For Immediate Release
Table of Contents
Some Thank-Yous
Some Online Resources
Upcoming Activities
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Youth Education Programs
Our Mission and Support
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SOME THANK YOUs
This month we thank the following folks (in somewhat
alphabetical order) who have joined or rejoined Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center as members or who have made donations to support our general
education programs since our previous first-of-the-month email broadcast:
Gene Adkins, Maureen Bike, Sharon Blackwell, Larry Bourne, Caroline Brown,
Elizabeth Butler, Allen Dart, Bruce & Patricia Dillingham, Anthony &
Patricia Doughty, David Doyel, Susanne Durling, Nancy Easter, David & Joan
Eerkes, Charles Farabee, Janet Golio, Mary Grau, Samuel Greenleaf, Stephen
Hayden & Diane Boyer, Gary Huckleberry, Alice Hutchison, Daniel Ice, Dennis
Kitchen, Walter Lane, Elinor Large, Melissa Loeschen, Grant & Arabelle
Luckhardt, Christine Moe, Douglas Newton, Janet Prinz, William & Cassandra
Ridlinghafer, Lynda Sánchez, Betsy Smith, Sharon Strachan, Christopher
Sugnet & Jennifer Cox, A. J. Vonarx, Esther White, White Stallion Ranch,
Sandra Wolf, Michele Worthington, and Monica Young.
Thank you all so much!
SOME ON
RESOURCES
(online!)
Check out some of these online resources about archaeology, history,
and cultures that you can indulge in at any time! (Other upcoming online
offerings that are scheduled for specific days and times are listed
sequentially by date below under the UPCOMING ACTIVITIES heading.)
* Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s April 21 “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” presentation The Mimbres Twins and the Rabbit in the Moon by
archaeologist Marc Thompson is now available in two parts on Old Pueblo’s
Youtube channel:
<https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos>
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos. Enjoy both
parts!
* The Amerind Museum has posted the recording of Bernard Siquieros’s
April 23 T-A:ga (Our Story): An Introduction to the Culture and History of
the Tohono O'odham online lecture:
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6RtXu_wHnA>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6RtXu_wHnA.
You can watch any of these in the comfort of your home or office!
UPCOMING ACTIVITIES
These listings include announcements about activities offered by Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center and other organizations interested in archaeology,
history and cultures. Old Pueblo’s activities are listed in green font. For
activities marked “This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event” the
information may be out of date – Readers are advised to confirm dates,
times, and details with the organizers of those activities.
Time zones are specified in these listings only for online
activities. The times for in-person activities are listed in the time zones
of the activity locations.
Sunday May 1, 2022: Tucson
“Agave Expo Night: Opening the Roasting Pit & Mezcal
Tastings, Mingle with Mezcaleros, Food and Music” sponsored by La Luna
Mezcal and Friends of Tucson’s Birthplace at Mission Garden, 946 W. Mission
Lane, Tucson*
6-8:30 p.m. $75 (includes 2 drinks (neat pour of mezcal
expression and mezcal cocktail with Mission Garden infusion) and food (small
bites).
Following up on Mission Garden’s April 29-30 Agave Heritage
Festival days, this Sunday evening event that benefits Mission Garden
celebrates the opening of the agave roasting pit and tasting the smoky
sweet, caramelized penca and biguata (roasted agave leaves and heart). The
evening includes talks, demonstrations, and music with Jesus Garcia
(Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum), Sal Picazo Chavez (La Luna), Eduardo Costa
(flamenco and classical guitar), cultivators, agave experts, assorted La
Luna Mezcal spirits and cocktails paired with delicious local food prepared
by Exo Roast, and – Oh Yeah – opening the roasting pit and sampling roasted
agave.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.tucsonsbirthplace.org>
www.tucsonsbirthplace.org or call 520-955-5200.
Tuesday May 3, 2022: Online
“Birds of the Sun: Macaws, Parrots, and People” free
Archaeology Café online lecture by Christopher W. Schwartz (Arizona State
University), Patricia A. Gilman (University of Oklahoma) and Stephen Plog
sponsored by Archaeology Southwest (ASW), Tucson*
6 to 7 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time. Free.
Macaws and parrots are colorful birds generally native to
areas south of the US-Mexico border, but they are present in numerous
archaeological sites in Arizona and New Mexico as well as at the very large
site of Paquimé just south of the border in Chihuahua. Archaeologists have
paid too little attention to these birds except to highlight the existence
and possible importance of interactions between the peoples of Mesoamerica
and the US Southwest and Mexican Northwest. This presentation by Christopher
W. Schwartz (Arizona State University), Patricia A. Gilman (University of
Oklahoma) and Stephen Plog (Professor Emeritus, University of Virginia) will
focus on recent detailed analyses of these birds and what we know about them
as a result.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<http://www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/birds-of-the-sun-macaws-parrots-a
nd-people/>
www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/birds-of-the-sun-macaws-parrots-and-peopl
e/.
Tuesdays & Thursdays May 3, 5, 10, 12, and 17, 2022: Online
“‘Deus vult’ – The Religious and Material Dimensions of
Violence against the Established Order in Modern World History” online
Master Class taught by Michael Brescia, PhD, sponsored by the Arizona State
Museum, University of Arizona (ASM), Tucson*
10-11:30 a.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time on each date.
$150 (ASM members $100). Credit card payments incur a 3% fee.
Invoking an all-powerful deity to effect radical changes in
the social and political order has deep roots in world history. Efforts to
restore or revitalize cultural identity and promote economic security cuts
across geographical boundaries and reveals the extent to which religious
understandings of material well-being intersect and conflict with
established political power, economic systems, and accepted social norms. In
his new Master Class, Michael Brescia identifies case studies from world
history since 1600 to illustrate how individuals, families, and communities
filtered their lived experiences through a religious framework in order to
make sense of changes imposed from the outside. Resistance to such changes
often took the form of violence and rebellion, with a potent millenarian
streak that promised its adherents economic renewal, spiritual redemption,
and a new social order. Case studies include Indigenous and other rebellions
across Spanish North America. Dr. Michael M. Brescia is a curator of
ethnohistory at ASM and affiliated professor of history and law at the
University of Arizona.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<https://arizona.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3nxVz5x2RgaQBFSLdkaEnQ>
https://arizona.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3nxVz5x2RgaQBFSLdkaEnQ.
Wednesday May 4, 2022: Online
“Brown Bag: Lost Oasis –The Ice Age Archaeology of Utah's
West Desert” with archaeologist Daron Duke, PhD, sponsored by Utah State
Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), Salt Lake City*
11 a.m.-12 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free.
Explore the end of the last Ice Age, 12,000 years ago, in the
Great Salt Lake Desert, which at the time offered vast wetlands that drew
Utah's first inhabitants, gave refuge to its last Ice Age megafauna, and
anchored a key waterfowl flyway. From the largest spear points on the
continent to the earliest evidence for tobacco use, archaeologists can now
highlight the unique contribution of this place to the story of human
settlement of the Americas. Daron Duke, a Principal at Far Western
Anthropological Research Group, has worked in the Great Basin for 25 years
and specializes in early-period archaeology, precontact land use, and stone
tool economy.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register visit
<https://www.eventbrite.com/e/brown-bag-lost-oasis-the-ice-age-archaeology-o
f-utahs-west-desert-tickets-293383677477?aff=odcleoeventsincollection>
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/brown-bag-lost-oasis-the-ice-age-archaeology-of
-utahs-west-desert-tickets-293383677477?aff=odcleoeventsincollection.
Thursday May 5, 2022: Online
“Lunar Twins: Cahokia’s Emerald Acropolis and Chaco’s Chimney
Rock in the 11th Century” free online presentation with archaeologist Tim
Pauketat, PhD, sponsored by Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez,
Colorado*
4 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free (donations encouraged).
Lunar alignments characterize a series of 9th through 12th
century North American Indigenous civilizations. Ancestral Puebloans,
Caddos, and Cahokians were involved, among others, hinting at a thick
continent-wide history if not also a series of long-distance communications.
In this talk, Dr. Pauketat will focus on comparing two Cahokian lunar shrine
complexes in Illinois – Pfeffer and the Emerald Acropolis – to Chimney Rock
in Colorado. Both Cahokian examples have been the focus of salvage
archaeological investigations in recent years, pointing to some surprising
similarities with Chimney Rock. What explains these widely separated,
intensive 11th century ceremonial constructions atop remote elevated
landforms?
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
learn more and register visit
<https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/lunar_twins_cahokias_emerald_acropolis_
and_chacos_chimney_rock_in_the_11th_century/?ms=sat_email&utm_campaign=sat&u
tm_medium=email&utm_source=aswemail&emci=01b4c01a-4ac6-ec11-997e-281878b83d8
a&emdi=0e34485a-4bc6-ec11-997e-281878b83d8a&ceid=15100>
https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/lunar_twins_cahokias_emerald_acropolis_a
nd_chacos_chimney_rock_in_the_11th_century/?ms=sat_email&utm_campaign=sat&ut
m_medium=email&utm_source=aswemail&emci=01b4c01a-4ac6-ec11-997e-281878b83d8a
&emdi=0e34485a-4bc6-ec11-997e-281878b83d8a&ceid=15100.
Thursday May 5, 2022: Online
“Toward an Engaged Science of Human-Environment Interactions”
free online presentation by Dr. Kristina Douglass sponsored by Cotsen
Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles*
6 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time. Free.
The exceptional challenges of the present moment provide an
important opportunity to contextualize and understand these issues using
deeper time perspectives. Maintaining a critical awareness of environmental
injustice, its historical roots, and its compounding effects on living
communities, Kristina Douglass draws on archaeological, historical,
ethnographic, and climate data to investigate contexts of past climate
change, resource scarcity, and decreasing biodiversity. Dr. Douglass is
Assistant professor of Anthropology and African Studies at Penn State
University. The Breaking Ground|Groundbreaking lecture series from the UCLA
Cotsen Institute of Archaeology features innovative archaeologists whose
research is breaking new ground.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<https://ucla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAvduqtrz8pEtFumJk-e7F2KTw0LgwXcosB>
https://ucla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAvduqtrz8pEtFumJk-e7F2KTw0LgwXcosB.
Thursday-Saturday May 5-7, 2022: Online
“Archaeological Society of New Mexico Virtual Annual Meeting”
online hosted by the Taos Archaeological Society*
Starting Thursday at 12 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time.
Registrants receive program and list of lecture topics; registration free
with $15 donation ($30 gives access to recordings, $50 includes recordings
access and T-shirt). Early registration ends April 15.
“Taos at the Crossroads of Trade” is the theme of this year’s
ASNM event, which includes three afternoons of one-hour lectures by invited
speakers plus an online auction and awards ceremonies.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <https://taosarch.wildapricot.org/>
https://taosarch.wildapricot.org/ or contact Phil Alldritt at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Saturday May 7, 2022: Tucson
“Indigenous Corn Traditions at Mission Garden” free activity
sponsored by Friends of Tucson’s Birthplace at Mission Garden, 946 W.
Mission Lane, Tucson*
8 a.m. to noon. $5 per person suggested donation.
Mission Garden teams with Ajo CSA to plant and interpret
O’odham 60-day corn. See a demonstration of preparing traditional ga’iwsa
(chicos) and a yummy tasting of this corn dish. Blue Corn Custom Designs and
San Xavier Coop Farm will be among exhibitors. This is part of a larger
Pueblos de Maíz festival happening concurrently in Tucson, San Antonio,
Mérida and Puebla, coordinated in Tucson by Tucson City of Gastronomy.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit
<https://www.missiongarden.org/events/indigenous-corn-traditions-at-mission-
garden>
https://www.missiongarden.org/events/indigenous-corn-traditions-at-mission-g
arden or call 520-955-5200.
Saturday May 7, 2021: Gallup NM
“Native American Art Auction” sponsored by Friends of Hubbell
at Gallup Community Service Center, 410 Bataan Veterans St., Gallup, New
Mexico*
9-11:30 a.m. preview, 12-5 p.m. auction. Free to browse.
Its Native American art auctions are the Friends of Hubbell
nonprofit organization’s biggest fundraising events, providing economic
assistance to the artists and community and enabling the Friends to fund a
scholarship program, the Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site in its
endeavors, and other special events. The sales and auction process returns
approximately 85 cents of every dollar sold to the Native American
community, with no sales tax or entrance fees for the buyers. Generally 400+
auction items are entered.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit
<https://friendsofhubbell.org/native-american-art-auctions/>
https://friendsofhubbell.org/native-american-art-auctions/ or contact
Friends of Hubbell at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Saturday May 7, 2021: Blanding, UT
“Archaeology Day” family activities at Edge of the Cedars
State Park, 660 West 400 North, Blanding, Utah*
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free.
Visit the museum to experience pottery making, weaving,
flintknapping, basket making, wood carving, atlatl throwing, and other
hands-on activities, in addition to seeing some fantastic displays of
archaeological and ethnographic materials.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit
<https://stateparks.utah.gov/parks/edge-of-the-cedars/events/>
https://stateparks.utah.gov/parks/edge-of-the-cedars/events/ or call
435-678-2238.
Saturday May 7, 2021: Florence, AZ
“First Saturday at the Museum!” free open house and
activities at the Pinal County Historical Museum, 715 S. Main St., Florence,
Arizona*
11 a.m.-4 p.m. Free.
Bring the entire family to the Pinal County Historical Museum
on any First Saturday of the month through June. On First Saturdays, the
museum waives admission fees to provide visitors with an affordable,
educational, and family-friendly experience. Rotating activities include a
scavenger hunt, a local geology activity, backyard bingo, desert animals,
and more. Stop by on May 7th and check out what is new at the museum and
gift shop!
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information contact the Pinal County Historical Museum at 520-868-4382
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Sundays-Fridays May 8-13, 15-20, or 22-27, or May 29-June 3, 2022: South of
Flagstaff, AZ
“Buck Mountain Fire Lookout Tower, AZ” HistoriCorps and
Coconino National Forest offer volunteer-assisted rehabilitation and repair
conservation project in the forest about 50 miles south of Flagstaff,
Arizona*
Arrive Sunday evening; daylight hours Monday-Friday. No fees.
The Buck Mountain Fire Lookout Tower was built in 1939 and
used seasonally. The Ranger District no longer actively uses the lookout for
surveillance and fire prevention, and proposes to reuse it as a recreation
facility for public lodging as part of the Forest Service Arizona Cabin
Rental Program. The lookout requires maintenance and repairs to make it safe
for public use. Once the fire lookout tower is repaired and approved as a
recreational cabin rental, it will be the only historic lookout available to
the public for lodging in the Southwest region. Volunteers for this project
will camp onsite. Access to camp requires high-clearance vehicle; no RV
spaces and no hookups are available but there will be restrooms and potable
water onsite.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register email <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Tuesday May 10, 2022: Online
“Indigenous Interests” free Zoom online presentation “Mapping
Yaqui History” by Anabel Galindo, PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
Dr. Anabel Galindo explores the Yaqui mobility from the late
colonial period to the early 20th century. She centers mobility as a
theoretical framework to emphasize the importance of moving away from
misconstrued notions about Indigenous peoples and their histories. Dr.
Galindo received her PhD from the University of Arizona and currently is a
Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Arizona State University’s Center for
Imagination in the Borderlands as well as a history instructor for the
Pascua Yaqui Tribe of Arizona.
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free
Zoom webinar series provides Native American presenters with a forum for
discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today. The series is
hosted by Martina Dawley (Hualapai-Diné), Anabel Galindo (Yaqui), and Maegan
Lopez (Tohono O’odham), all of whom are members of Old Pueblo’s board of
directors.
To register for the program go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nMPlIhxoSguZt7qPxePv3Q>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nMPlIhxoSguZt7qPxePv3Q. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send May 10 Indigenous
Interests flyer” in your email subject line.
Wednesday May 11, 2022: Online
“Thank You Mr. Carnegie! Utah’s Carnegie Library Legacy” with
Roger Roper sponsored by Utah State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO),
Salt Lake City*
11 a.m.-12 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free.
This session explores the history, impact, and durability of
industrialist/philanthropist Andrew Carnegie's library construction program
in Utah during the early 1900s. It also includes excerpts of a recorded
interview with a long-time Utah librarian, providing a local perspective on
what a Carnegie library has meant to one small Utah community. Roger Roper
has worked on hundreds of historic preservation projects since the 1980s,
including Utah's Carnegie libraries. The recorded interview portion of the
presentation involves Camille Sleight, folklorist and Heritage Program
Manager for the Bear River Heritage Area, and Patricia Forsgren with the
Richmond Public Library (Cache County).
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register visit
<https://www.eventbrite.com/e/thank-you-mr-carnegie-utahs-carnegie-library-l
egacy-tickets-311763150977?aff=odcleoeventsincollection>
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/thank-you-mr-carnegie-utahs-carnegie-library-le
gacy-tickets-311763150977?aff=odcleoeventsincollection.
Wednesday May 11, 2022: In-person and online
“Ancient Basketry Shields of the Northern Southwest” free
live and online presentation with ethnologist Edward A. Jolie, PhD,
sponsored by San Juan Basin Archaeological Society at Fort Lewis College’s
Center of Southwest Studies, 1000 Rim Dr., Durango, Colorado*
7 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free.
Indigenous American shield-making traditions are best
attested among the peoples of the Plains and Southwest cultural provinces
where shields were used in martial and ceremonial contexts. In these
regions, shields are frequently represented in rock and mural paintings, and
pictographs and petroglyphs, some of which exhibit considerable antiquity.
Actual shields, however, are almost unknown archaeologically. This
presentation discusses new data resulting from analyses of the five known
coiled basketry shields recovered from archaeological sites in the northern
Southwest. Improved dating suggests basketry shields predate the
proliferation of shield imagery in the 1200s. Dr. Jolie is the Clara Lee
Tanner Associate Curator of Ethnology at the Arizona State Museum and
Associate Professor of Anthropology in the School of Anthropology,
University of Arizona.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
attend the meeting online go to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85780706701?pwd=NlJxbUx3L09BU1Y0NCs0WTN1T0lmUT09>
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85780706701?pwd=NlJxbUx3L09BU1Y0NCs0WTN1T0lmUT09
(Meeting ID 857 8070 6701, passcode 578820).
Wednesday May 11, 2022: Online
“The Hearthstone Project: Using Archaeological Science to
Study Pictographs” free online presentation by Karen L. Steelman, PhD, for
San Tan Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, Queen Creek, Arizona*
7 p.m. Arizona/Mountain Standard Time. Free.
Dr. Steelman is director of the Shumla Archaeological
Research & Education Center’s 14C Plasma Oxidation Laboratory. She has a PhD
in analytical chemistry, was trained as an archaeological chemist, and is a
leading international rock art researcher.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information contact Marie Britton at 480-390-3491 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Saturday May 14, 2022: Comstock, TX
“Guided Tour to Halo Shelter and Shumla Archaeological Center
HQ” with archaeologist Vicky Roberts meets at Shumla Archaeological Research
& Education Center (sponsoring organization), 28 Langtry St., Comstock,
Texas*
8 a.m.-3 p.m. $160.
Halo Shelter sits within a small tributary that feeds into the main
branch of Dead Man’s Creek, approximately 5 km from the Devils River on a
private ranch in Val Verde County. Halo boasts one of the best-preserved
Pecos River style pictograph panels in the region. The site gets its name
from a unique arch motif with rayed lines extending from it over the top of
several figures’ heads. Along with the halo motif, there is a wide
assortment of unique Pecos River style figures and motifs intricately
executed and vibrant. Afterwards, enjoy a tour of Shumla’s research facility
and plasma oxidation laboratory.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<file:///C:/Users/Allen/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/Content.Ou
tlook/T121CB56/www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/> www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/. For
more information contact Shumla at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Saturday May 14 or Sunday May 22, 2022: Tucson
“Turquoise Trail Guided Walking Tour” starting at the
Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8-10:30 a.m. May 14 with guide Mauro Trejo; 8-10 a.m. May 22
with guide Dorothy Yanez. $25 (Presidio Museum members $20).
The Presidio Museum’s knowledgeable docents lead this walking
tour of the 2½-mile Turquoise Trail painted with a turquoise line through
the heart of downtown Tucson, the “Old Pueblo.” Learn about Tucson’s
fascinating history and see some architectural gems. The trail passes many
of the Old Pueblo’s historic buildings, parks, sculptures and shrines, and
tour guides share stories that make Tucson’s history special.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Spaces
are limited. Click on the date link for more information or to register:
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3252&qid=523253> May 14
or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3253&qid=523253> May
22.
Monday May 16, 2022: Tucson and online
“Hechizas: A History of Looting and Ceramic Fakes in
Northwest Chihuahua” presentation, live or Zoom option, by archaeologist
Fabiola E. Silva for Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society (AAHS)
meeting in University of Arizona’s Environmental & Natural Resources Bldg. 2
Room 107 (ground-floor auditorium Bldg. 2 Room 107 (ground-floor
auditorium), 1064 E. Lowell St., Tucson (Park in U of A 6th St. garage for
$1/hr.)*
7-8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time. Free.
In the early 1970s a pottery movement inspired by precontact
Casas Grandes ceramic styles emerged in Mata Ortiz, Chihuahua, Mexico. This
movement was led by the potter Juan Quezada and his patron Spencer
MacCallum. The origin story told by MacCallum and Quezada, and retold by
many others, is one filled with inspiration and chance encounters. However,
their story fails to acknowledge how looting and the creation of ceramic
fakes contributed to the development of this modern pottery movement. This
presentation will examine the emergence of ceramic fakes in northwestern
Chihuahua, establish their defining characteristics, and explore their role
in ceramic analysis. Data for this study were collected through extensive
interviews with looters, collectors, and elder potters from the region. In
addition, a ceramic replication project was conducted by elder potters
Macario Ortiz and Reynaldo Quezada in order to document the process of
making hechizas (ceramic fakes). Fabiola Silva is Cultural Resource Manager
and Tribal Liaison for Fort Bliss Military Installation.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored
event. To attend online register at <https://bit.ly/2022MaySilvaREG-OP>
https://bit.ly/2022MaySilvaREG-OP. For details visit
<http://www.az-arch-and-hist.org> www.az-arch-and-hist.org or contact Fran
Maiuri at <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Wednesday May 18, 2022: Online
“Perimortem Processing, Dismemberment, and Trophy Taking of
Human Remains” with Derinna Kopp, PhD, sponsored by Utah State Historic
Preservation Office (SHPO), Salt Lake City*
11 a.m.-12 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free.
Join Dr. Derinna Kopp for a survey of skeletal remains that
add new details to ancient life . . . and death. The identification of
certain perimortem (near the time of death) alterations on human bones has
long been viewed as hallmarks processing, dismemberment and trophy taking of
human remains. The presence of these characteristics in some archaeological
remains from Utah will be explored. Derinna Kopp is the head of the Ancient
Human Remains Program at the Utah SHPO. She has a PhD in Biological
Anthropology with emphasis on skeletal analysis from the University of Utah
and 20+ years of experience analyzing and recovering human remains from both
archaeological and modern forensic cases.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register visit
<https://www.eventbrite.com/e/perimortem-processing-dismemberment-and-trophy
-taking-of-human-remains-tickets-311771295337?aff=odcleoeventsincollection>
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/perimortem-processing-dismemberment-and-trophy-
taking-of-human-remains-tickets-311771295337?aff=odcleoeventsincollection.
Wednesday-Tuesday May 18-May 24, 2020: New Mexico
“New Mexico’s El Camino Real de la Tierra Adentro Tour”
sponsored by Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, Tucson*
8 a.m. Wednesday-6ish p.m. Tuesday. $2,200 ($2,000 Presidio
Museum members) double occupancy (add $200 for single); $100 off if paid in
full by March 1.
Follow the old Spanish Royal Road of the Interior Lands for a
regional exploration into the Hispanic heritage of New Mexico in this
6-night, 7-day trip that includes overnight stops in Mesilla and Ruidoso
plus 4 overnights in Santa Fe. The tour will roughly follow El Camino Real
de la Tierra Adentro with an eastern detour to see the White Sands National
Park, Lincoln, and the Salinas Pueblo missions on the way north.
Participants will learn about and explore the Gadsden Purchase, earthen
architecture in Mesilla, the White Sands, the 17th century Salinas missions,
historic Lincoln and Billy the Kid, Santa Fe’s world-class museums and
cultural attractions, Las Trampas, Taos, Los Luceros State Historic Site,
and El Santuario de Chimayo. Trip registration includes chartered bus
transportation and guide services, admission fees to Santa Fe museums and
New Mexico cultural sites, and all breakfasts (6) and dinners (6) but not
lunches.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/calendar/travel-new-mexicos-el-camino-real-de-la
-tierra-adentro-tour/>
https://tucsonpresidio.com/calendar/travel-new-mexicos-el-camino-real-de-la-
tierra-adentro-tour/ or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday May 19, 2022: Online
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free
Zoom online program featuring “The Elk Ridge Community in the Mimbres Pueblo
World” presentation by archaeologist Barbara J. Roth, PhD
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free
Elk Ridge was the largest pueblo in the northern portion of
the Mimbres River valley during the Classic Mimbres period (1000-1130 CE).
Recent excavations at the site combined with survey data indicate that it
was part of a thriving community with social ties to other nearby pueblos
and likely served as the ritual and perhaps economic hub for these smaller
pueblos. In this presentation, Dr. Roth will discuss data from fieldwork she
directed at Elk Ridge and surrounding sites and will explore how and why Elk
Ridge played such a prominent role in this portion of the Mimbres River
Valley.
To register go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1tPSIzRPQjO30CZ5u-0sYw>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1tPSIzRPQjO30CZ5u-0sYw. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send May Third Thursday
flyer” in your email subject line.
Saturdays/Sundays May 21, June 26, July 23, August 28, September 24, or
October 23: Tucson
“Mansions of Main Avenue Walking Tour” starting at the
Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8-10 a.m. (9-11 a.m. on Oct. 23). $25 (Presidio Museum
members $20).
Take a stroll down historic downtown Tucson’s Main Avenue to
view homes and hear stories of the early “Old Pueblo” including Hiram
Stevens (who tried to kill his wife and then turned the gun on himself), Sam
Hughes (called by some the “Father of Tucson” but was involved in the Camp
Grant Massacre of Aravaipa Apaches), Annie Cheyney (whose newly restored
1905 home was the talk of the town), Albert Steinfeld (department store
magnate whose son Harold was a top scorcher), Frank Hereford (attorney who
represented defendants in the Wham Robbery), and William Herring (at one
time Wyatt Earp’s lawyer).
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Spaces
are limited. Click on the date link for more information or to register:
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3246&qid=523253>
Saturday, May 21;
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3247&qid=523253> Sunday,
June 26;
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3248&qid=523253>
Saturday, July 23;
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3249&qid=523253> Sunday,
August 28;
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3250&qid=523253>
Saturday, September 24;
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=3251&qid=523253> Sunday,
October 23.
Saturday May 21, 2022: Tucson
“San Ysidro Festival ” sponsored by Friends of Tucson’s
Birthplace at Mission Garden, 946 W. Mission Lane, Tucson*
8 a.m. to noon. $5 per person suggested donation.
Help recreate one of Tucson's historic festivals – the spring
wheat harvest. It fell by the wayside with the decline of agriculture on the
historical floodplain of the Santa Cruz River in Tucson, Mission Garden
brings it back to life on the saint’s day for Saint Isadore, patron saint of
farmers and laborers. Watch the wheat harvested, threshed, and winnowed, and
taste the pozole de trigo.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.tucsonsbirthplace.org>
www.tucsonsbirthplace.org or call 520-955-5200.
Saturday May 21, June 18, July 16, August 20, September 17, or October 15,
2022: Tucson
“Barrio Viejo Walking Tour” starting at El Tiradito Shrine,
420 S. Main Ave., Tucson*
5:30-7 p.m. $25 ($20 Presidio Museum members).
Experience the rich history of Tucson’s Barrio Viejo (the
“old neighborhood”) by taking this one-mile walking tour with Presidio
Museum docent and board member Mauro Trejo. For over 100 years, Barrio Viejo
was the heart of Tucson’s social, economic, and cultural life. This
90-minute tour winds through the largest collection of Sonoran row houses in
the US, in Tucson’s oldest neighborhood. Your guide will discuss the history
of the neighborhood, its architecture, and the individuals, businesses, and
cultures that met there. For an additional $10 and 30 minutes participants
can join the tour guide after the tour at the historic El Minuto Café for
conversation, a margarita (or alternative) and a cheese crisp.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.TucsonPresidio.com>
www.TucsonPresidio.com or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Wednesday May 25, 2022: Online
“Wine, Wheat, and Whatnots: The Material Culture of
Cornerstones” with historic sites curator Emily Utt sponsored by Utah State
Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), Salt Lake City*
11 a.m.-12 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Free.
Placing a time capsule in a building is often a moment of
celebration in a construction project. From tools and books to food and
coins, the objects left behind during construction give us a glimpse into
the past and connects their stories to ours. Emily Utt is a historic sites
curator for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Her work
focuses on architectural history and historic preservation research and
projects across the globe.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register visit
<https://www.eventbrite.com/e/brown-bag-wine-wheat-and-whatnots-the-material
-culture-of-cornerstones-tickets-294049870077?aff=odcleoeventsincollection>
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/brown-bag-wine-wheat-and-whatnots-the-material-
culture-of-cornerstones-tickets-294049870077?aff=odcleoeventsincollection.
Wednesday-Saturday May 25-28, 2022: Navajo Nation, AZ
“Walking in the Beauty Way with the Diné: Canyon de Chelly &
Environs” guided tour starting in Ganado, Arizona, sponsored by Verde Valley
Archaeology Center Camp Verde, Arizona*
Wednesday-Sunday afternoons, Mountain Daylight Time. $615
(VVAC members $550).
This four-day, three-night excursion starts at Hubbell
Trading Post, the oldest continuously operated trading post in the American
Southwest. The evening will be spent in dialogue learning from a Diné
(Navajo) Wisdom Keeper. The following day join Diné guides for a custom tour
in the enchanting landscape of Canyon de Chelly, a 26-mile canyon of 30- to
1,000-foot cliffs, one of the most beautiful places on earth. Ancestral
Pueblo people inhabited these peach-colored sandstone canyons for thousands
of years, gradually replacing their pithouse structures with ones of stone
set into overhangs. Other activities include visiting local artists and
exploring Betatakin Pueblo in Navajo National Monument. Limited to 15
people.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <https://www.verdevalleyarchaeology.org/hikes>
https://www.verdevalleyarchaeology.org/hikes or contact VVAC at 928-567-0066
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Saturday May 28, 2022: Comstock, TX
“Guided Tour to Black Cave and Vaquero Shelter Rock Art
Sites” with archaeologist Vicky Roberts sponsored by Shumla Archaeological
Research & Education Center, meets at Shumla Archaeological Research Center,
28 Langtry St., Comstock, Texas*
8 a.m.-6 p.m. $160.
Black Cave is a large rockshelter within Upper Presa Canyon
in Seminole Canyon State Park that contains striking and vibrant rock art,
owing its preservation to its location high above the shelter floor (which
probably would have required the construction of scaffolding to create).
Vaquero Shelter gets its name for the Historic period rock art depicting two
riders mounted on horseback with a longhorn cow and calf adjacent to a
structure resembling a Spanish mission and a man in a Spanish uniform. Other
rock art styles are present denoting continued use throughout precontact
times.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<file:///C:/Users/Allen/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/Content.Ou
tlook/T121CB56/www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/> www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/. For
more information contact Shumla at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Sunday May 29, 2022: Comstock, TX
“Guided Tour to Fate Bell Shelter, Fate Bell Annex, and
Running Horse Rock Art Sites” with archaeologist Vicky Roberts sponsored by
Shumla Archaeological Research & Education Center, meets at Seminole Canyon
State Park & Historic Site on US-90, nine miles west of Comstock, Texas*
8 a.m.-3 p.m. $160.
Fate Bell Annex, Fate Bell Shelter, and Running Horse Shelter are all
situated in Seminole Canyon State Park and Historic Site. Fate Bell and Fate
Bell Annex are two of the most famous Pecos River style rock art sites in
the Lower Pecos Canyonlands with breath-taking rock art and extremely
well-preserved deposits. Running Horse Shelter offers beautiful remnant
Pecos River style rock art, intriguing Historic period art, and even a
historic stone wall. You’ll hear about the rock art, the lifeways of the
people who painted it, and Shumla’s most recent discoveries, and will see
4,000 years of history in this single day.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<file:///C:/Users/Allen/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/Content.Ou
tlook/T121CB56/www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/> www.shumla.org/shumlatreks/. For
more information contact Shumla at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Wednesdays June 1, 8, 15, 22, & 29, 2022: Tucson
“Domestication and Its Impact on Human Society” Master Class
taught by Martin Welker, PhD, at the Arizona State Museum (ASM), University
of Arizona, 1013 E. University Blvd., Tucson*
10 a.m.-12 p.m. each Wednesday. $230 (ASM members $200). Free
campus parking. Credit card payments incur a 3% fee.
The domestication of plants and animals is one of the most
significant events in human history. Plant and animal domestication has
directly or indirectly impacted most aspects of our daily lives including
human mobility, health, and diet, the environments in which we live and
animals we interact with, and even the organization of our communities, size
of our cities, and tasks we spend our daily lives accomplishing. Without
domestication, it is safe to say hat the world we know today would not
exist. This master class will explore the process of domestication and
impact that a few domesticated species have had upon human communities.
Session topics include 1) Introduction – what is “domestication”?; 2)
domestication in the Pleistocene: the domestic dog; 3) the “Neolithic
Revolution”: farming and early food domesticates; 4) trade, transport, and
directed domestication; and 5) tamed and domesticated birds.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Limited
to 10 participants. To register or for more information contact Darlene
Lizarraga at 520-626-8381 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
Thursday-Sunday June 2-5, 2022: Ruidoso, NM
“Tularosa Basin Conference” sponsored by Jornada Research
Institute (JRI) and the Village of Ruidoso at Ruidoso Convention Center, 111
Sierra Blanca Dr., Ruidoso, New Mexico*
Thursday evening through Sunday morning. $35 ($25 seniors and
students; discounts for JRI members – see
<https://jornadaresearchinstitute.com/>
https://jornadaresearchinstitute.com/).
Expanding beyond southern New Mexico’s Tularosa Basin this
year, the Tularosa Basin Conference’s June 2 keynote address will be “Men of
Iron, Gods of Thunder and Lightning: Coronado in Arizona” by Deni Seymour,
PhD, talking about her recent discovery of archaeological sites in southern
Arizona’s Santa Cruz and San Bernardino valleys that she firmly associates
with the 1540-1542 Coronado expedition. On June 3 and 4 there will be
presentations on topics associated with the Tularosa Basin, the Sierra
Blanca region, and Ruidoso including archaeology, Earth and ecological
studies, history of the Ruidoso area, the Spanish Entrada and colonial
period, and rock art and celestial markers. Guided tours to various sites
and points of historic interest are scheduled for June 5.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Seating
limited, preregistration is required. For more information visit
<https://jornadaresearchinstitute.com/2022-tularosa-basin-conference/>
https://jornadaresearchinstitute.com/2022-tularosa-basin-conference/ or
contact Dave Greenwald at 575-430-8854 (text works best) or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Sunday-Friday June 5-10, 2022: Near South Lake Tahoe, CA
“Sly Guard Station and Harvey West Cabin” HistoriCorps and
partner Eldorado National Forest offer volunteer-assisted rehabilitation and
repair
project about 45 minutes away from South Lake Tahoe, California*
Arrive Sunday evening; daylight hours daily thereafter. No
fees.
The Sly Guard Station and Harvey West Cabin played a
significant role in the history and evolution of the U.S. Forest Service,
and today are available to the public as overnight lodging. This multiseason
Historicorps project involves producing and installing vertical log slab
siding at Harvey West Cabin and repairing the wood sash windows of Sly Guard
Station. All meals, tools, and training are provided. Volunteers will need
to camp onsite in tents or truck/van campers (no RV spaces available) and
are responsible for their own transit to the site as well as personal
camping equipment, work clothes, and sturdy boots.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register go to
<https://historicorps.org/sly-guard-station-and-harvey-west-cabin-ca-2022/>
https://historicorps.org/sly-guard-station-and-harvey-west-cabin-ca-2022/.
Sundays-Fridays June 5-10, 12-17, or 19-24, or June 26-July 1, 2022:
Southwest of Denver
“Devils Head Fire Lookout Tower” HistoriCorps and partner
Pike-San Isabel National Forest offer volunteer-assisted wooden stairs
rehabilitation and repair project 50 miles southwest of Denver, Colorado*
Arrive Sunday evening; daylight hours daily thereafter. No
fees.
The Devils Head Fire Lookout was established in 1912 and its
original tower was built in 1919. Located at the top of the Rampart Range,
it is unique in still being staffed and cared for by the Forest and partner
organizations like HistoriCorps. In this project, volunteers will help
replace and stain all of the treads on the signature stairs that carry the
weight of hundreds of visitors every year, do minor carpentry repairs and
scrape/paint failed sections of paint on the lookout tower, and do minor
carpentry repairs and apply wood preservative to the lookout's cabin below
the tower. All meals, tools, and training are provided. Volunteers will need
to camp onsite in tents or truck/van campers (no RV spaces available) and
are responsible for their own transit to the site as well as personal
camping equipment, work clothes, and sturdy boots.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register go to
<https://historicorps.org/devils-head-lo-co-2022/>
https://historicorps.org/devils-head-lo-co-2022/.
Sundays-Fridays June 5-10, 12-17, or 19-24, or June 26-July 1, 2022: North
of Ft. Collins, CO*
“Red Mountain Open Space Barn” HistoriCorps and partner
Larimer County, Colorado, offer volunteer-assisted repair and replacement
conservation project 45 minutes north of Ft. Collins*
Arrive Sunday evening; daylight hours daily thereafter. No
fees.
The Roberts Goodwin buildings 45 minutes north of Fort
Collins serve as physical remnants of the area’s pioneer farming and
ranching heritage. In this project, volunteers are needed to help repair and
replace deteriorated wood siding, trims, and selected metal roof panels, and
scrape and paint all siding on a rustic barn that shares the history of
those who settled here between the 1870s and 1920s. If time allows, the work
will include rehabilitating windows and doors. All meals, tools, and
training are provided. Volunteers will need to camp onsite in tents or
truck/van campers (no RV spaces available) and are responsible for their own
transit to the site as well as personal camping equipment, work clothes, and
sturdy boots.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information or to register go to
<https://historicorps.org/red-mountain-open-space-barn-co-2022/>
https://historicorps.org/red-mountain-open-space-barn-co-2022/.
Wednesdays June 8-August 24, 2022: Online
“Archaeology of the Southwest” 12-session online adult
education class with archaeologist Allen Dart, sponsored by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Wednesday evening June 8 through
August 24, 2022. $99 donation ($80 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center,
Arizona Archaeological Society [AAS], and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum
members), not counting cost of the recommended text or of optional Arizona
Archaeological Society membership.
Archaeology of the Southwest is an introductory course that
provides a basic overview of the U.S. Southwest’s ancestral cultures. Its
twelve evening class sessions will cover cultural sequences, dating systems,
subsistence strategies, development of urbanization, depopulation 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 cultures for
anyone interested in the archaeology of the Southwest, the class is a
prerequisite for all other courses offered in the Arizona Archaeological
Society (AAS) Certification/Education Program. Instructor Allen Dart is a
registered professional archaeologist and executive director of Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center. Minimum enrollment 10 people. For information on the AAS
and its Certification program visit <http://www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603>
www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603.
Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5
p.m. Friday June 3, whichever is earlier. To register of for more
information contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send June-August
Archaeology class flyer” in your email subject line.
Sunday-Friday June 12-17 or 19-24, 2022: McNary, AZ area
“Los Burros Barn” HistoriCorps and the Apache-Sitgreaves National
Forest offer volunteer-assisted restoration project near McNary, Arizona*
Arrive Sunday evening; daylight hours daily thereafter. No fees.
National Register-listed Los Burros Barn is located at the edge of a
breathtaking conifer-ringed meadow. The barn was part of the US Forest
Service’s Los Burros Ranger Station, constructed in 1910 to house the fire
guard for the Lake Mountain lookout station and serve as a temporary base
camp for fire-fighting crews. After the lookout tower was constructed, Los
Burros Ranger Station was repurposed to house Forest Service timber sale
administrators and rangers. As the timber industry slowed, many miles of
timber-railroad grades throughout the area were repurposed to provide
outings to Los Burros vicinity for locals and tourists. Today, there is a
campground near the barn along with wonderful hiking opportunities including
the 13.8-mile Los Burros Trail. On this project, volunteers guided by
HistoriCorps staff will assist with removing and installing a new cedar
shingle roof, repairing and replacing some of the roof decking, and
completing the unfinished side staining. Camping area is accessible for
tents, campervans, truck campers and trailers up to 22 feet in length.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <https://historicorps.org/los-burros-barn-az-2022/>
https://historicorps.org/los-burros-barn-az-2022/ or contact HistoriCorps at
720-287-0100 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Monday-Friday June 13-17 or 20-24, 2022: Tucson
“Live Tucson’s History” summer camp for ages 8-12 at Presidio
San Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. each day. $290 (Presidio Museum members
$265). Lunch and snacks are NOT provided.
Children ages 8-12 become early inhabitants of Tucson and
experience history hands-on. Camp participants will experience how people in
the Presidio lived through a series of hands-on activities that may include
blacksmithing/tinsmithing, training to be a Spanish soldier, experiencing
foods that are native to the Sonoran Desert, or even candle making.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.TucsonPresidio.com>
www.TucsonPresidio.com or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday June 16, 2022: Online
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “Diné History’s Impact on
Jewelry” presentation by Nanibaa Beck, cosponsored by Arizona Humanities,
Phoenix
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
Nanibaa Beck, a second-generation Diné (Navajo) jeweler,
provides a history of Diné jewelry over the century, focusing on changes in
each decade. She will relate the shifting techniques, styles, and meanings
of the art over the years to important events in Diné history including the
impact of boarding schools, training schools, and access to new styles and
materials on Navajo jewelry over this extended period of time. Being
intricately connected to the creation process motivated Ms. Beck to become
more knowledgeable about the multifaceted areas surrounding Native American
art. In November 2013 she founded NotAbove Jewelry after an “aha moment” in
which a small thank-you card project sparked the idea for the original
language necklaces that connect to her Diné culture. Today, NotAbove
reflects vibrant Native creative expressions and the growth of an Diné
‘Asdzáá (woman) as a metalsmith. This program is made possible by Arizona
Humanities. It will not be recorded.
Go to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_8QpCuw1XQ6O09j5IeJVwDQ>
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_8QpCuw1XQ6O09j5IeJVwDQ to
register. For more information contact Old Pueblo at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send June Third
Thursday flyer” in your email subject line.
Monday-Friday June 20-24, 2022: Tucson
“The Cultures of Tucson” summer camp for ages 11-14 at
Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. each day. $290 (Presidio Museum members
$265). Lunch and snacks are NOT provided.
Participants will learn about the history and culture of the
Tucson area through a series of hands-on activities that may include making
adobe bricks by hand, learning traditional stories, and making soap from
native plants.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.TucsonPresidio.com>
www.TucsonPresidio.com or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Monday-Friday June 27-July 1, 2022: Tucson
“Archaeology Summer Camp” for ages 10-14 at Presidio San
Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. each day. $290 (Presidio Museum members
$265). Lunch and snacks are NOT provided.
Campers will learn how archaeologists really work through a
series of hands-on activities that include using pre-Hispanic tools,
excavating a simulated archaeological site, and analyzing the artifacts they
have found. This camp teaches the science of archaeological and artifact
analysis. There is some digging but most time is spent on what happens
before and after the dig.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information visit <http://www.TucsonPresidio.com>
www.TucsonPresidio.com or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Tuesday July 12, 2022: Online
“Indigenous Interests” free Zoom online presentation, speaker
and presentation to be announced, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free
Zoom webinar series provides Native American presenters with a forum for
discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today. The series is
hosted by Martina Dawley (Hualapai-Diné), Anabel Galindo (Yaqui), and Maegan
Lopez (Tohono O’odham), all of whom are members of Old Pueblo’s board of
directors.
To register for the program go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Wn7PTGxBQSaQ1PLWfoOLnA>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Wn7PTGxBQSaQ1PLWfoOLnA. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
Thursday July 21, 2022: Online
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “Ecological Knowledge and
Practices of Traditional Southwestern Agriculturists” presentation by Gary
P. Nabhan, PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free
Description coming.
To register go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ruxu_i6vRo2lZMKfykrlUA>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ruxu_i6vRo2lZMKfykrlUA. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send July Third
Thursday flyer” in your email subject line.
Thursday August 18, 2022: Online
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “The Full Story of Pueblo Grande
(or at Least a Few Chapters)” presentation by City of Phoenix Archaeologist
Laurene Montero, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free
Pueblo Grande is one of the last remaining precontact Hohokam
villages with an intact platform mound – or va’aki – in Arizona’s lower Salt
River valley. Its importance to descendant Tribal communities is recognized
today, and Pueblo Grande continues to yield a wealth of information
regarding the past and its connection to the present. Excavation projects in
almost 80 percent of this village have unearthed many archaeological
features, providing information for compiling a new research database. The
continued challenge to preserve, research, and interpret pieces of this
important place in the face of a changing urban landscape has required
creativity, collaboration, and devotion on the part of a diverse group of
volunteers and professionals. This Third Thursday presentation will combine
a brief history of the archaeology of Pueblo Grande, its role in the
surrounding irrigation community archaeologists call Canal System 2, and its
value as a resource for continued preservation archaeology.
To register go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ynVTuQ14QLSOnrcrosWEYw>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ynVTuQ14QLSOnrcrosWEYw. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send August Third
Thursday flyer” in your email subject line.
Tuesday September 13, 2022: Online
“Indigenous Interests” free Zoom online presentation, speaker
and presentation to be announced, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
Description coming.
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free
Zoom webinar series provides Native American presenters with a forum for
discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today. The series is
hosted by Martina Dawley (Hualapai-Diné), Anabel Galindo (Yaqui), and Maegan
Lopez (Tohono O’odham), all of whom are members of Old Pueblo’s board of
directors.
To register for the program go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_I6V1sk2PTEukauXCO3Dv4Q>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_I6V1sk2PTEukauXCO3Dv4Q. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
Thursday September 15, 2022: Online
(An Encore from March 17)
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “The Sinagua: Fact or Fiction?”
presentation by archaeologist Peter J. Pilles, Jr.
7 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as
Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
“Sinagua” is the name first coined in 1939 to refer to the
pre-European people who inhabited the Flagstaff region of north-central
Arizona. But what, exactly, does this mean? Does Sinagua refer to a
geographic area, a specific kind of pottery, an actual grouping of people,
or is it something else? These are difficult questions this presentation
will attempt to explore. The Sinagua archaeological area of Arizona has been
considered a cultural “frontier,” characterized as a blend of other
cultures, yet unique enough to warrant its own cultural designation.
However, over the years, this uniqueness dissolved as old interpretations
were no longer satisfactorily explaining what archaeologists were finding.
By the 1960s, new areas of study and new explanatory models were developed.
However, these paradigm shifts have failed to satisfactorily answer the
questions posed by past interpretations. These shifts beg the major
questions: Who were the Sinagua, how do they fit into the “Big Picture” of
Southwest prehistory, and what happened to the culture? In order to bring
closure to these questions, archaeologists need to explain how past
questions have been . . . not exactly the wrong questions, but they need to
be re-fitted and examined under a different lens, focused by degrees of
scale. This presentation will attempt to illustrate these different
approaches, as well as to demonstrate that the concept of “Sinagua” is both
fact AND fiction.
Archaeologist Peter Pilles has studied the Southwest’s
Sinagua archaeological culture for decades. In this presentation
(rescheduled from March 17 when he was unable to share his PowerPoint file)
he will give an overview of Sinagua and how it related to the surrounding,
contemporary Hohokam, Mogollon, Ancestral Pueblo, and Patayan cultures.
To register go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hLUS_B7-R_exp0XxQAKrBw>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hLUS_B7-R_exp0XxQAKrBw. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send September Third
Thursday flyer” in your email subject line.
Wednesdays September 21-December 14, 2022 (except skip October 26): Online
“The Hohokam Culture of Southern Arizona” 12-session online
adult education class with archaeologist Allen Dart, sponsored by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific
Daylight Time through Nov. 2nd) each Wednesday. $99 donation ($80 for
members of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Arizona Archaeological Society
[AAS], and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum); donation does not include costs
of recommended text (The Hohokam Millennium by Paul R. Fish and Suzanne K.
Fish, editors) or of the optional AAS membership or AAS Certification
Program enrollment.
Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart teaches this
class in 12 two-hour sessions to explore the archaeology of the ancient
Hohokam culture of the American Southwest. The class covers 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 exchange. Students seeking the AAS Certification are
expected to prepare a brief research report to be presented orally or in
written or video format. Minimum enrollment 10 people. The class meets the
requirements of the Arizona Archaeological Society (AAS) Training,
Certification and Education (TCE) program's “Advanced Southwest Archaeology
– The Hohokam of Southern Arizona” class. The AAS basic “Archaeology of the
Southwest” class is recommended as a prerequisite but this is negotiable
with the instructor. For information on the AAS and its Certification
program visit <http://www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603>
www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603.
Reservations and prepayment are due 10 days after reservation
request or by 5 p.m. Friday September 16, whichever is earlier. To register
or for more information contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send Hohokam class
flyer” in your email subject line.
Thursday September 22, 2022: Tucson-Marana, AZ
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Autumn Equinox Tour to Los
Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Sites” with archaeologist Allen Dart
departing from near Silverbell Road and Linda Vista Blvd. in Marana, Arizona
8 a.m. to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members) helps cover Old Pueblo’s
tour expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and
traditional cultures.
The 2022 autumn equinox occurs on September 22 at 6:04 p.m.
Arizona/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time; Sept. 23,
1:04 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time). To celebrate the 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,
bedrock mortars, and other archaeological features; and to Picture Rocks,
where ancient petroglyphs include a solstice and equinox calendar marker,
dancing human-like figures, whimsical animals, and other rock symbols made
by Hohokam Indians between 800 and 1100 CE. An equinox calendar petroglyph
at Picture Rocks exhibits a specific interaction with a ray of sunlight on
the morning of each equinox regardless of the hour and minute of the actual
celestial equinox, so participants in this tour will see that sunlight
interaction with the calendar glyph unless clouds block the sunlight.
Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5
p.m. Tuesday September 20, whichever is earlier: 520-798-1201 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send Autumn Equinox
tour flyer” in your email subject line.
Tuesdays October 4 and 18, 2022: Online
“Understanding Indigenous Mexico through the Maya and Aztec
Codices” two-session online adult education class with ethnohistorian
Michael M. Brescia, PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box
40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific
Daylight Time) each Tuesday. $50 donation ($40 for members of Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum)
Description coming.
For more information contact Old Pueblo at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
Saturday October 8, 2022: Tucson
“Arrowhead-making and Flintknapping Workshop” with flintknapper Sam
Greenleaf at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street, Tucson
9 a.m. to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members; 50% off for persons who have
taken this class previously)
Learn how to make arrowheads, spear points, and other flaked
stone artifacts just like ancient peoples did. In this workshop,
flintknapping expert Sam Greenleaf provides participants with hands-on
experience and learning on how pre-European Contact people made and used
projectile points and other tools created from obsidian and other stone. All
materials and equipment are provided. The class is designed to help modern
people understand how Native Americans made traditional crafts and is not
intended to train students how to make artwork for sale. Limited to six
registrants. All participants are asked to wear face masks and to practice
physical distancing during the workshop to avoid spreading COVID-19 virus.
Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5
p.m. Thursday October 6, whichever is earlier: 520-798-1201 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos
about the above-listed activity send an email to
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send flintknapping
flyer” in your email subject line.
OLD PUEBLO ARCHAEOLOGY CENTER’S YOUTH EDUCATION PROGRAMS
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center is now taking reservations for this
year’s youth education programs. You can find information about them at the
links listed below.
The OPEN3 Simulated Archaeological Excavation Education Program
The Old Pueblo Educational Neighborhood (OPEN) program allows
students and adults to learn what archaeology is all about by excavation in
“OPEN3,” a full-scale model of an archaeological site. OPEN3 is a simulated
excavation site that archaeologists have constructed to resemble a southern
Arizona Hohokam Indian ruin. It has full-size replicas of pre-Spanish
Contact pithouses and outdoor features that the Hohokam used for cooking,
storage, and other (sometimes surprising) purposes.
Students taking the OPEN3 field trip get to learn and practice
techniques used to excavate real archaeological sites. They are also exposed
to scientific interpretation of how ancient people constructed their houses,
what they looked like, ate, and believed in, and how they created beauty in
their lives.
For details on OPEN3 field trips visit
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/
open3-simulated-excavation-classrooms/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/o
pen3-simulated-excavation-classrooms/.
OPENOUT Archaeology Outreach Presentations
Old Pueblo’s OPENOUT (Old Pueblo Educational Neighborhood Outreach)
program offers 45-60 minute presentations by professional archaeologists.
Each presentation shows kids how some aspects of everyday life have changed
while others have stayed the same.
The hands-on materials and fun lesson plans in our OPENOUT programs
bring archaeology and the past alive for children and are a perfect prelude
for the OPEN3 simulated archaeological excavation program.
Old Pueblo also offers each of the OPENOUT programs via Zoom.
The “Ancient People of Arizona” presentation gives children an
overview of how the Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi), Mogollon, and Hohokam
peoples lived. For details visit
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/
classroom-outreach-ancient-people-arizona/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/c
lassroom-outreach-ancient-people-arizona/.
The “Lifestyle of the Hohokam” program shows children how the
ancient Hohokam lived. For details visit
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/
classroom-outreach-lifesyle-hohokam/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/c
lassroom-outreach-lifesyle-hohokam/.
The “Ancient People of Arizona” and “Lifestyle of the Hohokam”
presentations both include real and replica artifacts, plus abundant
illustrations to help children experience how pre-Contact Native Americans
of our area lived and to appreciate the arts they created.
“What is an Archaeologist?” is a program designed to give children
an idea of what archaeologists do, how they do it, and how they learn about
people through their work. This presentation includes examples of the tools
archaeologists work with, real and replica artifacts, and activities to help
children experience how archaeologists interpret the past. For details visit
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/
classroom-outreach-archaeologist/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/c
lassroom-outreach-archaeologist/.
Tours for Youth
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center offers guided tours to real
archaeological sites for classrooms and other organized children’s groups.
Heritage sites that can be visited in this program include a choice of the
Picture Rocks petroglyphs site (visited by the school group shown in the
accompanying photo), Los Morteros Hohokam Village, or Vista del Rio Hohokam
Village. Each youth tour is a guided visit that does not include
archaeological excavation; participants are not allowed to collect
artifacts. For details visit
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/
site-tours-classrooms/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/s
ite-tours-classrooms/.
OUR MISSION AND SUPPORT
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.
If you are a member of Old Pueblo, THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! If
your membership has lapsed, we would be grateful if you would rejoin us so
you can again receive membership benefits. Old Pueblo members receive
substantial discounts on most of our tours and other activities for which
donations or fees are required.
Payment Options for Donations and Memberships
For payment by mail please make check or money order payable to Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center or simply OPAC, and include a printed explanation
of what your payment is for. If it’s for or includes a membership fee, you
can print the Enrollment/Subscription form from Old Pueblo’s
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-
Subscription-Application-Form-20181215.doc>
www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-Subscript
ion-Application-Form-20181215.doc web page and complete the appropriate
information on that form. Mail payment and information sheet to Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717. (Mail sent to Old
Pueblo’s street address gets returned to senders because there is no mailbox
at our street address.)
You also can donate using a major credit or debit card by
clicking on the “Donations” image at the top of this message or by visiting
Old Pueblo’s secure donations web page:
<http://www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/donations/>
www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/donations/.
To start or renew an Old Pueblo membership online you can
visit our <http://www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/membership/>
www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/membership/ web page, scroll down to the bottom
of that page, and follow the instructions for using our secure online
membership form or our printable Enrollment/Subscription form.
To make a donation using PayPal, please go to the
<http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org home page, scroll down to the
“Donate” section, click on the “Donate” button above the PayPal logo, and
follow the prompts.
To make a credit card or debit card payment without going
online you can call Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201, tell the person who answers
you’d like to make a credit card donation or payment, and provide your card
authorization. We advise that you do not provide credit card or debit card
numbers to us in an email. Old Pueblo accepts Visa, MasterCard, and Discover
card payments.
All of us at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center appreciate your
support! I hope you enjoy reading this and future issues of Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center’s upcoming-activities announcements!
Warmest regards,
Allen Dart, RPA, Executive Director (Volunteer)
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
PO Box 40577
Tucson AZ 85717-0577 USA
520-798-1201
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
<http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
OPT-OUT OPTIONS
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center typically sends two emails 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.
This communication came to you through a listserve from which
Old Pueblo cannot remove your email address. The listserves to which this
message was posted and the email addresses to contact for inclusion in or
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Williams <[log in to unmask]>
Historical Archaeology:
<[log in to unmask]>
New Mexico Archaeological Council: David Phillips
<[log in to unmask]>
Rock Art-Arizona State University: Gary Hein
<[log in to unmask]>
Texas Archeological Society: Robert Lassen
<[log in to unmask]>
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