For Immediate Release
Table of Contents
Some Thank-Yous
Some Online Resources
Old Pueblo Activities Preview
Upcoming Activities
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Youth Education Programs
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Mission and Support
Opt-Out Options
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center is recognized as a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization under the U.S. tax code, so donations and membership fees are tax-deductible up to amounts specified by law. Please visit www.oldpueblo.org/forms/donorfrm.php <http://www.oldpueblo.org/forms/donorfrm.php> to make a contribution – Your donations help us continue to provide hands-on education programs in archaeology, history, and cultures for children and adults!
This communication was posted to a listserve and does not include any illustrations. If you would like to receive versions of Old Pueblo’s monthly “upcoming activities” emails that contain color photos and other illustrations pertaining to the activities, you can subscribe to our email address book by visiting Old Pueblo’s <http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org home page and scrolling down to the “Subscribe” box to enter your name and email address. (You can unsubscribe from our activities emailings any time you wish.)
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 blast: Tiffany Abeloe, Rabia Altaf & Jesse Hamilton, Shelley Altenstadter, Jeff & Debbie Altschul, Marilyn Bauer, Cynthia Bethard, Dennis Boon, Todd Bostwick, Irene Brace, Elizabeth Butler, Judi Cameron, Krieger Conradt, Sidney Coon, Al Dart, David DeKeizer, Nancy Easter, Jan Elster, Butch Farabee, Franco Farina, Carol Farnsworth, Mary Lee Fitzgerald & Martin Comey, David & Kimberly Gilles, Virginia Gisvold, Janet Golio, Grant County Archaeological Society, Ina & Lawrence Gravitz, Suzanne Griset, George Harding, Sharlot Hart, Jan & Loren Haury, Rebecca Heisler & Dan Drake, Sally Hocker, Vance & Diane Holliday, Lynda Klasky, Aleta Lawrence, Lainie Levick, Melissa Loeschen, Alexis Malone, Sherry Massie, Audrey Mathis, Kyle Meredith, Paul Minnis & Patricia Gilman, Zina Mirsky & Nancy Okamoto, Christine Moe, Barbara & Craig Montgomery, Bonnie Moser, Leslie O’Toole, Stanley Ponczek, Theodore Presler, Charles Price, Lynn Ratener, Chris Reed, Ronni Robles, Sharon Smith, Jane Stone, Sharon Strachan, Bud Tasch, Alan Troxel, Peggy Truders, Valerie Vashio, Zithlaly Vega, Tammy Visco, P. K. Weis, and one annual donor who asked to remain anonymous.
Thank you all so much!
SOME ON SOME ONLINE RESOURCES
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s recording of historian Bill Cavaliere’s June 15 A Photo Essay of the Apache Surrender Third Thursday Food for Thought presentation is now posted on Old Pueblo’s Youtube channel along with videos of many of our other Third Thursday Food for Thought and Indigenous Interests webinar presentations: <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos> https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos.
OLD PUEBLO ACTIVITIES PREVIEW
Thursday July 20: “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “’O’odham Place Names: Meanings, Origins and Histories” presentation by Harry J. Winters, Jr., PhD.
Saturday July 22: “Archaeology, Paleontology, and Environmental Sciences Laboratories Tour” of the University of Arizona’s Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill and Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research.
See green font listings below for details on these and other activities sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center.
UPCOMING ACTIVITIES
The following listings include announcements about activities offered by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and other organizations interested in archaeology, history and cultures. Time zones are specified only for online activities; each in-person activity listed is in the time zone of its location.
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.
Wednesday-Friday July 5-7, 2023: Santa Fe
“Women of the Lost Territory” three-day summer course at School for Advanced Research (SAR), 660 Garcia St., Santa Fe, New Mexico*
9:30 am-noon with optional afternoon excursions. $500 includes classes, lunch, and SAR one-year membership.
Professors Flannery Burke and Vanessa Fonseca-Chávez teach three days of learning and discussions on the historic SAR campus in Santa Fe. They will illuminate the legacies of New Mexican women, past and present, and teach about the unique experiences of women of the Lost Territory, and the sacred lands of southern Colorado and northern New Mexico.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information and to register go to <https://sarweb.org/lost-territory-23/?bblinkid=269797764&bbemailid=47728441&bbejrid=-1587730669> https://sarweb.org/lost-territory-23/?bblinkid=269797764&bbemailid=47728441&bbejrid=-1587730669.
Thursday July 6, 2023: Online
“How the Dolores Archaeological Program Shaped Research at Crow Canyon” free online presentation by archaeologists Drs. Ricky Lightfoot, Mark Varien, Bill Lipe, and Tim Kohler sponsored by Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado*
4-5 pm Mountain Daylight Time. Free (donations encouraged).
Located in southwestern Colorado, the Dolores Archaeological Program (DAP) represents one of the largest archaeology projects ever conducted in the United States. Project fieldwork was conducted from 1978-1984 to mitigate impacts to cultural resources by construction of McPhee Reservoir on the Dolores River. The Crow Canyon Archaeological Center was founded as the DAP was winding down, and many individuals who worked on the DAP joined the Crow Canyon staff. In this 40th anniversary celebration webinar, four of these individuals – Bill Lipe, Tim Kohler, Ricky Lightfoot, and Mark Varien –discuss how DAP archaeological research influenced the development of the research program at Crow Canyon.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To learn more and register visit <https://4454pp.blackbaudhosting.com/4454pp/How-the-Dolores-Archaeological-Program-Shaped-Research-at-Crow-Canyon> https://4454pp.blackbaudhosting.com/4454pp/How-the-Dolores-Archaeological-Program-Shaped-Research-at-Crow-Canyon.
Saturday July 8 , 2023: Phoenix
“Summertime Storytelling & Craft Saturday” at S’edav Va’aki Museum, 4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix*
10 am to noon. $5/child includes Museum admission for the child on the day of the event. Regular admission for accompanying adults.
S’edav Va’aki (formerly Pueblo Grande) Museum invites families to enjoy children’s storytelling and hands-on crafts this summer. This activity has something for everyone! The authors each present their books in their own special way, followed by a fun story-related craft, and snacks. Perfect for pre-kindergarten through fourth grade children. Parents can register kids online using Activenet or check-in at the front desk to participate. All children must be accompanied by an adult. (There is no program fee for adults. Museum admission fees apply.) The July 8 program features The Seed and the Giant Saguaro by Jennifer Ward in a virtual visit with an interactive read-aloud. Learn about how the plants and animals of the Sonoran Desert inspire this author’s work. Jennifer Ward is the author of more than 25 award-winning nonfiction and fiction books for children and adults. A former educator, she strives to bring science and nature concepts to life through her writing in a fun and engaging way. Activenet code #47009.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For details contact S’edav Va’aki Museum at 602-495-0901 or <http://www.pueblogrande.com> www.pueblogrande.com.
Saturday July 8 , 2023: Online
“It's All About Clouds” free online presentation with rock art researcher Carol Patterson, PhD, sponsored by American Rock Art Research Association*
6-7:30 pm Pacific Daylight Time. Free. Log in a half hour early if you wish to chat with other participants.
Rain is of dire importance for survival in the southwestern USA. Prehistoric people gave voice to cloud spirits through ritual prayers and rain ceremonies. They viewed their world as animate, and they engraved or painted imitative cloud beings with rain to motivate cloud behavior. An examination of proposed cloud images accompanied with symbols of lightning, thunder, and rainbows are discussed in context with extensive ethnographic documentation. Though various cloud forms occur, they all share a common theme describing “rain bringers.” The cultural identity for the Zuni, Keres, Hopi, and Apachean/Fremont is based on diagnostic elements in the panels that are described in the emergence stories that frame the different worldviews of each group. Carol B. Patterson, PhD, was a BLM archaeologist in Colorado. Her Urraca Archaeological Services company specializes in rock art documentation and reevaluation projects.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information and to register go to <https://arara.wildapricot.org/event-5336249> https://arara.wildapricot.org/event-5336249.
Saturdays July 8 & 22, August 5 & 19, September 2 & 16, 2023: Near St. Johns, AZ
“Ranger-led Hikes on the Petroglyph Trail” sponsored by Arizona State Parks at Lyman Lake State Park, 11 US-180, St. Johns, Arizona.
5 pm each Saturday. $10 per vehicle unless you are a registered camper at the park.
Ranger-led hikes on the Petroglyph Trail in cool Lyman Lake State Park are scheduled every other Saturday this summer through September 16. Enjoy beautiful views, rich history, amazing trails, and great information from Arizona State Parks rangers! Meet at the trailhead and bring cameras, water, and comfortable hiking shoes.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information visit <https://azstateparks.com/lyman-lake/events/hike-the-trail-at-lyman-lake%20or%20call%20928-337-4441> https://azstateparks.com/lyman-lake/events/hike-the-trail-at-lyman-lake or call 928-337-4441.
Sunday July 9 or Saturday August 12, 2023: Tucson
“Mansions of Main Avenue Walking Tour” sponsored by Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, starting at Café a la C’art, 150 N. Main Ave., Tucson*
8-10 am. $25 ($20 for Presidio Museum members).
Take a stroll down Main Avenue with Presidio Museum tour guide Alan Kruse to view the homes and hear the stories of the movers and shakers of early Tucson who lived in them, including Hiram and Petra Stevens (a prominent merchant couple whose domestic life was less than perfect), Sam Hughes (called by some the “father of Tucson”; involved in the notorious Camp Grant Massacre of Apaches), Annie Cheyney (whose newly restored 1905 home is the talk of the town), Albert Steinfeld (department store magnate), Frank Hereford (attorney who represented the Wham Robbery defendants) and William Herring (Wyatt Earp’s one-time lawyer). The tour is ¼-mile long; free on-street parking is available.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register click on your preferred date link: <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6856&qid=718224> Sunday, July 9, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6857&qid=718224> Saturday, August 12, 8-10 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday July 13, 2023: Online
“Obsidian Source Provenance in the North American Southwest: History, Methods, and Possibilities” free online presentation by archaeologist M. Steven Shackley, PhD, sponsored by Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado*
4 pm Mountain Daylight Time (MDT). Free (donations encouraged).
For over 35 years, the Southwest Archaeological Obsidian Project has focused on locating, mapping, and chemically characterizing artifact-quality obsidian sources in the greater North American Southwest from about four known sources in the mid-1980s to over 55 sources and source groups in 2021. This research has analyzed hundreds of thousands of obsidian artifacts not only from the North American Southwest but Mesoamerica, South America, eastern North America, Eurasia, and the Great Rift Valley of Africa. This lecture will touch upon the history of obsidian provenance research in the Southwest, field and instrumental methods used in understand source provenance, and some historical and current research projects. Dr. Shackley also plans to prognosticate, perhaps tongue in check, about the future of this research.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To learn more and register visit <https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/obsidian_source_provenance_in_the_north_american_southwest_history_methods_and_possibilities/> https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/obsidian_source_provenance_in_the_north_american_southwest_history_methods_and_possibilities/.
Saturday July 15, August 26, or September 16, 2023: Tucson
“Barrio Viejo (Old Neighborhood)” walking tour sponsored by the Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, starting at El Tiradito Wishing Shrine, 418 S. Main Ave., Tucson*
5:30-7 pm. $25 ($20 Presidio Museum members); Optional: $10 after-tour gathering at El Minuto Restaurant.
Experience the rich history of Tucson on the one-mile Barrio Viejo (“Old Neighborhood”) walking tour, which goes through the largest collection of historic Sonoran row houses in the United States. For over 100 years, Barrio Viejo was the heart of Tucson’s social, economic, and cultural life. On this 90-minute walking tour, your tour guide Mauro Trejo will discuss the history of the neighborhood, its architecture, and the individuals, businesses, and cultures that have met there. For an additional $10 participants have the option of joining MAURO for conversation, a Margarita or alternative, and a cheese crisp after the tour at the historic El Minuto Café.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register click on your preferred date link: <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7447&qid=739028> July 15, 5:30-7 pm or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7448&qid=739028> August 26, 5:30-7 pm or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7449&qid=739028> September 16, 5:30-7 pm; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Monday July 17, 2023: Online
“The Fremont Cultural Tradition at the Northern Edge of the Greater Southwest” free Zoom presentation by archaeologist Michael T. Searcy, sponsored by Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society (AAHS), Tucson*
7-8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time. Free.
New excavations and other recent research have contributed to a much better understanding of what has been identified as the Fremont cultural tradition. This lecture reviews some of these new studies and reports the most recent discoveries at a current excavation at the Hinckley Mounds. This site is located on the eastern edge of Utah Lake, the largest natural freshwater lake in Utah, and the ancient ruins are only part of one of the largest Fremont villages occupied during the Late Fremont Period (900-1300 CE). Michael Searcy is an associate professor of anthropology and archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at Brigham Young University.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. To register for online presentation go to <https://bit.ly/2023JulySearcyREG> https://bit.ly/2023JulySearcyREG.
Wednesday July 19, 2023: Silver City NM and online
“Mimbres Pottery - Feather Imagery” presentation with archaeologist Christopher Adams sponsored by Grant County Archaeological Society (GCAS) as a fundraiser for and at the Western New Mexico University Museum in Fleming Hall, located on W. 10th St. between the Aldo Leopold Charter School and the J. Cloyd Miller Library, Silver City, New Mexico, and online*
Museum doors open at 5 pm Mountain Daylight Time (MDT), presentation starts at 6 pm. Minimum $5 donation requested from in-person and Zoom attendees.
The Grant County Archaeological Society forgoes its usual monthly potluck and business meeting to sponsor an in-person and online presentation on Mimbres pottery and fundraiser for the Western New Mexico University Museum. The WNMU Museum probably has the largest collection of Mimbres pottery and artifacts in the world, and was recently renovated. This evening event includes time for in-person attendees to view the Museum’s exhibits of Mimbres pottery and other artifacts, and to purchase items from the Museum’s gift shop starting at 5 pm; and for both in-person and online participants to enjoy and learn from a 6 pm presentation on feather imagery in Mimbres pottery by Gila National Forest District Archaeologist Chris Adams. There will be an in-person and online Q&A session after the talk, and light refreshments will be provided. Both in-person and Zoom attendees can donate to the Museum via the GCAS PayPal link. All proceeds go to the WNMU Museum.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For GPS directions enter “WNMU Museum, Silver City, NM” in smartphone app. Museum seating is limited so please register to attend in-person. For Zoom link contact Marianne Smith at 772-529-2627 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday July 20, 2023: Online
“Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “’O’odham Place Names: Meanings, Origins and Histories” presentation by Harry J. Winters, Jr., PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
When he was 14 or 15 years old, Harry Winters, Jr., came across John D. Mitchell’s 1953 book Lost Mines and Buried Treasures along the Old Frontier. Mitchell’s tales inspired him to become a geological engineer in the mining industry, partly because of his interest in mathematics, physics, geology and engineering, but also because mining geology (which he calls “modern prospecting”) offered the opportunity to roam the deserts and mountains. He began prospecting and camping in the Arizona desert, and in 1956 he and his friend Ted McIntyre drove into the Tohono O'odham Nation lands (then known as the Papago Indian Reservation). Eventually their 1947 Plymouth got stuck in a narrow wash and an ’O’odham man came over to see what had happened. That fellow, Enos Miguel, didn’t speak English and the boys didn’t speak ’O’odham, but Enos could see what was needed so walked over to his house, brought out a shovel and some boards, and soon Harry and Ted were on their way. Enos was Harry’s first of many O'odham friends made over the next six-plus decades. Combining those friendships with his interest in geology and Native place names, Harry learned the ’O’odham language, spoke with lots of ’O’odham about their knowledge of the landscape, and eventually authored the 1,002-page (not counting the 56 pages in the table of contents and other front matter) tome ’O'odham Place Names: Meanings, Origins and Histories, Arizona and Sonora, Second Edition (2020, SRI Press, Tucson). In this month’s Third Thursday Food for Thought presentation, Dr. Harry Winters, Jr., recounts some of his travels and shares some of his deep knowledge of the ’O’odham landscape lore on both sides of the modern US-Mexico border.
To register for the Zoom webinar go to <https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_e0QYkHObRfCvES3XfFiESg> https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_e0QYkHObRfCvES3XfFiESg. 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 July THIRD THURSDAY flyer” in your email subject line.
Thursday July 20, August 17, or September 21, 2023: Tucson
“Walking the Wall of the Original Presidio” guided tour with Kathe Kubish meets at Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
8-10 am. $25 ($20 for Presidio Museum members).
Take a walk through downtown Tucson with tour guide Kathe Kubish and discover the extent of the original Presidio Wall. This tour shows attendees just how large the original Presidio San Agustín del Tucson actually was. Along the way, you’ll learn the interesting history of several buildings and hear stories of some of Tucson’s most prominent citizens. Highlights include Old Town Artisans, the Sam Hughes house, the historic Pima County Courthouse, and the location of the old Presidio San Agustín Cemetery. The tour is less than a mile.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register click on your preferred date link: <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7439&qid=739028> July 20, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7440&qid=739028> August 17, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=7441&qid=739028> September 21, 8-10 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Friday July 21, August 18, or September 15, 2023: Tucson*
“Santa Cruz River History Tour” sponsored by Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, starting and ending at Mission Garden, 946 W. Mission Lane, Tucson*
8-10 am. $30 ($25 for Presidio Museum members) includes admission to Mission Gardens.
This two-mile walking tour led by Mauro Trejo focuses on our relationship with the Santa Cruz River, how it supported Tucson’s early residents, and the factors in the 19th and 20th century that affected its demise. The tour begins and ends at Tucson’s Mission Gardens and includes the sites of the former Spanish mission and the O’odham village that was the origin of modern Tucson. Attendees also visit Tucson’s tallest tree and the Garden of Gethsemane, a holy site of statues made by WWI veteran and artist Felix Lucero in the 1940s.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register click on your preferred date link: <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6845&qid=718224> July 21, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6846&qid=718224> August 18, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6847&qid=718224> September 15, 8-10 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Saturday July 22, 2023: Tucson
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Archaeology, Paleontology, and Environmental Sciences Laboratories Tour” meets in the courtyard at Mercado San Agustín, 100 S. Avenida del Convento, Tucson
8 am to 12:30 pm. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures.
This Old Pueblo Archaeology Center summer tour visits two TOO-COOL environmental-science laboratories in Tucson – the Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill and the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research (LTRR), both administered by The University of Arizona (UA). The Tumamoc Desert Laboratory began its existence in 1903 as the Carnegie Desert Botanical Laboratory established by the Carnegie Institution of Washington and is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The Tree-Ring Lab also has a venerable record of research in archaeology, astronomy, and environmental sciences, created in 1937 by the founder of dendrochronology as a science: UA Professor of Astronomy Andrew Ellicott Douglass. Tour presenters and guides will include archaeologists Paul and Suzanne Fish, the Tumamoc Lab’s Robert Villa and Lynne Schepartz, and LTRR docent Donna MacEachern. The drive from the Mercado San Agustín meeting place to the Tumamoc Lab is limited to five vehicles so carpooling is required and no more than 20 people can attend. After returning to the Mercado, all participants can take their own vehicles in a caravan to the LTRR.
Donation prepayments are required 10 days after reservation request or by 5 pm Wednesday July 19, 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 July Labs Tour flyer” in your email subject line.
Thursday July 29, 2023: Online
“Pueblo on the Plains: The Merchant Site of Southeastern New Mexico and New Insights into Plains-Pueblo Relationships during the 14th Century” free online presentation by archaeologists Myles Miller and John D. Speth sponsored by Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado*
4 pm Mountain Daylight Time (MDT). Free (donations encouraged).
Two seasons of archaeological investigations at the Merchant site and its surroundings on the southern Great Plains of southeastern New Mexico documented one of the most unusual and significant southwestern pre-Hispanic settlements: the Merchant site. This 1300-1400 CE pueblo settlement included at least 60 jacal rooms, kivas, gridded agricultural fields, and exceptionally dense midden and kiva-closure deposits containing tens of thousands of bison, pronghorn, and deer bones. Maize was cultivated in gridded fields nearby but mesquite was also a primary component of the diet. Ochoa Indented Corrugated ceramic vessels were made and used locally, and rarely transported beyond the settlement whereas most raw materials for flaked stone tools were obtained from distant sources throughout the Texas central plains and Panhandle. The architecture, gridded fields, and corrugated ceramics suggest a southwestern appearance and origin, but the masses of large mammal bones and thousands of projectile points and hide processing tools of exotic stone materials reflect Plains-like hunting practices. Migration has been suggested as the reason the Merchant site was founded, but more likely it was due to a complex interplay of purposive social actions and economic decisions.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To learn more and register visit <https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/pueblo_on_the_plains_the_merchant_site_of_southeastern_new_mexico_and_new_insights_into_plains_pueblo_relationships_during_the_14th_century/> https://www.crowcanyon.org/programs/pueblo_on_the_plains_the_merchant_site_of_southeastern_new_mexico_and_new_insights_into_plains_pueblo_relationships_during_the_14th_century/.
Saturday July 29, 2023: Greer, AZ
“Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart in Butterfly Lodge Museum’s Applewhite Pavilion, 4 Co Rd 1126, Greer, Arizona; cosponsored by Arizona Humanities*
1-2:30 pm. Free.
Ancient Indian pictographs (rock paintings) and petroglyphs (symbols carved or pecked on rocks) are claimed by some to be forms of writing for which meanings are known. But are such claims supported by archaeology or by Native Americans themselves? Mr. Dart illustrates southwestern petroglyphs and pictographs, and discusses how even the same rock art symbol may be interpreted differently from popular, scientific, and modern Native American perspectives. This program is made possible by Arizona Humanities.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information call 928-735-7514 between 10 am & 3 pm Thursdays-Saturdays; or email <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Tuesdays August 8, 15, 22, and 29, 2023: Tucson and online
“The History of the World Written in Tree-Rings” class with dendroarchaeologist Charlotte Pearson, PhD, sponsored by University of Arizona Humanities Seminars Program (HSP) at University of Arizona Poetry Center (Rubel Room), 1508 E. Helen St., Tucson, and online*
10 am-12 pm each Tuesday. $135.
This course will focus on the scientific field of dendrochronology, or tree-ring science, and what it can tell us about the past, present and future. It will explore the fascinating history of how the science was developed by a pioneering astronomer interested in solar cycles, how it works, how it has fed into other disciplines such as radiocarbon dating, art history and climatology, and how its applications have led to transformative discoveries about the past. Study of tree-rings can tell us about the rise and fall of civilizations, climate change, migration, trade, settlement history and natural hazards. The course will also offer a personalized guided tour of the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research and Tree-Ring Archive. No textbook is required. Charlotte Pearson, Associate Professor at the University of Arizona Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, is a dendroarchaeologist trained in environmental archaeology, geoarchaeology and archaeological science.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information visit <https://hsp.arizona.edu/course/summer-2023/history-world-written-tree-rings> https://hsp.arizona.edu/course/summer-2023/history-world-written-tree-rings or contact the HSP at 520-621-2492 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday-Sunday August 10-13, 2023: Near Flagstaff, AZ
“2023 Pecos Archaeological Conference” at the Coconino Hotshot Camp on the Coconino National Forest, 10 miles northwest of Flagstaff, Arizona.*
See times below. Online preregistration after June 25: $75 ($65 student); dinner & other amenities extra. Sunday is field trips day.
Since 1927, when archaeologist Alfred Vincent Kidder first inspired and organized the original Pecos Conference, professional and avocational archaeologists have gathered under open skies somewhere in the southwestern United States or northwestern Mexico during August for the nearly yearly Pecos Conference. They set up a large tent for shade and spend three or more days together discussing recent research, problems of the field, and the challenges of the profession, and present and critique each others’ ideas before committing them to publication. In recent years, Native Americans, avocational archaeologists, the general public, and media organizations have come to play an increasingly important role, serving as participants and as audience, to celebrate archaeological research and to mark cultural continuity. Attendees can tent and RV camp at the conference site at no additional fee (no dispersed camping is allowed in the forest this summer) or lodge in nearby communities.
Thursday 5:30-7 pm reception at Museum of Northern Arizona, 3101 N. Fort Valley Road, Flagstaff.
Friday & Saturday 8:30 am-5 pm presentations, posters, silent auction, vendor tents, and affinity group meetups. Friday features a star party around dusk. Saturday includes 11 am business meeting; 5:30 pm happy hour with beer from Mother Road Brewing Co.; 6:30 pm dinner served by Salsa Brava's fajita buffet (purchase dinner tickets in advance; & 8 pm band music by Andy See and His Swinging Jamboree.
Sunday, August 13: field trips.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information visit <http://www.pecosconference.org/> www.pecosconference.org/.
Saturday August 12, 2023: Online
“The Distribution of Cultural Lac Scale Use (Tachardiella spp.) in the Arid Southwest” free online presentation by Marilen Pool, PhD, sponsored by the Amerind Museum, Dragoon, Arizona*
11 am Arizona/Mountain Standard Time. Free (donations requested).
Dr. Marilen Pool will discuss the examination of the lac scale insect in the arid Southwest and the distribution of its cultural use. Three species, Tachardiella fulgens, T. larreae, and T. pustulata are those most known to have been utilized for their lac by the Indigenous peoples of the region from as early as the Archaic period to the modern era. Lac was used as an adhesive, mastic, and coating for the fabrication of tools, weapons, musical instruments, kicking balls, ornaments, and amulets. It was also used for hermetic sealing of containers to protect foods and seeds from pests and as a repair material for mending pottery. Marilen Pool, PhD, is a Senior Project Conservator at the Arizona State Museum and Objects Conservator and owner of Sonoran Art Conservation Services in Tucson.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register or for more information visit <https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_5T0Lm1Q2T1ezYno6a19MsA#/registration> https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_5T0Lm1Q2T1ezYno6a19MsA#/registration or contact Amerind at 520-586-3666 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday August 17, 2023: Online
“Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “The 1541 O’odham Annihilation of Vázquez de Coronado’s Southern Arizona Townsite and Other New Coronado-Era Discoveries” presentation by archaeologist Deni J. Seymour, PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
The Arizona Coronado Project continues to astound as expedition sites are found in improbable valleys, as evidence reveals encounters with unexpected Native groups, artifacts are uncovered in Arizona that are unknown from other Coronado sites, and excavated archaeological features demonstrate the beginnings of a permanent European settlement. There is also clear evidence of the battle, described in documents, that annihilated the region's first Spanish townsite and contributed to the termination of the 1539-1542 Coronado expedition as a whole. Dr. Deni Seymour is an award-winning author of seven books and over 110 articles. In addition to her previous discoveries of the site where Apache Chief Juh ambushed US Army Lt. Cushing the 1871 and several important Spanish colonial period sites, recently she has identified five archaeological sites of the Coronado expedition on four stream drainages.
At Dr. Seymour’s request, Old Pueblo will not post or distribute a recording of this presentation.
To register for the Zoom webinar go to <https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_wwC9iKfWROOXPQM6e-OWYg> https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_wwC9iKfWROOXPQM6e-OWYg. 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 AUGUST THIRD THURSDAY flyer” in your email subject line.
Saturdays August 19 & 26 & September 2 & 9, 2023: Tucson
“Gender in Archaeology” Master Class taught by Suzanne L. Eckert, PhD, sponsored by the Arizona State Museum (ASM)f in Environmental & Natural Resources (ENR) Bldg. 2, Room N595, University of Arizona, Tucson*
10 am-12 pm on each date. $180 (ASM members $150). Amount paid over $100 is a tax-deductible gift to support Dr. Eckert's research projects. Credit card payments incur a 3% fee.
The archaeological record is extraordinarily rich and varied, yet for most of its history as a field of study archaeology has failed to recognize gender as a viable research topic. This four-part Master Class presents an introduction to archaeological research on women and gender since the 1960s. It will explore the ways in which a consciousness of gender can offer a more in-depth understanding of the archaeological record and how the study of gender challenges traditional archaeological culture histories as well as how it impacts modern thought. Limited to 20 participants. Dr. Suzanne L. Eckert is the Head of Collections at ASM and Professor of Anthropology at the University of Arizona.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register contact Darlene Lizarraga at 520-626-8381 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Sunday August 20, 2023: Tucson
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Popol Vuh and the Hero Twins in Mesoamerica and the US Southwest” tour led by Mary Jo McMullen and Allen Dart at Tucson Museum of Art (TMA), 140 N. Main Ave., Tucson
1 to 2:30 pm. $20 donation ($16 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures.
Sidestepping Tucson’s August heat, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s comfortable indoor tour this month will be at the Tucson Museum of Art downtown, led by TMA docent (and Old Pueblo member) Mary Jo McMullen. The new “Popol Vuh and the Maya Art of Storytelling” exhibit in TMA’s Kasser Wing focuses on art and lore related to the Popol Vuh, a narrative of the K’iche Maya about the origins of the world and heroic twin brothers who descended to the underworld to conquer Death. Archaeologist Allen Dart will comment on precontact images in the US Southwest that may depict elements of the Hero Twins story, and will assist Mary Jo in answering questions about the Popol Vuh exhibit and two others included in the tour: “Art of the Ancient Americas” and “Enduring Legacies: The James T. Bialac Indigenous Art Collection.” We encourage participants to visit TMA’s other galleries and gift shop after the tour since the donation to Old Pueblo provides entry fee to all of the Museum’s galleries. Tour is limited to 20 people.
Donation prepayments are required 10 days after reservation request or by 5 pm Thursday August 17, 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 August 20 tour flyer” in your email subject line.
Sunday-Friday August 20-25 or August 27-September 1, 2023: Southwestern Utah
“Cedar Breaks Cabin, UT 2023” HistoriCorps and National Park Service offer volunteer-assisted rehabilitation and repair conservation project at Point Supreme Viewpoint in Cedar Breaks National Monument*
Volunteers arrive at campsite between 5 and 7 pm on first day and work daylight hours daily thereafter. No fees.
Cedar Breaks National Monument, established in 1933 roughly 74 miles northeast of St. George, Utah, features stunning scenery, grand geology, refreshing summers, and cultural connection to the region’s Indigenous Paiute people. The Monument’s iconic Point Supreme Overlook that is the site of this Historicorps project hosts several cabins constructed between 1936 and 1937 by members of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). HistoriCorps is set to restore the original Visitor’s Center that was retired from duty in 2020 and repurposed for a human history exhibit installed in 2021. In 1983 the cabin was added the National Register of Historic Places. HistoriCorps field staff and volunteers will apply the traditional skills necessary to restore the Cedar Breaks Cabin including log repairs and replacement, exterior wood repairs and staining, and stone chimney repairs. Tent, truck-camper, or campervan camping in a campground is required. Showers are not available and dogs are not allowed.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register go to <https://historicorps.org/cedar-breaks-cabin-ut-2023/> https://historicorps.org/cedar-breaks-cabin-ut-2023/.
Tuesday & Wednesday , August 22 & 23, 2023: Albuquerque
“National Historic Preservation Act/Section 106 Training” sponsored by Jornada Research Institute (JRI) at Bureau of Reclamation Office, 555 Broadway Blvd. NE, Albuquerque*
9 am-5 pm each day. $185 ($175 JRI members, $165 students)
The Jornada Research Institute offers its annual two-day training class on the National Historic Preservation Act/Section 106 and related legislation. The course will cover the historic context and background of historic preservation legislation, major provisions of NHPA including Sections 101, 106 and Section 110, working through the “106 process,” National Register of Historic Places criteria and eligibility, traditional cultural properties, stakeholder roles, and potential areas of conflict. Designed for cultural resource management professionals, it also is useful for others interested in archaeological and historic preservation, and it meets the New Mexico Historic Preservation Division’s continuing education credits requirements.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information contact Jeffery Hanson at 817-658-5544 or [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> .
Wednesday August 23 or September 27, 2023: Tucson
“Fort Lowell Neighborhood Walking Tour” sponsored by the Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum starting at Fort Lowell Park, 2900 N. Craycroft Rd., Tucson*
Times vary, see links below. $25 ($20 for Presidio Museum members).
Historian and preservationist Ken Scoville explains how physical features, cultural layers, and political decisions have shaped not just the story of the district but the development of Arizona as well, from Apache wars to development wars. Discover why the Fort Lowell area and the State of Arizona are the places they are today.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information or to register click on your preferred date link: <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6861&qid=718224> August 23, 8-10 am or <https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=6862&qid=718224> September 27, 8:30-10:30 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Wednesdays September 6-December 6, 2023
(skipping October 25 and November 22): 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 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time through Nov. 1st) each Wednesday. $99 donation ($80 for members of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Arizona Archaeological Society [AAS], and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation); 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 pm Friday September 1st, 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.
Friday & Saturday September 8 & 9, 2023: Near Winslow & Holbrook, AZ
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Homol’ovi and Rock Art Ranch Pueblos and Petroglyphs Tour” with archaeologist Rich Lange starting at Homolovi State Park Visitor Center northeast of Winslow (from I-40 Exit 257 it’s 1.5 miles north on AZ-87)
12 pm Friday to 1 pm or later Saturday. $109 donation per person ($87 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures; includes all site entry fees and Old Pueblo’s expenses but no transportation, lodging, or meals.
Archaeologists Rich Lange and Al Dart lead this car-caravan educational tour to sites where archaeologists conducted excavations during the Arizona State Museum’s 1983-2016 Homol’ovi Research Program, and to the Rock Art Ranch petroglyphs in Chevelon Canyon. The tour will visit three of the largest Ancestral Hopi pueblos and an Early Agricultural-to-Great Pueblo period site in Homolovi State Park just outside Winslow, plus spectacular petroglyph panels near Winslow and at Rock Art Ranch south of Holbrook, Arizona. Sites to be visited on Saturday include the Homolovi I (1280-1400 CE), Homolovi II (1360-1400), and Homolovi IV (1260-1280) pueblos, a Basketmaker II (Early Agricultural period, 500-850) to Pueblo II/III (1150-1225) village site, and a petroglyphs site north of Winslow. On Sunday we’ll head to the Rock Art Ranch south of Holbrook to visit Brandy’s Pueblo (1225-1254) and a replica Navajo farmstead site before hiking down into Chevelon Canyon to see petroglyphs dating between 8000 BCE and the mid-1200s. Participants provide their own lodging, meals, and transportation.
Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 pm Friday September 1st, 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 Homolovi tour flyer” in your email subject line.
Saturdays September 9, 23, & 30, and October 7, 2023: Tucson
“Presidio San Agustín del Tucson and Fort Lowell Museums Docent Training Course” at address TBA, Tucson*
9 am to 1 pm each Saturday. New docents $75 (includes one-year membership to the museums), other history buffs $100, committed students $25; 10% discount for registering by August 1.
The lifeblood of downtown Tucson’s Presidio Museum and the soon-to-be-opened Fort Lowell Museum are volunteers and docents who provide most of the museums’ programming and tours. Persons who are excited about Tucson’s history and want to learn more and share with visitors are invited to register for the Presidio Museum’s docent training course that will cover topics including:
• The early people of the Tucson Basin
• History, geography and people of the Spanish Presidio
• Basic Spanish military history and uniforms
• The Mexican Republic
• Introduction to interpretive kits
• How to know your audience
• Geography of the Presidio neighborhood, the Santa Cruz River, and Sentinel Peak (A Mountain)
• The history of Fort Lowell
Participants who take the course to become docents are expected to fill out an application and commitment form and are expected to volunteer one weekday a week or one weekend each month. History buffs who are not interested in volunteering after the class may attend if there is availability.
* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more information go to <https://tucsonpresidio.com/volunteering/> https://tucsonpresidio.com/volunteering/ or contact the Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
Thursday September 21, 2023: Online
“Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “The Historical George McJunkin Reimagined through His Archaeological Sites” presentation by applied anthropologist and archaeologist Brian W. Kenny, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
7 to 8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time). Free.
George McJunkin, who is widely known today as the original discoverer of a fossil bone deposit exposed after a devastating 1908 flood in Wild Horse Arroyo near Folsom, New Mexico, died in Folsom in January 1922. The “Folsom site” he discovered turned out to be where archaeologists in 1927 first confirmed the antiquity of humans in the Americas based on direct association of in-situ stone tools and Pleistocene bison bones. The Folsom site has been examined in popular and academic works, but among professional archaeologists there are generalized and continuing disputes regarding the type and extent of credit and recognition McJunkin should receive for our early historical understanding of the Folsom site. McJunkin was born a slave in Texas, was emancipated, and left home as a young man to become a cowboy in west Texas. He learned his trade from Mexican vaqueros and was known for superior cowboy skills and some wild adventures as he worked in the big cattle outfits that moved stock up from Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado to the transcontinental Overland Route. After the Colorado and Southern Railroad was completed in 1888 he settled near Folsom, patented a homestead, built a house in town, and worked for local ranchers. He was well respected by the local community and became a ranch foreman and leader of Black and Mexican cowboys working for New Mexican ranchers. During his time there, McJunkin built a number of ranch facilities, many of which are now obsolete, abandoned, or reused in alternate ways. These sites, their contents, and the nature of their construction, use, and abandonment hold the key to investigating McJunkin from alternate perspectives. From 2021-2023, a century after McJunkin’s passing, Brian Kenny and colleagues initiated archival, ethnographic, and archaeological research in the Folsom community. In Old Pueblo’s September Third Thursday presentation, Kenny will tell how the members of “Team McJunkin” have visited and documented known McJunkin sites using basic methodologies of community ethnography, archival research, landscape scale characterization, and archaeological survey, and how team members are currently reviewing their field results and preparing for journal publication.
To register for the Zoom webinar go to <https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_0SwzVEeWTdGHvp1Qyh_Wsg> https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_0SwzVEeWTdGHvp1Qyh_Wsg. 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 September THIRD THURSDAY flyer” in your email subject line.
Saturday September 23, 2023: 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 am to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures.
The 2023 autumn equinox occurs on September 23 at 12:50 am Arizona/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time; Sept. 23, 6:50 am Greenwich Mean Time). To celebrate the equinox day (but not the exact time!) and explore ancient people's recognition of equinoxes and other calendrical events, archaeologist Allen Dart (Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's executive director) leads this tour to Los Morteros, an ancient village site that includes a Hohokam ballcourt, 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 pm Thursday September 21, 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.
Saturday October 7, 2023: Tucson & Marana, AZ
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Tucson and Marana Yoeme (Yaqui Indian) Communities” car-caravan cultural sites tour with Yoeme traditional culture specialist Felipe S. Molina starting in the Santa Cruz River Park ramada at 1317 W. Irvington Road, Tucson (on south side of Irvington just west of the Santa Cruz River)
8 am to 1 pm. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Friends of S’edav Va’aki Museum members) helps cover Old Pueblo’s tour expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures.
Felipe S. Molina was taught the indigenous language, culture, and history of the Yoemem (Yaqui Indians) by his maternal grandfather and grandmother, his grandmother's cousin, and several elders from Tucson's original Pascua Village. A steady stream of Yoeme migrated into southern Arizona to escape the Mexican government's war on and deportations of the Yoeme in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. By 1940 there were about 3,000 Yoeme in Arizona, mostly living in the well-established villages of Libre (Barrio Libre) and Pascua (Barrio Loco) in Tucson, Yoem Pueblo and Wiilo Kampo in Marana, and others near Eloy, Somerton, Phoenix, and Scottsdale. Mr. Molina will lead this tour to places settled historically by Yoeme in the Tucson and Marana areas including Bwe'u Hu'upa (Big Mesquite) Village, the San Martin Church and plaza in the 39th Street Community (Barrio Libre), Pascua, Ili Hu'upa, Wiilo Kampo, and his home community of Yoem Pueblo including its San Juan Church and plaza.
Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 pm Wednesday October 4, whichever is earlier: 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 send an email to <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send Yoeme Communities tour flyer” in your email subject line.
Wednesday December 6, 2023: Online or by mail
You could win a 2023 Ford Bronco Raptor valued at $76,580, or two first-class round-trip airline tickets to anywhere in the world, or $5,000 cash in “The Jim Click Millions for Tucson Raffle” on December 14! Ticket sales benefit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and other southern Arizona charities so get your tickets from Old Pueblo before 5 pm Wednesday December 6!
Cost: $25 per ticket.
On Thursday December 14, Tucson’s Jim Click Automotive Team will give away a 2023 Ford Bronco Raptor Edition SUV in a raffle to raise $2,500,000 for southern Arizona nonprofit organizations including Old Pueblo Archaeology Center. With your contribution you could win this fantastic 2023 vehicle (List Price $76,580) – or two first-class round-trip airline tickets to anywhere in the world, or $5,000 in cash! And 100% of what you contribute to Old Pueblo for tickets will go directly to Old Pueblo’s education programs because Old Pueblo gets to keep all of the proceeds from our ticket sales!
Old Pueblo’s raffle rules: To be entered in the raffle Old Pueblo Archaeology Center must receive your request for tickets and your donation for them no later than 5 pm Wednesday December 6th so we can turn in all of our sold tickets to the raffle manager the next day. Old Pueblo must account for all tickets issued to us and must return all unsold tickets, so advance payment for tickets is required. Tickets may be purchased through the PayPal “Donation” button on Old Pueblo’s <http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org home page or by calling 520-603-6181 to provide your Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express card payment authorization. Once payment is received, Old Pueblo will enter your name and contact information on your ticket(s), enter your ticket(s) into the drawing, and mail you the correspondingly numbered ticket stubs with a letter acknowledging your contribution.
Winners consent to be photographed and for their names and likenesses to be used by the Jim Click Automotive Team and/or the Russell Public Communications firm for publicity and advertising purposes.
For tickets or more information about Old Pueblo’s involvement in the raffle contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] For more information about The Jim Click Automotive Team’s Millions for Tucson Raffle itself visit <http://www.millionsfortucson.org> www.millionsfortucson.org.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about this fundraiser send an email to <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] with “Send Millions for Tucson flyer” in your email subject line.
OLD PUEBLO ARCHAEOLOGY CENTER’S YOUTH EDUCATION PROGRAMS
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center is now taking reservations for the 2023-2024 school year’s youth education programs. You can find information about them at the links listed below.
* OPEN3 Simulated Archaeological Excavation Education Program: https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/open3-simulated-excavation-classrooms/.
* OPENOUT Archaeology Outreach Presentations “Ancient People of Arizona,” “Lifestyle of the Hohokam,” and “What is an Archaeologist?”: https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/.
* Tours for Youth: https://www.oldpueblo.org/programs/educational-programs/childrens-programs/site-tours-classrooms/.
OLD PUEBLO ARCHAEOLOGY CENTER’S 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 www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-Subscription-Application-Form-20181215.doc <https://www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-Subscription-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.)
To start or renew an Old Pueblo membership online you can visit our www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/membership/ <http://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 www.oldpueblo.org <http://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
[log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
www.oldpueblo.org <http://www.oldpueblo.org>
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