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HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
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Mon, 18 Dec 2023 00:23:21 -0700
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For Immediate Release
 

Hello!
 
        This is Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s semimonthly
upcoming-activities email blast providing announcements about upcoming
southwestern archaeology, history, and cultures activities offered by Old
Pueblo and other organizations. If you know of others who might like to be
added to Old Pueblo’s emailing list for these emails, please feel free to
let them know they can subscribe to it directly by going to
www.oldpueblo.org <http://www.oldpueblo.org>  and scrolling down to the
Subscribe section to enter their names and email addresses at the prompts
there. One can unsubscribe from Old Pueblo’s emailing list at any time, as
indicated at the end of this message.
       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event” the information may be out of date – Readers are advised to confirm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. Each in-person activity listed is in the time zone of its
location. 
 
 
Table of Contents
       A Shout-Out to Friends
       Some Online Resources 
       Old Pueblo Activities Preview
       Upcoming Activities
       Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Mission and Support
       Opt-Out Options
 
 
A SHOUT-OUT TO FRIENDS: Friends of Hubbell Trading Post Promotes Native
American Arts & Crafts while Providing College Scholarships
 
       A federally recognized nonprofit organization incorporated in 1990,
the Friends of Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site, Inc. contributes
to the management objectives of the National Park Service at Hubbell Trading
Post National Historic Site. Related goals include revitalizing Native
American arts and crafts, perpetuating John Lorenzo Hubbell’s legacy,
providing college scholarships to Navajo, Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, Laguna, and
Southern Ute Nation students, and increasing public awareness of the Hubbell
Trading Post. 
       As a 501(c)(3) organization, Friends of Hubbell Trading Post NHS
actively supports Native American arts and crafts through our biannual
Friends of Hubbell Native American Art Auction, providing scholarships to
Navajo, Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, Laguna, and Southern Ute Nation college students,
and increasing awareness of the trading post heritage in the Southwest.
       In the 34 years of its existence, the Friends’ auctions have returned
more than $3,000,000 to the community through the weavers and other Native
artists who consigned items into our auctions. We have encouraged young
weavers to put their first rug into our auctions and when they sell, it is a
strong incentive to weave yet another rug – and they only get better! Our
scholarship program through 2023 has awarded just over $300,000 to Native
American students in the four corners area. We work closely with the City of
Gallup, NM, and Hubbell Trading Post Park Management to secure grants as we
strive to implement new programs that the Park would like to pursue and to
provide monies and equipment for which there is no funding source.
       Friends of Hubbell auctions take place twice a year on the first
Saturday in May and the last Saturday in September, in the Gallup, NM,
Community Services Center.  The next auction is scheduled for May 4, 2024,
with viewing from 9 am to noon and the auction commencing at 1 pm.
 
 
SOME ONLINE RESOURCES
 
        Check out 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 has posted recordings of many of our Third
Thursday Food for Thought and Indigenous Interests webinar presentations on
our Youtube channel:
<https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos>
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDgPTetfOL9FHuAW49TrSig/videos.
 
*  North Texas Archeological Society: A Short Discourse on Comanche History
and Archeological Investigations by archaeologist Jimmy Arterberry:
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_c24pBK2BFI&t=12s>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_c24pBK2BFI&t=12s).
 
 
OLD PUEBLO ACTIVITIES PREVIEW
 
       Thursday December 21: “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom
online program featuring “Healing and Health in Hopi, Mayan and Andean
(Yauyo) Cultures: Symbiosis with Western Medicine” by anthropologist
Sharonah Fredrick, PhD
 
Wednesdays January 3-April 3, 2024: “Archaeology of the Southwest”
14-session online adult education class with archaeologist Allen Dart
 
Saturday January 6, 2024: “Arrowhead-making and Flintknapping Workshop” with
flintknapper Sam Greenleaf at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson
 
       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. 
 
 
Monday December 18, 2023: Tucson and online
       “The Risks and Rewards of Social Networks in the Ancient Southwest”
free presentation by archaeologist Matthew Peeples, PhD, sponsored by
Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society (AAHS), optional online or in
Environmental & Natural Resources (ENR) Bldg. 2, Room 107 (ground-floor
auditorium), 1064 E. Lowell St., University of Arizona, Tucson*
       7-8:30 pm Mountain Standard Time. Free.
       Archaeological data provide the only direct source of information for
exploring the structure and dynamics of social systems beyond the historical
record. Not only are archaeologists increasingly able to replicate the
findings of other social scientists, they are also beginning to discover
patterns in human societies that transcend the timescales typically
considered in comparative research. In this talk Dr. Matt Peeples, associate
professor in Arizona State University’s School of Human Evolution and Social
Change and Director of the ASU Center for Archaeology and Society, outlines
the efforts of the one large collaborative research team (cyberSW) over the
last 15 years to apply network methods and models toward questions at the
intersection of social networks and culture. This research involves the
analyses of a massive settlement and material culture database spanning a
period of 1,000 years across the U.S. Southwest and Mexican Northwest. This
work suggests that the nature of networks and the risks and rewards
associated with network positions are historically contingent and tied to
broader trends in political complexity and demographic scale. Large-scale
archaeological network studies have considerable potential for revealing
comparative insights both within archaeology and beyond. 
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For
in-person meeting, no reservations are needed and $1/hr parking is available
in U of A 6th St. garage immediately east of ENR. To register for online
presentation go to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SCZJeyfWQsGScwazUnRIkg#/registr
ation>
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SCZJeyfWQsGScwazUnRIkg#/registra
tion. 
 
 
Thursday December 21, 2023: Online
       “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring
the presentation “Healing and Health in Hopi, Mayan and Andean (Yauyo)
Cultures: Symbiosis with Western Medicine” by anthropologist Sharonah
Fredrick, PhD, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577,
Tucson AZ 85717
       7 to 8:30 pm Mountain Standard Time. Free.
       Archaeological finds, colonial Spanish chronicles, and most
importantly, the living memories of tribal elders in Central America, South
America, and the American Southwest demonstrate not only extraordinary
botanical medical knowledge, but understandings of surgery and osteopathy
that contradict stereotypes of Native peoples as always and only practicing
“spiritual” medicine. It is spiritual, mental, and deeply physical, and has
been so for millennia. Through understanding the causal links between
spiritual, physical, mental, and environmental factors, Native medicine
systems, when allied with Western holistic and conventional medicine, have
been able to produce superb results for health and well-being. How can we
learn from these systems, how can we respect Native science without
appropriating it, and what are the connections between the stories of the
Cosmic Twins in Native cultures and their healing abilities for human mental
health? The Hopi, Mayan, and Andean Yauyo cultures are all characterized by
village autonomy and diversity of thought and theory regarding their own
beliefs, a trait that has previously only been associated with so-called
Western societies. The importance of the Twin metaphor and its connections
with healing focus on the need to find continual balance between shifting
polar opposites that are life itself. In this view, health is based on
balance, not elimination of the bad.
       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 December THIRDTHURSDAY flyer” in your email
subject line.
 
 
Fridays December 22, 2023 or January 26, February 23, March 22, or April 26,
2024: 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*
       10 am-12 pm through March, 9-11 am in April. $35 ($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 19th and 20th century factors that affected its demise.
The tour includes the sites of the former Spanish mission and O’odham
village that was the origin of modern Tucson, plus visits to 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=9956&qid=870055> Friday,
December 22, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9957&qid=870055> Friday,
January 26, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9958&qid=870055> Friday,
February 23, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9959&qid=870055> Friday,
March 22, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9960&qid=870055> Friday,
April 26, 9-11 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Wednesdays January 3-April 3, 2024: Online
       “Archaeology of the Southwest” 14-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 each Wednesday evening
January 3 through April 3, 2024. $109 donation ($90 for Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, Arizona Archaeological Society [AAS], and S’edav Va’aki
Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about
archaeology and traditional cultures. Donation does not include 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 US 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 pm Friday
December 29, 2023, 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 January-April archaeology class flyer” in your
email subject line.
 
 
Saturday January 6, 2024: Tucson
       “Arrowhead-making and Flintknapping Workshop” with flintknapper Sam
Greenleaf at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street, Tucson
       9 am to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members; 50% off for persons who have taken
this class previously) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about
archaeology and traditional cultures.
       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. 
       Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 pm
Thursday January 4, 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.
 
 
Monday January 8, 2024: Tucson 
       “Fort Lowell Neighborhood Walking Tour” with historian Ken Scoville
sponsored by the Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum starting at Fort
Lowell Park, 2900 N. Craycroft Rd., Tucson*
       For times see links below. $30 ($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 this link:
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9684&qid=860713> Monday,
January 8, 10 am-12 pm; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at
520-622-0594 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Saturdays January 6, 13, 20, & 27, 2024: Tucson
       “The Fiber of our Being: The Origins and Antiquity of Perishable
Material Culture” Master Class taught by archaeologist Edward A. Jolie, PhD,
in Room 309, Arizona State Museum (ASM), University of Arizona, 1013 E.
University Blvd., Tucson*
       9-11 am on each date. $180 (ASM members $150). Credit card payments
incur a 3% fee.
       In this four-part Master Class, fiber expert Dr. Edward A. Jolie,
Clara Lee Tanner Associate Curator of Ethnology and Associate Professor of
Anthropology, will take participants through the global origins and
antiquity of perishable material culture – basketry, textiles, string, wood,
hide working, and more – going back millions of years ago beginning in
Africa and spreading beyond.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information visit  <https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/perishables>
https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/perishables. To register contact
Darlene Lizarraga at 520-626-8381 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Tuesday January 9, 2024: Tucson and online
       “Archaeology Café: Indigenous Agriculture: Planting for Survival”
free lecture by Michael Kotutwa Johnson presented by Archaeology Southwest
(ASW) at the Loft Cinema, 3233 E. Speedway Blvd., Tucson, and online*
       6 to 7 pm Mountain Standard Time. Free.
       Michael Kotutwa Johnson (University of Arizona) will cover the
importance of culture and belief systems that are integrated into Indigenous
agriculture systems. He will also reference the importance of place-based
knowledge or the relationships that exist to make Indigenous agriculture
systems so resilient. If you will attend at the Loft Cinema, you can arrive
around 5:30 pm to visit and purchase your own tamales, pizza, wraps,
sandwiches, snacks, and refreshments from The Loft’s concession bar. The
program begins at 6 pm in Theatre 1’s open and unreserved seating. Parking
is free.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To preregister
for the Zoom go to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hVNK254uSvStthkearVjkQ#/registr
ation>
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hVNK254uSvStthkearVjkQ#/registra
tion. For more information contact Sara Anderson at 520-882-6946 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Wednesday January 10, 2024: Queen Creek, AZ
       “This Native American Tribe Is Taking Back Its Water” free
presentation by archaeologist M. Kyle Woodson, PhD, for San Tan Chapter,
Arizona Archaeological Society meeting at San Tan Historical Society Museum,
20425 S. Old Ellsworth Rd. (at intersection of Queen Creek Rd. and Ellsworth
Loop Rd.), Queen Creek, Arizona*
       6:30 pm. Free.
       Dr. Woodson is Director of the Gila River Indian Community’s Cultural
Resource Management Program in Sacaton, Arizona. His research focuses on
southern Arizona and includes Hohokam canal irrigation agriculture,
community organization, and ceramic production and technology as well as
Ancestral Pueblo migrations and other topics.
       * 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]
 
 
Wednesday January 10, 2024: Cave Creek, AZ
       “Scarlet Macaws in Southern Arizona – Like the Other Macaws but
Different” free presentation by Christopher W. Schwartz, PhD, for Desert
Foothills Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society meeting at Good Shepherd
of the Hills Fellowship Hall, 6502 E. Cave Creek Rd., Cave Creek, Arizona*
       7:30-8:30 pm; refreshment and socialization beginning at 7 pm. Free.
       A long-term study of scarlet macaws (Ara macao) and other parrots in
the southwestern United States and Mexican northwest by Christopher W.
Schwartz, Steven Plog, and Patricia A. Gilman has provided some surprising
results.  Scarlet macaws recovered from Chaco Canyon and the Mimbres region
are all very closely related genetically, they all ate mostly corn, and they
tend to have been raised in the area where they were recovered, that is, at
Chaco or Mimbres.  In this presentation, Christopher will discuss new DNA,
isotope, and radiocarbon data from southern and central Arizona, along with
isotopic data from Wupatki.  These data we have to date are consistent with
the conclusion that the macaws through time and across space in the
Southwest virtually all were genetically closely related, ate corn, and were
locally raised.  Even so, past people used and interacted with the macaws
differently in various parts of the Southwest, and very differently from
people living hundreds of miles away in the scarlet macaw’s distant homeland
of eastern and southern Mexico. 
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact Mary Kearney at  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] 
 
 
Saturday January 13, 2024: Green Valley, AZ
        “Before There Was a Canoa (and After): A Brief Cultural History of
Southern Arizona’s Middle Santa Cruz Valley” presentation by archaeologist
Allen Dart, part of the 2024 Native Peoples, Native Voices speaker series at
Historic Canoa Ranch, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road, Green Valley, Arizona
(accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56)*
       1 to 2:30 pm. $5 per person plus Activenet registration fee
approximately $3/ticket. (Purchase multiple tickets together to lower the
per-ticket fee.) Cash will not be accepted at the door.
       The Santa Cruz River valley’s Canoa vicinity south of Green Valley
was inhabited by O’odham and Yaqui Indians who trace their ancestry to
pre-Spanish and colonial-period times. From an early era the constant source
of water at “La Canoa” made it an oasis for farming and ranching, and an
important stop for travelers in the dry Sonoran Desert. This presentation
looks at archaeological evidence of pre-Spanish Canoa residents who were
affiliated with the Hohokam culture to the north and with Upper Santa Cruz
Valley people to the south. Sobaípuri O'odham, Akimel O'odham, Tohono
O'odham, Apache, Jocome, Manso, and other Indigenous peoples who were
present when Spanish explorers first visited in the 1690s will be discussed,
along with 1691-1821 Spanish explorations and colonialism, Yaqui Indians who
arrived with the Spanish (if not before), the 1821-1854 Mexican governmental
period and its establishment of the San Ignacio de la Canoa Land Grant, and
the post-1854 American period.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Register in
advance at  <https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration>
https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration; search for CANOA RANCH and select this
program’s title and date to enroll. (You must create an account before
registering for the program.) For more information contact Marsha Colbert at
520-724-5359 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
 
 
Saturday January 13, 2024: Online
       “Rediscovering the Fremont through Data-Driven Examination of Rock
Imagery” free online presentation by archaeologist Elizabeth Hora sponsored
by American Rock Art Research Association (ARARA)*
       5:30-7:30 pm Pacific Standard Time. Free.
       Over 1,000 years ago the Fremont lived in the Uinta Basin where they
farmed, foraged, made villages, and – central to this talk – created some of
the most incredible and intriguing rock imagery the world has ever seen. The
rock imagery centers on depictions of human forms with gorgeous jewelry,
intricate clothing and body paint, and holding implements of war and
agricultural prosperity. Could these clues help us understand Fremont
society? Elizabeth Hora is using data from nearly 500 of these human-esque
figures to learn more about the Fremont – who these people were, how they
organized among themselves, and what war and peace among them may have been
like. Elizabeth Hora is Public Archaeologist at the Utah State Historic
Preservation Office.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register
visit  <https://arara.wildapricot.org/event-5523230/Registration>
https://arara.wildapricot.org/event-5523230/Registration. 
 
 
Thursday January 18, 2024: Online
       “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring
the presentation “The Perils of Dyhydrogen Monoxide – Challenging Hembrillo
Canyon 1880 Myths of the Apache Wars” by historian Robert N. Watt, PhD,
sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
       7 to 8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time. Free.
       This month’s Third Thursday presenter Dr. Robert N. Watt, University
of Birmingham, UK, completed his trilogy on the Victorio Campaign of
1877-1881 in 2019 after almost 20 years of research. His presentation will
challenge several myths concerning the two engagements between the US Army
Ninth Cavalry and Apaches led by Victorio in southern New Mexico’s Hembrillo
Canyon and Basin between April 5 and 7, 1880. Historic records tell of the
drinking of tainted water and overnight siege of Captain Henry Carroll’s two
Ninth Cavalry companies in Hembrillo Basin on April 6-7, 1880, and include
Lt. John Conline’s detailed report of a skirmish between Company A, Ninth
Cavalry, and Victorio’s warriors on April 5 of that year. Archaeologist Karl
Laumbach’s archaeological and archive research has shown that these accounts
are inaccurate. Historian Robert Watt’s archive research supports Laumbach’s
conclusions and challenges additional myths that the US Army knew the
location of Victorio’s camp and that the operation to trap Victorio was
undermined by Captain Carroll attacking too early. 
       Following up on Laumbach’s work, Bob Watt has found that the US
Army’s letters and telegrams sent and received prior to this operation also
tell a very different story than that which was entered into the official
record after the event. He has published articles on this conflict in Small
Wars and Insurgencies (2002), The New Mexico Historical Review (2011 and
2022), War in History (two articles in 2011), The Southwestern Historical
Quarterly (2015), and in an article in The Journal of Military History
(2016) that was awarded the Moncado Prize.
       To register for the Zoom webinar go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6SsyU2ahQjiGYtBUfQG18g>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6SsyU2ahQjiGYtBUfQG18g. 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 January THIRDTHURSDAY flyer” in your email
subject line.
 
 
Fridays January 19 or February 16 or March 15 or April 19, 2024: Tucson
       “Presidio District Tour – Why is Tucson the City It is Today” walking
tour with historian Ken Scoville, sponsored by the Presidio San Agustín del
Tucson Museum, beginning at the 1928 Pima County Courthouse, 115 N Church
Ave, Tucson*
       10 am-12 pm. $30 ($20 Presidio Museum members). 
       Beginning at Tucson’s 1928 Pima County Courthouse, guide Ken Scoville
will discuss the archaeological efforts to find the Spanish presidio (fort),
two earlier courthouses built at this same location, and the beginning of
the burg now known as “the Old Pueblo.” El Presidio Historic District
provides many of the answers to why Tucson is the city it is today. Homes
constructed there responded to and later denied the desert environment. The
constant pressure for change and real estate speculation in a growing city
is also a part of the story as the infancy of historic districts established
the desire to preserve the buildings and landscape environment of an area
that connects to important past events and people in the community and
nation.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information and to register click on your preferred date link:
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9588&qid=854610> Friday,
Jan. 19, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9589&qid=854610> Friday,
Feb. 16, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9590&qid=854610> Friday,
March 15, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9591&qid=854610> Friday,
April 19, 10 am-12 pm, or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594
or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Saturday January 20, 2024: Tucson
       “History Relived Special Event” at Tucson Wagon & History Museum,
4823 S. 6th Ave., Tucson*
       9:30 am-3:30 pm. Free.
       Displays of carriages, wagons, historic Tucson businesses, model
trains, delicious food trucks, and more! Historical & promotional displays
from Arizona Historical Society, Empire Ranch, Glen Gold & John Schaffer
wagon displays, Mescal Movie Set, Mission Garden, Old Pueblo Trolley, Old
Tucson Studios, Presidio San Augustín, Purple Devil Donuts, Rails in the
Garden, Southern Arizona Attractions Alliance, Southern Arizona
Transportation Museum, Sulphur Springs Valley Historical Society &
Chiricahua Regional Museum, Territory of Arizona Buffalo Soldiers, True
Ranches (White Stallion, La Osa, etc.), Tucson Auto Museum, musician Buck
Helton, and authors Doug Hocking and P. J. Lawton.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact the museum at 520-294-3636 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
 
 
Saturday January 20 or Sunday April 21, 2024: Tucson
       “Mansions of Main Avenue Walking Tour” with Alan Kruse sponsored by
Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum, meeting at Café a la C’art, 150 N.
Main Ave., Tucson*
       10 am-12 pm on Dec. 10 and Jan. 20, 9-11 am on April 21. $30
(Presidio Museum members $20).
       Presidio Museum tour guide Alan Kruse leads a 1/4-mile-long stroll
down Main Avenue 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” but involved in the Camp Grant
Massacre along Aravaipa Creek), Annie Cheyney (whose newly restored 1905
home was the talk of the town), Albert Steinfeld (famous department store
proprietor), Frank Hereford (attorney who represented the defendants in the
Wham Robbery), and William Herring (Wyatt Earp’s lawyer once upon a time).
       * 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=9598&qid=854610>
Saturday, Jan. 20, 10 am-12 pm or
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/civicrm/mailing/url/?u=9599&qid=854610> Sunday,
April 21, 9-11 am; or contact the Tucson Presidio Museum at 520-622-0594 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Saturday January 20, 2024: Payson, AZ
       “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Rim Country Chapter, Arizona
Archaeological Society, at Payson Public Library, 328 N. McLane Rd., Payson,
Arizona; cosponsored by Arizona Humanities*
        10-11:30 am. Free.
       Native Americans in the U.S. Southwest developed sophisticated skills
in astronomy and predicting the seasons, centuries before non-Indian peoples
entered the region. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart discusses
the petroglyphs at Picture Rocks, the architecture of the “Great House” at
Arizona's Casa Grande Ruins, and other archaeological evidence of ancient
southwestern astronomy and calendrical reckoning, and interprets how these
discoveries may have related to ancient Native American rituals. This
program is made possible by Arizona Humanities.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information visit  <https://azarchsoc.org/RimCountry>
https://azarchsoc.org/RimCountry. 
 
 
Wednesday January 24, 2024: Surprise, AZ
       “Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social
Sustainability” free presentation for City of Surprise AZ Speaker series by
archaeologist Allen Dart at Surprise City Hall Council Chambers, 16000 N.
Civic Center Plaza, Surprise, Arizona; cosponsored by Arizona Humanities*
        11 am-12:30 pm. Free.
       The deep time perspective that archaeology and related disciplines
provide about natural hazards, environmental change, and human adaptation
not only is a valuable supplement to historical records, it sometimes
contradicts historical data used by modern societies to make decisions
affecting social sustainability and human safety. What can be learned from
scientific evidence that virtually all prehistoric farming cultures in
Arizona and the Southwest eventually surpassed their thresholds of
sustainability, leading to collapse or reorganization of their societies?
Could the disastrous damages to nuclear power plants damaged by the Japanese
tsunami of 2011 have been avoided if the engineers who decided where to
build those plants had not ignored evidence of prehistoric tsunamis? This
presentation looks at archaeological, geological, and
sustainable-agricultural evidence on environmental changes and how human
cultures have adapted to those changes, and discusses the value of a “beyond
history” perspective for modern society. This program is made possible by
Arizona Humanities.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information contact the City of Surprise at 623-222-2920 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]  
 
 
Saturday January 27, 2024: Marana, AZ
        Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Archaeological Sites of the Marana
Hohokam Platform Mound Community” tour guided by archaeologists Paul and
Suzanne Fish, departing from 13961 N. Sandario Rd., Marana, Arizona
        8:30 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.
        University of Arizona archaeologists Dr. Paul R. Fish and Dr.
Suzanne K. Fish lead this tour to selected archaeological sites in one of
southern Arizona’s largest ancient Hohokam communities. Our visit will
include the Marana Platform Mound site (which was surrounded by 40+
residential compounds), a sampling of Hohokam agricultural field locations
including specialized ones for agave cultivation, and a secondary compound
center on the Tortolita Mountains bajada. The Marana Mound site is one of
the very few Hohokam Early Classic period (1150-1300 CE) villages that has
wholly escaped the destruction resulting from modern agriculture and
urbanization and where adobe-wall remnants can be clearly identified on the
surface. We also will visit the location where a segment of the nearly
seven-mile-long Marana Mound site canal was identified from surface and
excavated remains before that area was included in a modern housing
development. These site visits will provide a basis for understanding the
social and economic processes during the Early Classic period, when
processes of Hohokam centralization and population aggregation greatly
accelerated. 
        Tour is limited to 20 people including guides. Reservations and
donation prepayment required by 5 pm Monday January 22. 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 Marana Mound tour flyer” in your email subject
line.
 
 
Saturday January 27, 2024: Green Valley, AZ
       “Caretakers of the Land: History of Land and Water in the San Xavier
Community” presentation by Jacelle Ramon-Sauberan, PhD, for the 2024 Native
Peoples, Native Voices Speaker Series at Raul M. Grijalva Canoa Ranch
Conservation Park, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road, Green Valley, Arizona
(accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56)*
       1-2:30 pm. $5 per person plus Activenet registration fee
approximately $3/ticket. (Purchase multiple tickets together to lower the
per-ticket fee.) Cash will not be accepted at the door.
       Dr. Jacelle Ramon-Sauberan (Tohono O'odham) will share her knowledge
about the history and culture of her people, the Wa:k O’odham.  
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Register in
advance at  <https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration>
https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration; search for CANOA RANCH and select this
program’s title and date to enroll. (You must create an account before
registering for the program.) For more information contact Marsha Colbert at
520-724-5359 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Wednesdays January 31, February 7, 14, 21, 28, & March 6, 2024: Online
       “Recent Discoveries Regarding Point of Pines Pueblo” online Master
Class taught by Patrick D. Lyons, PhD, sponsored by the Arizona State Museum
(ASM), Tucson*
       10 am-12 pm Mountain Standard Time on each date. $180 (ASM members
$150). Credit card payments incur a 3% fee.
       Excavated from 1946 to 1958 by the Arizona State Museum and the
University of Arizona Department (now School) of Anthropology, Point of
Pines Pueblo was the largest late pre-Hispanic settlement in the mountains
of Arizona, consisting of as many as 800 rooms. It has long been at the
center of discussions about ancient migrations in the US Southwest and
interactions between locals and immigrants. However, a lack of systematic
analysis of the collections from the site and a dearth of published data
about it have left generations of researchers in the position of having to
make assumptions about social processes unfolding in the Point of Pines
region based on Emil W. Haury's 1958 six-page summary of his complex
inferences. In this six-session Master Class, Dr. Patrick D. Lyons, ASM
Director and Curator, and Professor of Anthropology will guide participants
through the results of four recent studies focused on unpublished
collections from the site and their associated records, including original
fieldnotes, maps, and photographs. 
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information visit  <https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/point-pines>
https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/point-pines. To register contact
Darlene Lizarraga at 520-626-8381 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] 
 
 
Saturday February 10, 2024: Agua Fria National Monument, AZ
      Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Badger Springs Pueblo and Petroglyphs
Archaeology and Geology Tour” with JJ Golio and Allen Dart in Agua Fria
National Monument, starting at Badger Springs Trailhead parking area ca. 1
mile east of Interstate-17 Exit 256 (Badger Springs).
       8:30 am to 3:30 pm. $55 donation per person ($45 for Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation members) supports Old
Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures.
        Agua Fria National Monument, located approximately 40 miles north of
central Phoenix, was established in 2000 by President Bill Clinton to
protect its extensive and important cultural and natural resources.
Encompassing two mesas, the canyon of the Agua Fria River, and the river’s
tributaries including Badger Spring Wash, the monument protects numerous
archaeological sites as well as outstanding geological and biological
resources. This Old Pueblo tour will visit Badger Springs Pueblo, a 30-50
room precontact structure perched atop a high bluff, plus ancient bedrock
metates and bedrock outcrops with elaborate figurative petroglyphs. It also
will stop at a historical arrastra – an ore-grinding mill in which heavy
stones attached to horizontal poles radiating from a central pillar were
turned by a draft animal or powered by water to drag the stones on the
mill’s floor of stone to pulverize ore. Guides also will point out and
interpret geologic processes in which Badger Spring Wash cut through the
basalt and granodiorite to create colorful red,  pink, yellow, green, brown,
white, dark gray, and black formations, some including xenoliths.
       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 Badger Springs flyer” in your email subject
line.
 
 
Saturday February 10, 2024: Green Valley, AZ
       “Yoeme Culture and History” presentation by Felipe S. Molina (Yaqui)
for 2024 Native Peoples, Native Voices speaker series at Raul M. Grijalva
Canoa Ranch Conservation Park, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road, Green Valley,
Arizona (accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56)*
       1 to 2:30 pm. $5 per person plus Activenet registration fee
approximately $3/ticket. (Purchase multiple tickets together to lower the
per-ticket fee.) Cash will not be accepted at the door.
       Join Felipe Molina, a resident of the Yoem Pueblo in Marana, Arizona:
author, former teacher, and deer dancer for a discussion of Yoeme history
and culture in southern Arizona and beyond.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Register in
advance at  <https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration>
https://bit.ly/NRPRregistration; search for CANOA RANCH and select this
program’s title and date to enroll. (You must create an account before
registering for the program.) For more information contact Marsha Colbert at
520-724-5359 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Thursday February 15, 2024: Online 
        “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program featuring
the presentation “Recent University of New Mexico Research at Chaco Canyon
with some Background and Future” by archaeologist Wirt H. Wills, PhD,
sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
       7 to 8:30 pm Mountain Standard Time. Free.
       In Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s February Third Thursday
presentation Dr. W. H. Wills, Professor of Anthropology and Regents'
Lecturer, University of New Mexico, will offer a brief historical overview
of UNM’s archaeological investigations at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, with an
emphasis on the joint National Park Service - UNM Chaco Project (1969-1984).
More recent UNM work includes studies of water control features,
agricultural suitability modeling,  and remote sensing applications that
have built on the innovative research of the Chaco Project.
       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 February THIRDTHURSDAY flyer” in your email
subject line.
 
 
Wednesday February 28, 2024: Tucson
       “Chaco, Mimbres and Paquimé: A New Synthesis” free presentation by
archaeologist Steven LeBlanc, PhD, sponsored by the Arizona State Museum
(ASM) in Environmental & Natural Resources (ENR) Bldg. 2, Room S107
(ground-floor auditorium), 1064 E. Lowell St., University of Arizona campus,
Tucson*
       3-4 pm. Free.
       Chaco Canyon and Paquimé (Casas Grandes) are both World Heritage
Sites. When they were florescing, between them lay the unique Mimbres
archaeological culture. For over 50 years the relationships among these
three culture regions have produced many theories, but little consensus.
Recent information strongly suggests the terminal dates for Chaco and
Mimbres at ca. 1130 CE are very near the initial date for the founding of
Paquimé, thus changing ideas on how they might have been related. A new
synthesis provides insights into the links among these three cultures. Dr.
LeBlanc is retired Director of Collections, Peabody Museum/Harvard
University. 
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Parking is
available in the U of A 6th St Garage, 1201 E. 6th St. For more information
contact Darlene Lizarraga at 520-626-8381 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Tuesday March 19, 2024: Tucson-Marana, AZ
       Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Spring Equinox Tour to Los Morteros
and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Archaeological 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) helps cover Old Pueblo’s tour
expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and
traditional cultures.
       The 2024 vernal equinox occurs on Tuesday March 19, 2024 at 8:06 pm
Mountain Standard Time (Mar. 20, 3:06 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
mostly Hohokam Indians between 800 and 1100 CE. An equinox calendar
petroglyph at the site 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 Sunday
March 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 March 20 tour flyer” in your email subject
line.
 
 
Wednesdays May 8-August 7, 2024: Online
       “The Mogollon Culture of the US Southwest” 14-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 each Wednesday evening May 8-August 7, 2024. $109
donation per person ($90 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and S’edav Va’aki
Museum Foundation members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about
archaeology and traditional cultures. Donation does not include cost of
optional AAS membership or AAS Certification Program enrollment.
       Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart teaches this class
in 14 two-hour sessions on Wednesday evenings May 8-August 7, 2024, to
explore the archaeology of the ancient Mogollon culture of the American
Southwest. The class covers the history of Mogollon archaeology, Mogollon
origins, the complex subregional Mogollon “branches,” chronology of
habitation, subsistence and settlement patterns through time, artifacts,
rock art, religious and social organization, depopulation and movement, and
descendant peoples. 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 – Mogollon” course. Students seeking AAS
Certification are expected to prepare a brief research report to be
presented orally or in written or video format. 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 the TCE 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 May 3, 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 Mogollon class flyer” in your email subject
line.
 
 
Wednesdays September 4-December 11, 2024 (skipping October 23): Online
       “The Hohokam Culture of Southern Arizona” 14-session online adult
education class with archaeologist Allen Dart, sponsored by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577
       Each Wednesday 6:30 to 8:30 pm ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same
as Pacific Daylight Time through Oct. 30). $109 donation per person ($90 for
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, AAS, and S’edav Va’aki Museum Foundation
members) supports Old Pueblo’s education programs about archaeology and
traditional cultures. 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 14 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
–Hohokam” 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 August 30, 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.
 
 
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.
       Old Pueblo 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.
       Do you like getting our announcements about upcoming activities? Or
would you like to help us continue to provide hands-on education programs in
archaeology, history, and cultures for children and adults? THEN PLEASE:
Visit  <http://www.oldpueblo.org/forms/donorfrm.php>
www.oldpueblo.org/forms/donorfrm.php to make a contribution, or see below
for information on how you can support Old Pueblo as a member!
 
 
Payment Options for Donations and Memberships
 
        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, Discover,
and  American Express 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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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
removal from each one include:
 
       Archaeological Society of New Mexico:  <[log in to unmask]>
       Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists:  Greg 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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