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For Immediate Release
 
        These listings include announcements about activities offered by Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center and other organizations interested in archaeology,
history and cultures. Old Pueblo’s activities are listed in green font. (If
you’d like to receive Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s full-color-illustrated
upcoming-activities email blasts, go to  <https://www.oldpueblo.org/>
https://www.oldpueblo.org/ and scroll down to the “Subscribe” box.) 
      You can click on the blue-lettered words to visit websites or to send
emails.
 
 
Table of Contents

Upcoming Activities

Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Mission and Support

Opt-Out Options
 
 
UPCOMING ACTIVITIES
 
        These listings include announcements about activities offered by Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center and other organizations interested in archaeology,
history and cultures. 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Archaeology Center event” the information may be out of date – Readers are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. 
 
 
Wednesday December 15, 2021: Online
               “5 Questions about the History of Humanity” free online
discussion between Yoli Ngandali and David Wengrow sponsored by SAPIENS, New
York.
               3-3:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. Free.
       SAPIENS Media and Public Outreach Fellow Yoli Ngandali asks
archaeologist and author David Wengrow about his New York Times bestselling
book The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity (co-authored with the
late anthropologist David Graeber). Learn about how assumptions about social
evolution such as the development of agriculture and the origins of
inequality are being challenged to reveal new possibilities for
understanding human history.
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_x2HDMnKyR--FzltGZMwaCw>
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_x2HDMnKyR--FzltGZMwaCw. 
 
 
Thursday December 16, 2021: Online
        “Archaeology at the Haynie Site: Investigating a Chacoan Outlier on
the Colorado Plateau” free online presentation with archaeologists Jim
Walker and Kellam Throgmorton, sponsored by The Archaeological Conservancy
(Albuquerque NM) and Crow Canyon Archaeological Center (Cortez CO)* 
        5 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free.
        Haynie Pueblo, located in the southwestern Colorado’s Mesa Verde
archaeological region, was a Chacoan outlier occupied from around 500 to
1280 CE. The five-acre site contains two massive, multi-storied Chacoan
Great Houses as well as other masonry architecture, kivas, pithouses and
dense trash middens. The Archaeological Conservancy acquired Haynie Site in
2019 with support of its members and a Colorado Historical Fund grant.
Research conducted by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center continues to
contribute to our knowledge of the site and the people who lived there
centuries ago. The Archaeological Conservancy’s Southwestern Regional
Director Jim Walker and Crow Canyon Archaeological Center’s Haynie Site
Field Director Kellam Throgmorton will discuss more about the how the site
was acquired, what is necessary to preserve it, and what ongoing research
tells us about its connection to Chaco culture.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register go
to
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/6316384815443/WN_gNyXffRmSkCB7SCQT
djV3Q?fbclid=IwAR3sGzSwtL1wtAl8AjaA1Cr8M0-EvDmgq0-szzD1CTQZvWpZVRuSlJb-DEQ>
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/6316384815443/WN_gNyXffRmSkCB7SCQTd
jV3Q?fbclid=IwAR3sGzSwtL1wtAl8AjaA1Cr8M0-EvDmgq0-szzD1CTQZvWpZVRuSlJb-DEQ. 
 
 
Thursday December 16, 2021: Online
        Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought”
free Zoom online program featuring “Apache Warriors Tell Their Side”
presentation by author-historian Lynda A. Sánchez
        7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free.
        Eve Ball (1890-1984) was a noted New Mexico chronicler of Apache,
Anglo and Hispanic history. Obtaining their trust over many years, she began
interviewing over 67 of the participants and descendants of those implacable
warriors who fought the Apache Wars.  By listening to, rather than trying to
talk over, the old-timers, Eve gathered fresh information and a differing
point of view long before it was popular to do so.  Historian and educator
Lynda A. Sánchez will present background about Eve and her stubborn desire
to learn from the Apaches and from their side of the fence, and will
describe what it was like working side by side with this amazing woman.
        To register go to
<https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_JYWiXGriRjOBGKe5OW0rfA>
https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_JYWiXGriRjOBGKe5OW0rfA. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
        IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity send an email to  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] with “Send December 16 Third Thursday flyer” in your
email subject line.
 
 
Friday December 17, 2021: Tumacácori, AZ
        “Full Moon Guided Hike on the Anza Trail” starting at the Anza
Trailhead across from Tumacácori Post Office and just north of the parking
lot for the Tumacácori National Historical Park (TUMA; event sponsor)
visitor center at 1891 E. Frontage Rd., Tumacácori, Arizona*
        6-8:30 p.m. Free.
        Join Tumacácori National Historical Park rangers for a guided full
moon hike around the Park and along the Juan Bautista de Anza National
Historic Trail. Tumacácori is an International Dark Sky Park, recognized as
having high quality, clear night skies with little artificial light. This
opportunity will be a leisurely, interpreted hike through the shadows of the
Santa Cruz River’s riparian landscape, revealing history and nature in a
nighttime setting, an experience that rarely happens. Bring your flashlight
but don’t plan to use it since the moon will be your night light. Wear
hiking shoes and carry water. No pets, please.  Note that the TUMA mission
church and restrooms will not be available.
       * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Reservations
are encouraged. For more information visit  <http://www.nps.gov/tuma>
www.nps.gov/tuma or call 520-377-5060.
 
 
Monday December 20, 2021: Tucson
        “History in the Field Youth Workshop” at Presidio San Agustín del
Tucson Museum, 196 N. Court Ave., Tucson*
        4-6 p.m. $5 per person.
        The History in the Field Youth Workshop focuses on archaeology this
month. Participants will start with a visit to the Museum’s excavated Early
Agricultural period pit house and will learn about specific artifacts found
in recent archaeological excavations of downtown Tucson. Attendees will then
be provided field mapping supplies to document what they find and figure out
what was going on in that area. Restricted to ages nine and older. 
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event.
Preregistration is required at
<https://tucsonpresidio.com/history-in-the-field-youth-programs/>
https://tucsonpresidio.com/history-in-the-field-youth-programs/. For more
information contact April Bourie at 520-444-3687 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Monday December 20, 2021: Online
               “Monumental Avenues of the Chaco World: New Research at the
Crossroads of Infrastructure, Ontology, and Power” free Zoom online
presentation by Rob Weiner sponsored by Arizona Archaeological and
Historical Society (AAHS), Tucson* 
               7-8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free.
               Researchers have puzzled over wide roadways associated with
Chaco-style Great Houses in the U.S. Southwest for over a century. Despite
frequent references to roads in Chaco scholarship, there has been relatively
little on-the-ground assessment of how roads were used, where they led, and,
more broadly, how they were implicated in the rise and fall of ancient Four
Corners society. In this talk, Rob Weiner will present recent documentation
of monumental roads throughout the Chaco World with particular attention to
small-scale, road-related architectural features and exploring evidence for
practices of offerings, processions, and races. Interpreted in light of
Pueblo and Navajo traditional knowledge, cross-cultural examples, and
perspectives from cognitive science, he will argue that roads and the ritual
practices carried out along them were key to the emergence of both regional
integration and burgeoning inequality during the Chaco era, serving as
tangible manifestations of identity, hierarchy, and cosmography inscribed on
the landscape. Robert Weiner is a PhD candidate at the University of
Colorado Boulder, Research Fellow with the Solstice Project, and Staff
Archaeologist for Cottonwood Gulch Expeditions.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. To
register go to  <https://bit.ly/WeinerDec2021REG>
https://bit.ly/WeinerDec2021REG. 
 
 
Tuesday January 4, 2022: Online
        “Ducks, Power, and the San Juan Basketmakers” free Archaeology Café
online lecture by Polly Schaafsma sponsored by Archaeology Southwest (ASW),
Tucson*
        6 to 7 p.m. Free.
        Polly Schaafsma (Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/Laboratory of
Anthropology) will address the duck as a symbol in Basketmaker
II-Basketmaker III rock art, where it is represented as an independent
element and on the heads of human figures in narrative scenes. 
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register go
to
<http://www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/ducks-power-and-the-san-juan-bask
etmakers/>
www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/ducks-power-and-the-san-juan-basketmakers
/.
 
 
Friday January 7, 2022: Online
               “Culture History of the Tucson Basin” free online
presentation with archaeologist Ian Milliken for Pima County Natural
Resources, Parks and Recreation (PCNRPR) environmental education series*
               10-11 a.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free
               Pima County is blessed with a rich and varying record of
human settlement over the last 11,000 years representing ancestral Native
Americans, Spanish Colonial, Mexican-American, and many other cultures in
history. Pima County’s Cultural Resources Manager Ian Milliken will present
on the culture history of the Tucson Basin and southern Arizona showcasing
Pima County’s unique and deep heritage legacies.
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<https://www.eventbrite.com/e/culture-history-of-the-tucson-basin-registrati
on-215877955777?aff=ebdsoporgprofile>
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/culture-history-of-the-tucson-basin-registratio
n-215877955777?aff=ebdsoporgprofile. 
 
 
Saturday January 8, 2022: Online
        “The Antiquity of Irrigation in the Southwest” free Zoom online
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for the Pima County Natural
Resources, Parks and Recreation (PCNRPR) environmental education 2022
history lecture series*
        1-2 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free.
        Before 1500 CE, Native American cultures took advantage of southern
Arizona's long growing season and tackled its challenge of limi­ted
precipitation by developing the earliest and most extensive irrigation works
in all of North America. Agriculture was introduced to Arizona more than
4,000 years before present, and irrigation systems were developed in our
state at least 3,500 years ago – several hundred years be­fore irrigation
was established in ancient Mexico. This presentation by archaeologist Allen
Dart provides an overview of ancient irrigation systems in the southern
Southwest and discusses irrigation’s implications for understanding social
complexity. 
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
more information contact Sandy Reith at 520-724-5375 extension 7 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
 
 
Mondays January 10-March 28, 2022: Online
        “The Mogollon Culture of the US Southwest” 12-session online adult
education class taught by archaeologist Allen Dart, RPA, Executive Director
of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson
        6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Monday evening January 10-March 28, 2022. $99
donation ($80 for members of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Arizona
Archaeological Society [AAS], and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum [FOPGM])
does not include costs of recommended text or cost of optional AAS
membership or AAS Certification Program enrollment.
       Registered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart teaches this class
in 12 two-hour sessions on Monday evenings, January 10-March 28, 2022, 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 its Certification program visit
<http://www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603> www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603.
        Reservations and prepayment are due 10 days after reservation
request or by 5 p.m. Thursday January 6, 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 [log in to unmask] with “Send
Mogollon class flyer” in your email subject line.
 
 
Tuesday January 11, 2022: Green Valley, AZ 
        “Before there Was a Canoa (and After): A Brief Cultural History of
Southern Arizona’s Middle Santa Cruz Valley” free presentation by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center’s Allen Dart to kick off Pima County Natural Resources,
Parks and Recreation’s 200th Anniversary of the San Ignacio de la Canoa Land
Grant Lecture Series, at Historic Canoa Ranch, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road,
Green Valley, Arizona (accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56)*
        10 to 11:30 a.m. $5 per person.
        For the past several thousand years the Canoa Ranch vicinity of the
Santa Cruz River valley was an oasis for hunting, gathering, farming, and
ranching, and an important stop for travelers through the dry Sonoran
Desert. In this presentation, archaeologist Allen Dart looks at evidence of
the area’s pre-Spanish residents including 11,000 to 2100 BCE Paleoindian
and Archaic hunters and gatherers, and the Hohokam and Upper Santa Cruz
Valley farming peoples who apparently coexisted there up to the 1400s. He
also will discuss Sobaípuri O’odham, Akimel O’odham, Tohono O’odham, Apache,
Jócome, and Janos Indians who were there when the first Spanish explorers
visited in the 1690s; 1691-1821 Spanish explorations and colonialism; Yaqui
Indians who arrived with the Spanish; the 1821-1854 Mexican governmental
period (during which the San Ignacio de la Canoa Land Grant was
established);  and the post-1845 American period.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event.
Limited to 30 people. To register or for more information contact Yajaira
Gray at 520-724-5355 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Tuesday January 11, 2022: Online
        “Investigating and Caring for Your Handwoven Blankets and Rugs” free
Zoom presentation by Dr. Ann Lane Hedlund and Dr. Nancy Odegaard sponsored
by the Arizona State Museum (ASM), University of Arizona, Tucson*
        6-7 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free.
        In this program Dr. Ann Lane Hedlund, textile expert, retired
curator and former director of the Gloria F. Ross Center for Tapestry
Studies, will describe the physical traits of handwoven Mexican and Spanish
American sarapes, blankets, and rugs as they relate to the weaving process
and tools, and will discuss how collectors and researchers can use these
traits to understand how weavers work and to distinguish between different
cultural traditions and styles. And Dr. Nancy Odegaard, conservator
professor emerita, and former head of preservation at ASM, will describe how
weaving technology impacts the display and care of handwoven textiles and
how specific examples were used and cared for after they left the loom, and
will offer tips for preserving them into the future.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register go
to  <https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/investigating-and-caring>
https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/investigating-and-caring.
 
 
Tuesday January 11, 2022: Online
        “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom online presentation “The Border
Wall and the Tohono O'odham Nation’s Traditions and Spiritual Freedom” by
Verlon José (Tohono O'odham), sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO
Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
        7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free
        Tohono O’odham elder Verlon José has written, “When I grew up living
near the U.S./Mexico border, the Tohono O’odham elders taught me that our
sacred mountains and springs – as well as our most important spiritual
ceremonies and pilgrimages – occur on both sides of the international
boundary. We traveled to areas not knowing we were in another country, but
knowing we were on the land of our ancestors and family. I learned that we
have a basic human responsibility to protect the land and the people.”
Having been both an elected leader of the Tohono O’odham and a traditional
practitioner, he has attempted to explain to the federal government how
important the continuity of Tohono O'odham sacred and religious traditions
are important not only to his people but also for the health and well-being
of the land itself. “We must continue our traditional and religious
practices to keep the world in balance,” he says. Mr. José is a Tohono
O'odham traditional religious practitioner and has served as the Tohono
O'odham Nation’s Legislative Council Chairman and as the Nation’s Vice
Chairman. 
        Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom
webinar series, hosted by Old Pueblo Board of Directors members Martina
Dawley (Hualapai-Diné), Maegan Lopez (Tohono O’odham), and Anabel Galindo
(Pascua Yaqui), is made possible by a grant from Arizona Humanities. The
series provides Native American presenters with a forum for discussing
issues important to Indigenous peoples today.
        To register for the program go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_e5ZmY0m4TjKQ8QBqyOl1Mw>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_e5ZmY0m4TjKQ8QBqyOl1Mw. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
 
 
Tuesdays January 11, 18, 25, and February 1, 2022: Online
        “Ancient Southwest Ceramics” online Master Class taught by Patrick
D. Lyons, PhD, sponsored by the Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona
(ASM), Tucson*
        10-11:30 a.m. Mountain Standard Time. $130 (ASM members $80). Credit
card payments incur a 3% fee.
        This four-part ASM Master Class will focus on painted prehispanic
pottery. Session 1 will include typological conventions and nomenclature
used in the US Southwest; the origin and development of ceramics in the
region; pottery-making technology; and what pottery can tell us about the
dating of archaeological sites, as well as ancient diets, migrations, trade,
and religion. Session 2 focuses on the painted pottery of the Kayenta
Region, the Hopi Mesas, and the Middle Little Colorado River valley
including Tusayan White Ware, Little Colorado White Ware, Tsegi Orange Ware,
Jeddito Orange Ware, Winslow Orange Ware, and Jeddito Yellow Ware. Session 3
will explore the decorated ceramics of the southern Colorado Plateau in
east-central Arizona and west-central New Mexico including Cibola White
Ware, White Mountain Red Ware, Zuni Glaze Ware, and Matsaki Buff Ware. And
Session 4 focuses on Roosevelt Red Ware and Maverick Mountain Series pottery
types, which are most common in southern Arizona and southwestern New
Mexico.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register go
to
<https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/asm-master-class-ancient-southwest-c
eramics>
https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/asm-master-class-ancient-southwest-ce
ramics.
 
 
Saturday January 15, 2022: Tucson
        “Arrowhead-making and Flintknapping Workshop” with flintknapper Sam
Greenleaf at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street, Tucson
        9 a.m. to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members; 50% off for persons who have
taken this class previously)
        Learn how to make arrowheads, spear points, and other flaked stone
artifacts just like ancient peoples did. In this workshop, flintknapping
expert Sam Greenleaf provides participants with hands-on experience and
learning on how pre-European Contact people made and used projectile points
and other tools created from obsidian and other stone. All materials and
equipment are provided. The class is designed to help modern people
understand how Native Americans made traditional crafts and is not intended
to train students how to make artwork for sale. Limited to six registrants.
All participants are asked to wear face masks and to practice physical
distancing during the workshop to avoid spreading COVID-19 virus.
        Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 p.m.
Thursday January 13, 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.           
 
 
Saturday January 15, 2022: Tubac, AZ
        “African Americans in the Early West” presentation by Jack Lasseter
for Shaw D. Kinsley Lecture series at Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, 1
Burruel Street, Tubac, Arizona*
        2-3 p.m. $15 (children 6 and under free) includes all day entrance
into the park and the historic buildings.
        Our image of the history of the American West, perceived in movies,
would have you believe there were only Caucasians shaping its development.
However, it had its share of African Americans, men and women, who are all
an important part of the story of the West, from the cowboys and Buffalo
Soldiers to hotel owners and school teachers, from good guys to bad guys.
Come and hear their part in the development and settlement of the West.
Snacks will be served. The lecture will take place outdoors in a large
picnic area.  Bring your own chair or sit at one of the picnic tables. 
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Call
520-398-2252 to RSVP. For more information call 520-398-2252 or email
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Wednesday January 19, 2022: Prescott, AZ
        “Old-Time Religion? The Salado Phenomenon in the U.S. Southwest and
Preserving Its Evidence” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for
Yavapai Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at the Museum of Indigenous
People, 147 N. Arizona St., Prescott, Arizona*
        6:30-8 p.m. Free.
        When first recognized by archaeologists in the early twentieth
century, a constellation of peculiar cultural traits in the southwestern
United States, including polychrome (three-colored) pottery, above-ground
housing often enclosed in walled compounds, and monumental architecture, was
thought to be indicative of a distinct group of people: "the Salado." As
more and more research was done and the widespread distribution of Salado
material culture became apparent, interpretations of what the Salado
phenomenon represents was debated. In this presentation archaeologist Allen
Dart illustrates pottery and other cultural attributes of the so-called
Salado culture, reviews some of the theories about the Salado, and discusses
how Salado related to the Ancestral Pueblo, Mogollon, Hohokam, and Casas
Grandes cultures of the "Greater Southwest" (the U.S. Southwest and Mexico's
Northwest). Mr. Dart also will discuss how vandalism affects archaeologists’
ability to understand the Salado phenomenon.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For
more information contact Andrew Christenson at 928-308-5758 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
 
 
Thursday January 20, 2022: Online
        Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought”
free Zoom online program featuring “Specters of the Past – Ghost Towns That
Built Arizona” presentation by Jay Mark, cosponsored by Arizona Humanities,
Phoenix.
        7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free
        In addition to an entertaining, visual display of the communities,
towns and settlements that contributed to the early growth of Arizona, this
presentation focuses on respect for these diminishing historic resources.
Most of the photographs represent a comprehensive exploration of Arizona
ghost towns made by Mr. Mark in the 1960s and 1970s just prior to a major
period of incursion and destruction by off-road and all-terrain vehicles.
Many sites are no longer extant or have been seriously degraded since, over
the last fifty or sixty years. This presentation emphasizes the need to
respect these valuable but fragile and vulnerable resources. Most are on
public land with little or no protection afforded. From Mr. Mark’s personal
library of nearly one thousand photographs of nearly three dozen ghost
towns, the presentation features ghost towns from the area in which it is
made. Jay Mark, a resident of Arizona for more 50 years, has written more
than 800 articles about local and Arizona history, and has taught popular
continuing education classes in the Maricopa Community College District. He
has received the Arizona Historical Society’s Al Merito award and the State
Historic Preservation Office/Arizona Preservation Foundation Governor’s
Heritage Preservation. This program is made possible by Arizona Humanities. 
        For more information contact Old Pueblo at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.This program
will not be recorded.
 
 
Saturday January 22, 2022: Benson, AZ
        “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Cochise College Benson Center,
1025 S. State Route 90, Benson*
        12-1:30 p.m. 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 contact DeVon Hannah at 520-586-1981 or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Thursday January 27, 2022: Sedona, AZ
        “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Arizona Archaeological Society
Verde Valley Chapter at Sedona Public Library, 3250 White Bear Road, Sedona,
Arizona; cosponsored by Arizona Humanities*
        3:30-5:30 p.m. 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 contact Linda Krumrie at  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Saturday January 29, 2022: Tubac, AZ
               “Discovering the ‘Discoverers’: New Evidence of Francisco
Vasquez de Coronado in Southern Arizona” by archaeologist Dr. Deni J.
Seymour for Shaw D. Kinsley Lecture series, outdoors at Tubac Presidio State
Historic Park, 1 Burruel Street, Tubac, Arizona*
        2 p.m. $15 fee includes all-day admission to tour the Presidio Park.
               Definitive evidence has been discovered of the 1539 and 1540
expedition of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado through Arizona. One of the
longest standing mysteries in the American Southwest is the route taken by
Fray Marcos de Niza and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado through Sonora and
Arizona. They were the first Europeans to step foot into this region in 1539
and 1540. Abundant evidence has been found in neighboring New Mexico and
also a site has been found in Texas, but their path through Arizona and
Sonora has remained a question for nearly 500 years. Recent discoveries
reveal evidence that the moment of first contact between Europeans and
Native populations in what is now the southwestern US in southern Arizona.
Among the findings is a large encampment with hundreds of the diagnostic
mid-16th century artifacts. Early 16th-century weapons like those used on
the expedition will be displayed with weapons experts on hand to discuss
their use. This is a fundraiser for Tubac Presidio. It will be outdoors,
bring your own chair. Snacks will be served.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For
reservations go to
<https://www.tubacpresidio.org/events-1/discovering-the-discoverers-new-evid
ence-of-francisco-vasquez-de-coronado-in-southern-arizona?fbclid=IwAR0PBaCi-
w_TivKGvvpaSHNh588bGmxeGNU3MsWKXD9c1pzSgUW1YNMr4P4>
https://www.tubacpresidio.org/events-1/discovering-the-discoverers-new-evide
nce-of-francisco-vasquez-de-coronado-in-southern-arizona?fbclid=IwAR0PBaCi-w
_TivKGvvpaSHNh588bGmxeGNU3MsWKXD9c1pzSgUW1YNMr4P4. For more information call
520-398-2252 or email  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]
 
 
Tuesday February 1, 2022: Online
        “The Importance of Birds in Chaco Canyon” free Archaeology Café
online lecture by Katelyn Bishop sponsored by Archaeology Southwest (ASW),
Tucson*
        6 to 7 p.m. Free.
        Katelyn Bishop (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) will
share some findings and insights from an analysis of avifaunal remains from
Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. Analysis reveals how birds were involved in
people’s lives in Chaco Canyon and the many types of birds these people
valued.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To register go
to
<http://www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/the-importance-of-birds-in-chaco-
canyon/>
www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/the-importance-of-birds-in-chaco-canyon/.
 
 
Thursday February 17, 2022: Online
               Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” free Zoom online program featuring “Understanding Indigenous Mexico
through the Maya, Mixtec, and Aztec Codices” presentation by ethnohistorian
Michael M. Brescia, Ph.D.
        7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free
        Mexican codices are manuscripts made by precontact and early Spanish
colonial period Mesoamerican peoples. In this presentation Michael Brescia,
PhD, Curator of Ethnohistory at the Arizona State Museum and affiliated
Professor of History and Law at the University of Arizona, will discuss what
the codices tell us (and don’t tell us) about the political, economic,
social, and cultural rhythms of daily life in the Maya, Mixtec, and Aztec
cultures. After the Spanish conquest of Mexico in 1521, the codex tradition
continued under the auspices of the Spanish missionaries and provided
Indigenous peoples with a voice amid the dramatic changes that were taking
place all around them.
        To register go to
<https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_OFjMuDjuQaCBQHm8hRV1bA>
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_OFjMuDjuQaCBQHm8hRV1bA. For more
information contact Old Pueblo at  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201. For each Old Pueblo Zoom presentation,
we let the presenter decide whether he or she wants for the program to be
recorded and made available online. No recording decision has yet been made
for this program.
        IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity send an email to  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] with “Send February Third Thursday flyer” in your email
subject line.
 
 
Tuesday February 22, 2022: Online
               “Finding Historical Mexico along the Camino Real: Material
Culture and Identity from the 16th to 19th Centuries” free online
presentation by Dr. Michael M. Brescia sponsored by the Arizona State
Museum, University of Arizona (ASM)*
               6 to 7 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free. 
               The Camino Real de Tierra Adentro—Royal Road of the Interior
Lands—is one of the oldest and longest historic roads in the western
hemisphere. Following the established trade routes of Indigenous peoples
that dated to Mexican antiquity, Spaniards set out to explore and claim
sovereignty over the North American continent in the wake of the conquest of
the Aztec confederation in 1521.  The Camino Real reflected the broader
objectives of the Spanish colonial enterprise: identify and exploit precious
metals such as silver and gold; promote trade based on local and global
resources; establish farms and ranches to meet the needs of newly arrived
settlers; and nurture among the Spanish and Indigenous peoples a colonial
identity based on Catholicism and obedience to the Spanish crown. ASM
historian Michael Brescia examines the dynamic yet unequal exchange that
took place between European and Indigenous societies along the nearly
1600-mile route from Mexico City to Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo, just north of
Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the material culture that emerged as a direct
result of that exchange, including, for example, artwork, household wares,
and domestic goods, but also the construction of haciendas, chapels,
bridges, and modes of transport. This program is held in conjunction with
the exhibit,  <https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/exhibit/wrapped-in-color>
Wrapped in Color: Legacies of the Mexican Sarape, showing through July 2022.
Michael Brescia is a curator of ethnohistory at ASM and an affiliated
professor of history and law at the University of Arizona.
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/historical-mexico-camino-real>
https://statemuseum.arizona.edu/events/historical-mexico-camino-real. 
 
 
Saturday February 26, 2022: 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 a.m. to 1 p.m.; $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members) helps cover Old Pueblo’s
tour expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and
traditional cultures.
        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 p.m.
Wednesday February 23, 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 [log in to unmask] with “Send
Yoeme Communities tour flyer” in your email subject line.
 
 
Tuesday March 1, 2022: Online
        “Birds, Feathers, and Ancient Pueblo Pottery” free Archaeology Café
online lecture by Kelley Hays-Gilpin sponsored by Archaeology Southwest
(ASW), Tucson*
        6 to 7 p.m. Free.
        Since the beginning of Pueblo pottery traditions in the seventh
century CE, potters have looked to birds as inspiration for vessel shapes
and painted designs. In the 1400s, feathers became a favorite motif, and
birds and feathers are still important subjects in Pueblo pottery today. In
this talk, archaeologist Kelley Hays-Gilpin (Northern Arizona University and
Museum of Northern Arizona) will explore images and meanings on a wide
variety of ancestral, historic, and contemporary pottery, focusing on the
Hopi Mesas.
               * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. To
register go to
<http://www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/birds-feathers-and-ancient-pueblo
-pottery/>
www.archaeologysouthwest.org/event/birds-feathers-and-ancient-pueblo-pottery
/.
 
 
Monday-Friday March 7-11, 2022: Ajo, AZ
        “Tri-national Sonoran Symposium” in Ajo, Arizona*
        Place, times, and registration fees to be announced.
        Organized by representatives from the Tohono O’odham Nation, Mexico
and the United States, this biennial symposium offers presentations and
dialogue about the dynamics of natural and cultural ecology, environmental
challenges, and their relationships to past and present peoples living in
the Sonoran Desert. The symposium was established to promote increased
understanding, conservation and celebration of the natural and cultural
resources of the Sonoran Desert and to foster communication and productive
collaboration dedicated to this purpose.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For more
information visit  <https://www.isdanet.org/symposium>
sonoransymposium.com. 
 
 
Tuesday March 8, 2022: Online
        “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom online presentation “The Tribal
Archaeologist’s Duties With A Focus On Ancestral Territories And Traditional
Cultural Places” by Martina Dawley (Hualapai/Diné), sponsored by Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717
        7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Free
        Martina Dawley (Hualapai/Diné) is the Senior Archaeologist for the
Hualapai Tribe’s Department of Cultural Resources. Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom webinar series, hosted by Old
Pueblo Board of Directors members Martina Dawley, Maegan Lopez (Tohono
O’odham), and Anabel Galindo (Pascua Yaqui) and made possible by a grant
from Arizona Humanities, provides Native American presenters with a forum
for discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today.
        For more information contact Old Pueblo at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] or 520-798-1201.
 
 
Thursday March 10, 2022: Online
        “Archaeology's Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social
Sustainability” free online Zoom presentation with archaeologist Allen Dart
sponsored by Pacific Coast Archaeological Society (PCAS), Costa Mesa,
California*
        7:30 to 9 p.m. Pacific Standard Time. 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 the
US Southwest eventually surpassed their thresholds of sustainability,
leading to collapse or reorganization of their societies? Could the
disastrous damages to nuclear power plants caused 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 is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. For a
registration request send email to  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] For more information contact Joe Hodulik at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]  or 949-300-1864.
 
 
Friday March 18, 2022: Online
               “Ancient Southwestern Native American Pottery” online adult
education class with archaeologist Allen Dart via Zoom for University of
Arizona’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI)*
       3-4:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time. OLLI Greater Tucson (NW,
SE) and Green Valley membership fee of $150 for Monsoon/Fall Semester
(7/1/2021 to 12/31/2021) classes or $200 for full year (July-June) allows
one to take this and many other OLLI courses.
        In this presentation Mr. Dart shows and discusses Native American
ceramic styles that characterized specific peoples and eras in the U.S.
Southwest prior to about 1450, and talks about how archaeologists use
pottery for dating archaeological sites and interpreting ancient lifeways.
He discusses the importance of context in archaeology, how the things people
make change in style over time, and how different styles are useful for
identifying different cultures and for dating archaeological sites. His many
illustrations include examples of ancient pottery types made throughout the
American Southwest from about 2000 to 500 years ago. This program is made
possible by Arizona Humanities.
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. To
join OLLI, download a registration and payment form, or pay and register
online visit  <http://olli.arizona.edu/> http://olli.arizona.edu/. For more
information about OLLI call 520-626-9039.
 
 
Saturday March 19, 2022: Tubac, AZ
        “Women on the Arizona Frontier” presentation by Jack Lasseter for
Shaw D. Kinsley Lecture series at Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, 1
Burruel Street, Tubac, Arizona*
        2-3 p.m. $15 (children 6 and under free) includes all day entrance
into the park and the historic buildings.
        The history of the West is not just the story of men.  It is the
story of men and women. In this talk Jack tells the fascinating story of
some of the women on the Arizona frontier who would bring civilization to
this land. He focuses on three, an Apache woman, a Spanish woman, and a New
England woman. They have three different stories but all poignant to the
development of Arizona.  Others include Chinese, African American, Jewish,
Mormon, and ranch women. Some of these women were governors, judges, a
bridesmaid of Eleanor Roosevelt, the Captain of the “Arizona Navy,” the
first territorial historian, a famous painter and architect, and the last
stagecoach robber. You will go away amazed and with a new appreciation of
the role played by women on the Arizona frontier. Snacks will be served.
Lecture will take place outdoors in our large picnic area. Bring your own
chair or sit at one of the picnic tables.  
        * This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center event. Call
520-398-2252 to RSVP. For more information call 520-398-2252 or email
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
 
 
Sunday March 20, 2022: 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 a.m. to noon. $35 donation ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members) helps cover Old Pueblo’s tour
expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and
traditional cultures.
        The 2022 spring equinox occurs on Sunday March 20 at 8:33 a.m. MST
(Sunday March 20 at 3:33 p.m. UTC). To celebrate the vernal equinox,
archaeologist Allen Dart (Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s executive
director) leads this tour to Los Morteros, an ancient village site that
includes a Hohokam ballcourt, bedrock mortars, and other archaeological
features; and to Picture Rocks, where ancient petroglyphs include a solstice
and equinox calendar marker, dancing human-like figures, whimsical animals,
and other rock symbols made 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 p.m.
Thursday 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 June 8-August 24, 2022: Online
        “Archaeology of the Southwest” 12-session class with archaeologist
Allen Dart, online via Zoom, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, PO
Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577
        6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Wednesday evening June 8 through August 24,
2022. $99 donation ($80 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Arizona
Archaeological Society [AAS], and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members),
not counting cost of the recommended text or of optional Arizona
Archaeological Society membership. 
        Archaeology of the Southwest is an introductory course that provides
a basic overview of the U.S. Southwest’s ancestral cultures. Its twelve
evening class sessions will cover cultural sequences, dating systems,
subsistence strategies, development of urbanization, depopulation of
different areas at different times, and the general characteristics of major
cultural groups that have lived in the Southwest over the past 13,000-plus
years. Besides offering an up-to-date synthesis of southwestern cultures for
anyone interested in the archaeology of the Southwest, the class is a
prerequisite for all other courses offered in the Arizona Archaeological
Society (AAS) Certification/Education Program. Instructor Allen Dart is a
registered professional archaeologist and executive director of Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center. Minimum enrollment 10 people. For information on the AAS
and its Certification program visit   <http://www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603>
www.azarchsoc.org/page-807603.
        Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 p.m.
Friday June 3, whichever is earlier. To register of for more information
contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] 
        IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity send an email to  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] with “Send June-August Archaeology class flyer” in your
email subject line.
 
 
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
 
        For payment by mail please make check or money order payable to Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center or simply OPAC, and include a printed explanation
of what your payment is for. If it’s for or includes a membership fee, you
can print the Enrollment/Subscription form from Old Pueblo’s
<https://www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-
Subscription-Application-Form-20181215.doc>
www.oldpueblo.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Old-Pueblo-Membership-Subscript
ion-Application-Form-20181215.doc web page and complete the appro­priate
information on that form. Mail payment and information sheet to Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717. (Mail sent to Old
Pueblo’s street address gets returned to senders because there is no mailbox
at our street address.)
        To start or renew an Old Pueblo membership online you can visit our
<http://www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/membership/>
www.oldpueblo.org/about-us/membership/ web page, scroll down to the bottom
of that page, and follow the instructions for using our secure online
membership form or our printable Enrollment/Subscription form.
        To make a donation using PayPal, please go to the
<http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org home page, scroll down to the
“Donate” section, click on the “Donate” button above the PayPal logo, and
follow the prompts. 
        To make a credit card or debit card payment without going online you
can call Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201, tell the person who answers you’d like
to make a credit card donation or payment, and provide your card
authorization. We advise that you do not provide credit card or debit card
numbers to us in an email. Old Pueblo accepts Visa, MasterCard, 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 
             <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
             <http://www.oldpueblo.org> www.oldpueblo.org 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
OPT-OUT OPTIONS
 
            Old Pueblo Archaeology Center typically sends two emails each
month that tell about upcoming activities offered by Old Pueblo and other
southwestern U.S. archaeology and history organizations. We also email pdf
copies of our Old Pueblo Archaeology newsletter to our members, subscribers,
and some other recipients, usually no more often than once every three
months. 
      This communication came to you through a listserve from which Old
Pueblo cannot remove your email address. The listserves to which this
message was posted and the email addresses to contact for inclusion in or
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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