record of an archaeological artifact, learn more
about the artifact itself through such careful examination, and inform
others about the intricacies of an artifact through detailed illustration
that cannot be as easily conveyed through words or photographs.
Participants will all stay at the Q Ranch Lodge and may enjoy additional
sketching opportunities of the picturesque ranch, ancient pueblo
archaeological site, and mountain-park scenery. Jonathan Rogers’s Q-Ranch
Lodge is a two-story ranch house with six upstairs bedrooms and three
shared bathrooms, where Jonathan delights his guests with gourmet cuisine
and good conversation.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For reservations
contact Jonathan Rogers at 928-970-0596 or [log in to unmask]


Monday June 16, 2014
	“Can’t We All Just Get Along? Domestic Disputes and Warfare in the
Prehistoric Sonoran Desert” free presentation by James T. Watson at
Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society meeting, University Medical
Center DuVal Auditorium, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Tucson*
	7:30 p.m. Free
	****[Description coming]
	* 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.


Thursday June 19, 2014
	"Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces" free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart sponsored by the Arizona Archaeological
Society Yavapai Chapter at the Smoki Museum’s Pueblo Building, 147 N.
Arizona St., Prescott, Arizona, cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities*
	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 southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning; and
interprets how these discoveries may have related to ancient Native
American rituals. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. No
reservations needed. For meeting details contact Julie Rucker in Prescott
at 928-554-2745 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.


Friday-Tuesday June 20-24, 2014
	"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 $250 for the full four-day tour ($230 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.
	Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart leads this tour to
Classic Mimbres and Early Mogollon village archaeological sites,
spectacular petroglyph and pictograph sites, and museums 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 site
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, TJ, and Woodrow); the Frying Pan Canyon and Pony
Hills petroglyph sites; and the Western New Mexico University Museum and
Deming-Luna Mimbres 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]


Saturday July 5, 2014
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” and
“Modern and Historical O'odham Culture” free presentations by
archaeologist Allen Dart for the “Ha:san Bak Saguaro Harvest Celebration”
at Colossal Cave Mountain Park, 16721 E. Old Spanish Trail, Vail,
Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.*
	2-4 p.m. Free
	The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from
the sixth through fifteenth centuries, and the Akimel O'odham (Pima) and
Tohono O'odham (Papago) occupied this region historically. Ancient
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 Hohokam discussion is followed by
information about the historical and modern O'odham cultures of southern
Arizona, and how they relate to the Hohokam. Funding for the program is
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For event
details contact Lauren Hohl at the Park at 520-647-7121 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]


Monday July 21, 2014
	“La Frontera: A History of the Borderlands in Cochise County” free
presentation by Rebecca Orozco at Arizona Archaeological and Historical
Society meeting, University Medical Center DuVal Auditorium, 1501 N.
Campbell Ave., Tucson*
	7:30 p.m. Free
	****[Description coming]
	* 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.


Friday-Sunday August 29-31, 2014
	NEW MEXICO: “Southwest Kiln Conference” at Tijeras Ranger Station, 11776
New Mexico 337, Tijeras, New Mexico*
	Times TBA. $25 for those wanting to conduct their own firing or
contribute pots to be fired (includes T-shirt & food for the barbecue);
$15 just to watch and learn (includes food cost)
	The Southwest Kiln Conference is an informal gathering of archaeologists,
potters, and other folks interested in ancient and modern southwestern
ceramic technology. Held nearly every year since 2003 at various sites in
the American Southwest, this year it will be on Labor Day weekend in
Tijeras, NM, sponsored by the U.S. Forest Service in conjunction with The
Friends of Tijeras Pueblo. The ranger station is at Tijeras Pueblo, one
of the Southwest’s early pottery production sites, and the local area
offers exploration opportunities for local clays during the planned field
trip.  Social activities and slide presentations are scheduled for August
29 and demonstrations and firings on August 30-31.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information email Southwest Kiln Conference at
[log in to unmask] or visit www.swkiln.com.


Thursday September 18, 2014
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner
featuring the presentation “Chiricahua Apaches in Myth and History” with
Cochise College-Douglas History and Anthropology Instructor Rebecca
Orozco at ****[restaurant to be announced], Tucson
	6 to 8:30 p.m. Free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu)
	As the last Native American group to reach a peace accord with the U.S.
government, the Chiricahua Apache were often featured in the press.
Famous warriors Geronimo and Naiche were photographed many times. Their
story has been the basis of numerous feature films. The story of their
conflict first with the Spaniards and Mexicans who claimed their
homeland, and later with the Americans expanding into the region in a
policy of Manifest Destiny, has become a mix of history and heresy.  The
full story never will be completely known. This presentation contains a
collection of historic photos from the end of an era – the late 1800s –
that tell the story of the clash of the people trying save their lifeway
and homeland and the people who believed the land was empty and open for
settlement.
	Those wishing to attend must call 520-798-1201 and must have their
reservations confirmed before 5 p.m. Wednesday September 17 because the
fire-safety ordinance limits attendance. There is no entry fee but guests
are asked to purchase their own dinners so that the restaurant won’t
charge Old Pueblo for their seats, and donations will be requested to
benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.
	**** 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 13, 2014
	“Fundraising Raffle of a 2014 Jeep Cherokee” by Tucson’s Jim Click
Automotive Team. Old Pueblo Archaeology Center gets to keep 100% of the
proceeds from all raffle tickets that it sells
	Tickets are 5 for $100 or $25 each
	The Jim Click Automotive Team is presenting a new 2014 Jeep Cherokee to
be used as the featured prize in a raffle to raise one million dollars
for Tucson-area nonprofit organizations. With your $25 contribution (or 5
raffle tickets for $100) you could win the 2014 Jeep Cherokee. The best
part is that 100% of your contribution will support Tucson charities,
including Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, which gets to keep all the
proceeds from the tickets that Old Pueblo sells. A maximum of 50,000
tickets will be sold.
	Raffle tickets for entry in the drawing must be received by Old Pueblo by
October 24, 2014, so that we can turn them in to the Jim Click Automotive
Team’s raffle coordinator by October 31. The drawing will be held on
November 13.
	The rules of the raffle require that Old Pueblo account for all tickets
issued to us and that we return all unsold tickets, therefore payment in
advance is required in order to obtain tickets. The ticket price is $25
apiece or five tickets for $100.  Tickets may be purchased by check sent
to our PO box address listed below, by calling me on my cell phone
(520-603-6181) to provide your Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or Diners Club
credit card payment information, or through the PayPal portal on Old
Pueblo’s www.oldpueblo.org home page. Once you have provided payment, Old
Pueblo will enter your ticket(s) into the drawing for you and will mail
you the correspondingly numbered ticket stub(s) with a letter
acknowledging your contribution.
	For tickets or more information contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask] For more information about the Jim Click Automotive
Team’s 2014 Jeep Cherokee raffle visit the Raffle Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/JeepCherokeeRaffle.
	**** 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 (Volunteer)
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.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


KINDS OF REGULAR EMAIL ANNOUNCEMENTS WE SEND

        Old Pueblo Archaeology Center typically sends two email ACTIVITY
ANNOUNCEMENTS each month that tell about upcoming activities
offered by Old Pueblo and other southwestern U.S. archaeology and
history organizations. We also email pdf copies of our Old Pueblo
Archaeology newsletter to our members, subscribers, and some other
recipients, usually no more often than once every three months.


OPT-OUT OPTIONS

        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]>
	Historical Archaeology-Arizona State University <[log in to unmask]>
	New Mexico Archaeological Council <[log in to unmask]>
	Rock Art-Arizona State University <[log in to unmask]>
	Rock Art News <[log in to unmask]>
	Society for American Archaeology Public Archaeology Interest Group
<[log in to unmask]>
	Southwest Archaeology Today <[log in to unmask]>
	Utah Professional Archaeological Council <[log in to unmask]>

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