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Subject:
From:
Allen Dart <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 1 Jul 2012 16:10:52 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (840 lines)
For Immediate Release

Included in this announcement:

(1) Summary of Upcoming Presentations, Classes, Tours, and Other Activities
(2) Details on Upcoming Activities


(1) SUMMARY OF UPCOMING PRESENTATIONS, CLASSES, TOURS, AND OTHER ACTIVITIES

(For details on each activity see DETAILS ON UPCOMING ACTIVITIES below.)

On-going: OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig, OPENOUT archaeology
presentations, and guided tours of archaeological sites for children’s
groups.

July 7, 2012 “Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam
Indians” and "Modern and Historical O’odham Culture" free presentations by
archaeologist Allen Dart at Colossal Cave Park, Vail, Arizona

July 16, 2012 “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by
archaeologist Allen Dart for Little Colorado Chapter, Arizona
Archaeological Society, Springerville, Arizona*

[July 19, 2012 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner presentation program is on hiatus until September]

August 1, 2012, and ongoing thereafter “Writing Preliminary Archaeological
Reports” on-line class taught by Allen Dart (flexible schedule)

August 9-12, 2012 2012 Annual Pecos Archaeological Conference at Pecos
National Historic Park, Pecos, New Mexico
www.swanet.org/2012_pecos_conference/index.html

August 16, 2012 “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” 
free archaeology presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Homolovi
Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, Winslow*

[September 11, 2012 The “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time
Pieces” presentation that had been scheduled for this date at the Pima
County Public Library’s Sahuarita Branch has been cancelled.]

September 13, 2012 “Southern Arizona Archaeological Research by the USDA
Natural Resources Conservation Service” free presentation by archaeologist
Allen Dart for Santa Cruz Valley Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society,
Tubac*

Fridays September 14-November 16, 2012 “Prehistory of the Southwest” class
with archaeologist Allen Dart at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson

September 15, 2012 “Ancient Native American Pottery of Southern Arizona”
free Library Presenters program with archaeologist Allen Dart at Pima
County Public Library’s Sahuarita Branch, Sahuarita, Arizona

September 20, 2012 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food
for Thought” dinner & presentation, Tucson: Guest speaker & Tucson
restaurant to be announced

September 22, 2012 “Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Fall
Equinox Archaeological Sites Guided Tour” with archaeologist Allen Dart in
northwestern Tucson metropolitan area

September 27-October 1, 2012 “Chaco Canyon, Aztec, and Salmon Great
Pueblos and Other Sites” educational tour with archaeologist Ronald H.
Towner, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center

October 11-14, 2012 “Canyon de Chelly Archaeology and Cultures”
educational tour with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, sponsored by Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center

October 18, 2012 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner & presentation, Tucson: Guest speaker & Tucson restaurant
to be announced

October 19 and 20, 2012 “Patterns, Problems, and Possibilities” Verde
Valley - Arizona Archaeological Council Conference cosponsored by Arizona
Archaeological Council and the Verde Valley Archaeology Center, Camp
Verde, Arizona*

November 3 and 4, 2012 “Sinagua Archaeology of the Flagstaff and Verde
Valley Areas” with archaeologist Peter J. Pilles, Jr., starting at Elden
Pueblo near Flagstaff, Arizona

November 7, 2012 Library Presenters “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona”
free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Pima County Public
Library Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch, Tucson

November 10, 2012 “Deer Valley & Spur Cross Ranch Petroglyphs & Pueblo
Ruins” archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen Dart in
Phoenix and Carefree, Arizona

November 15, 2012 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner & presentation, Tucson: Guest speaker & Tucson restaurant
to be announced

December 1, 2012 “White Tank Mountains – Petroglyphs of Waterfall Canyon &
Mesquite Canyon” guided archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen
and Allen Dart in Waddell, Arizona

December 5, 2012 “Southwestern Rock Calendars  and Ancient Time Pieces”
free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Pueblo Grande Museum
Auxiliary  at Pueblo Grande Museum, Phoenix*

December 20, 2012 Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for
Thought” dinner & presentation, Tucson: Guest speaker & Tucson restaurant
to be announced

December 21, 2012 “Winter Solstice Tour of Los Morteros and Picture Rocks
Petroglyphs Archaeological Sites” with archaeologist Allen Dart in
northwestern Tucson metro area

January 10, 2013 "Set in Stone but Not in Meaning:  Southwestern Indian
Rock Art" free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Superstition
Mountain Museum, Apache Junction, Arizona

January 19, 2013 “Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and
Social Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for
Rim Country Chapter, AZ Archaeological Society, Payson*

March 1- 6, 2013 “A Dozen Southern New Mexico and West Texas Rock Art
Sites” archaeology tour with Marc Thompson, Glenn Omundson, Bob White, and
Allen Dart in El Paso-Three Rivers-Tularosa Lordsburg areas


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


(2) DETAILS ON UPCOMING ACTIVITIES

ON-GOING: OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig, OPENOUT archaeology
presentations, and guided tours of archaeological sites for children’s
groups

	Reservations are being taken for school classes and other children’s
groups to experience the OPEN3 simulated archaeological dig education
program, to have archaeologists come to your classrooms to provide
OPENOUT archaeology outreach presentations, and to take guided tours to
local archaeological sites. Old Pueblo Archaeology Center offers a
hands-on simulated archaeological excavation program field trip in which
students apply social studies, science, and math skills in a practical,
real-life situation, as well as in-classroom archaeology outreach
presentations.

	For more information on the OPEN3 and OPENOUT programs please visit the
following Old Pueblo Archaeology Center web pages:

OPEN3 Simulated Excavation for Classrooms
http://www.oldpueblo.org/open3.html

Classroom Outreach - "Ancient People of Arizona":
http://www.oldpueblo.org/azplp.html

Classroom Outreach "What is an Archaeologist?"
http://www.oldpueblo.org/whatarch.html

Classroom Outreach “Lifesyle of the Hohokam”Classroom outreach presentation
http://www.oldpueblo.org/lifestyles.html

Site Tours for Classrooms
http://www.oldpueblo.org/sitetour.html



Saturday July 7, 2012
	“Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians” and
"Modern and Historical O’odham Culture" free presentations for the Ha:san
Bak Saguaro Harvest Celebration Saguaro Harvest Festival at Colossal Cave
Mountain Park, 16721 E. Old Spanish Trail, Vail, Arizona. Cosponsored by
the Arizona Humanities Council.
	1 to 2:30 p.m. AHC
	The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from
the sixth through fifteenth centuries, and the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and
Tohono O’odham (Papago) occupied this region historically. Ancient
Hohokam artifacts, architecture, and other material culture provide
archaeologists with clues for identifying where the Hohokam lived, for
interpreting how they adapted to the Sonoran Desert for centuries, and
explaining why the Hohokam culture mysteriously disappeared. In this
presentation archaeologist Allen Dart illustrates the material culture of
the Hohokam and presents possible interpretations about their
relationships to the natural world, their time reckoning, religious
practices, beliefs, and deities, and possible reasons for the eventual
demise of their way of life. The Hohokam discussion is followed by
information about the historical and modern O’odham cultures of southern
Arizona, and how they relate to the Hohokam. Funding for the program is
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	 For event details contact Lauren Hohl at the Park at 520-647-7121 or
[log in to unmask]; for information about the activity subject
matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]


Monday July 16, 2012
	“Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free presentation by archaeologist
Allen Dart for Little Colorado Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society,
at the Old Springerville School, 418 E. Main St. (in same building as the
Casa Malpais Museum), Springerville, Arizona
	6:30 business meeting, 7-8:30 p.m. presentation. Free
	Many different peoples have contributed to making Arizona such a unique
and fascinating cultural place. In this program archaeologist Allen Dart
summarizes and interprets the archaeology of Arizona from the earliest
“Paleoindians” through Archaic period hunters and foragers, the
transition to true village life, and the later prehistoric archaeological
cultures (Puebloan, Mogollon, Sinagua, Hohokam, Salado, and Patayan). He
also discusses connections between archaeology and history, and provides
an overview of the Native American, European, Mexican, African, and Asian
peoples who have formed our state’s more recent history. Funding for
program provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Carol Farnsworth in
Springerville at 928-333-3219 or [log in to unmask]; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday July 19, 2012
	[Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's "Third Thursday Food for Thought" dinner
presentation program is on hiatus until September]


Wednesday August 1, 2012, and Ongoing Thereafter
	“Writing Preliminary Archaeological Reports” on-line class taught by
Allen Dart, RPA, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson
	Flexible schedule. Free for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members; $25 minimum Old Pueblo annual membership
fee for nonmembers. Membership in the Arizona Archaeological Society
(AAS, a nonprofit organization separate from Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center) and one-time $10 AAS Certification Department registration fee
are required if student wants AAS Certification for the class.
	The “Writing Preliminary Archaeological Reports” class has been developed
by the Arizona Archaeological Society to provide the student with the
necessary knowledge and skills to prepare a usable preliminary report
about archaeological survey or excavation projects, including basic
descriptions of archaeological project areas, archaeological site
locations and descriptions, survey and excavation methods and techniques,
artifact comparisons, and interpretation. After completing this course
the student is expected to be able to define a preliminary report;
develop an acceptable report outline; indicate an awareness of standard
archaeological writing styles and style guides; organize ancillary
information; describe the basic methods of research organization (in a
paper to be submitted for the class); demonstrate a knowledge of
appropriate printing techniques and graphics usage; practice the correct
usage of photography for the preparation of illustrative materials; and
explain the importance of the various sections of a standard archaeology
report. The course includes 20 hours of instruction and feedback with the
instructor, and a minimum of 40 hours actually drafting a brief
preliminary report and getting the instructor’s guidance and feedback on
the reporting effort.
	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s version of this course is taught entirely
on-line, although instructor will be available by telephone for
person-to-person supplemental instruction and feedback. Prerequisites to
enrollment are a current email address, access to and basic knowledge of
how to use the Internet, and basic familiarity with Microsoft Word
software.
	Registration deadline for the August 1 class is July 15, 2012. For more
information contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday August 9-Sunday August 12, 2012
	2012 Annual Pecos Archaeological Conference at Pecos National Historic
Park, Pecos, New Mexico.
	www.swanet.org/2012_pecos_conference/index.html


Thursday August 16, 2012
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by archaeologist Allen Dart for Homolovi Chapter, Arizona Archaeological
Society, at Winslow Chamber of Commerce (Old Hubbell Building), 523 W.
Second St., Winslow, Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	7-8 p.m. Free
	Native Americans in the Southwest developed sophisticated skills in
astronomy and predicting the seasons, centuries before Old World peoples
first entered the region. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart
discusses historically known sky-watching practices of various
southwestern peoples, and how their ancestors’ observations of the
heavens may have been commemorated in ancient architecture and rock
symbols. The program illustrates cardinal, solstice, and equinox
alignments and possible calendrical reckoning features at such places as
Arizona’s Casa Grande Ruins and Picture Rocks petroglyphs sites, New
Mexico’s Chaco Canyon archaeological district, the Hovenweep area of
Utah, and the Mesa Verde and Chimney Rock regions of Colorado. Mr. Dart
also offers interpretation of how these discoveries may relate to ancient
Native American ritual. Funding for program provided by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Darlene Brinkerhoff
or Karen Berggren (both in Winslow) at 928-524-6569 or
[log in to unmask] (Diane) or 928-607-1836 or [log in to unmask]
(Karen); for information about the presentation subject matter contact
Allen Dart at Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Tuesday September 11, 2012
	[The “Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” presentation
that had been scheduled for this date at the Pima County Public Library’s
Sahuarita Branch has been cancelled.]


Thursday September 13, 2012
	“Southern Arizona Archaeological Research by the USDA Natural Resources
Conservation Service” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for
the Santa Cruz Valley Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Santa
Cruz County's North County Facility, 50 Bridge Road, Tubac, Arizona.
	7 to 8 p.m. Free
	For over a decade the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), the
U.S. Department of Agriculture agency formerly known as the Soil
Conservation Service, has been conducting cultural resources surveys to
ensure that NRCS-assisted farm and range land conservation and
improvement projects do not impact archaeological sites. These surveys
have covered thousands of acres of private and public land in southern
Arizona, resulting in discoveries of numerous archaeological sites
spanning the last several thousand years. In this presentation
archaeologist Allen Dart, NRCS’s State Cultural Resources Specialist,
will describe the agency’s approach to archaeological site conservation
and will review some of the discoveries that have been made during the
NRCS research efforts.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Mary Dahl at
520-604-2667 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the presentation
subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Fridays September 14-November 16, 2012
	"Prehistory of the Southwest" class with archaeologist Allen Dart, RPA at
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, 2201 W. 44th Street, Tucson (at Tucson
Unified School District's Ajo Service Center, just west of La Cholla
Blvd., ½-mile north of John F. Kennedy Park)
	6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each Friday September 14 through November 16, 2012. Fee
$50 ($40 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum
Auxiliary members), not counting cost of the recommended text or of
optional Arizona Archaeological Society membership. Minimum enrollment 8,
maximum 32.
	"Prehistory of the Southwest" is an introductory course in the study of
the American Southwest, developed by the Arizona Archaeological Society
to provide a basic overview of this region's archaeology and cultures.
Ten Friday evening class sessions will cover cultural sequences, dating
systems, subsistence strategies, development of urbanization,
abandonments 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 prehistory for anyone interested in the archaeology of
the Southwest, the class can be used as prerequisite for all other
courses offered to members of the Arizona Archaeological Society (AAS)
enrolled in or interested in enrolling in the AAS Certification Program.
Instructor Allen Dart is a registered professional archaeologist with the
U.S. Department of Agriculture and is volunteer executive director of Old
Pueblo Archaeology Center.
	Reservations required, registration deadline September 10: 520-798-1201
or [log in to unmask] to register or for more information.
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Saturday September 15, 2012
	Library Presenters free presentation “Ancient Native American Pottery of
Southern Arizona” with archaeologist Allen Dart at Pima County Public
Library’s Sahuarita Branch, 725 W. Via Rancho Sahuarita, Sahuarita,
Arizona
	2 to 3 p.m. Free
	Using digital images and actual ancient pottery, archaeologist Allen Dart
shows Native American ceramic styles that characterized specific eras in
Arizona prehistory and history, and discusses how archaeologists use
pottery for dating archaeological sites and interpreting ancient
lifeways. Allen discusses the importance of context in archaeology, how
things people make change in style over time, and how different styles
are useful for identifying different cultures and for dating pottery.
Then he shows illustrations and examples of the pottery styles that were
made in southern Arizona by the ancient Early Ceramic and Hohokam
cultures, and historically by Piman (Tohono O’odham and Akimel O’odham),
Yuman (including Mohave and Maricopa), and Apachean peoples from as early
as 800 B.C. into the early twentieth century. The program features slides
and a display of authentic prehistoric pottery, and recommended readings
for more information about ancient ceramics.
	For event details contact Librarian Michele White at Tucson telephone no.
520-594-5495 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the
presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday September 22, 2012
	“Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs Fall Equinox Archaeological
Sites” guided tour with archaeologist Allen Dart, departing from
northeast corner of Silverbell Road & Linda Vista Blvd. northwest of
Tucson, Arizona
	8 a.m. to noon. $15 ($12 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members)
	To celebrate the autumnal 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 and bedrock
mortars, and to Picture Rocks, where ancient petroglyphs include a
solstice and equinox marker, dancing human-like figures, whimsical
animals, and other rock symbols made by Hohokam Indians between A.D. 650
and 1450.
	LIMITED TO 32 PEOPLE. RESERVATIONS REQUIRED: 520-798-1201 or
[log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday September 27-Monday October 1, 2012
	“Chaco Canyon, Aztec, and Salmon Great Pueblos and Other Archaeological
Sites” educational tour with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, sponsored by
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center. Drive your own vehicle and meet tour in
Gallup, NM, on Thursday; actual touring begins Friday and continues
through Sunday, with Monday reserved for return trip home
	Fee $195 for the full three days of touring ($175 for Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members), or $70
per day to attend tour on individual days ($60/day for Old Pueblo and
PGMA members). Participants are responsible for their own transportation,
meals, and lodging.
	The archaeological sites in Chaco Canyon are some of the most famous, yet
enigmatic, sites in the Southwest. A World Heritage Site, Chaco attracts
thousands of visitors each year, yet most people see only sand, mud, rock
walls, and a treeless desolate landscape. Old Pueblo’s intensive five-day
tour will take you beyond the simple brochures and photo-ops to explore
the multiple contexts of the people who created these magnificent
structures. We not only will examine sites within Chaco Canyon, but also
will visit outlier sites to the north and, time permitting, to the south
as well. This tour will be led by archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, Ph.D.,
is the Agnese N. Haury Endowed Chair of Archaeological Dendrochronology
at the University of Arizona’s Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. A native
southwesterner, he has 30+ years experience in the archaeology and
history of the Southwest and in guiding tours to archaeological sites.
TRIP ITINERARY: THURSDAY DAY 1: Travel; meet at El Rancho Motel in
Gallup, NM (www.elranchohotel.com). FRIDAY DAY 2: Drive from Gallup to
the South entrance to Chaco Canyon via Twin Lakes and Crownpoint (high
clearance vehicle recommended); tour Great House sites on north side of
the Canyon; travel to Farmington, NM, via the North Chaco road, US 550,
and US 64, stay at the Red Lion Hotel (700 Scott Ave.). SATURDAY DAY 3: 
Morning tour of Salmon Ruins; afternoon tour of Aztec Ruins; return to
Farmington to stay in Red Lion overnight. SUNDAY DAY 4:  Leave at 8 AM
for Chaco Canyon via US 64, US550, and north entrance to the canyon; tour
Small House sites and Casa Rinconada; depart for Gallup via South
entrance to Canyon, NM  371 past Crownpoint to Thoreau; tif time allows
we will also take a side trip to Casamero Ruins near Prewitt; stay in El
Rancho Motel, Gallup. MONDAY DAY 5: Check out and return home. Other
hotels, camping, and other accommodations for those who wish to arrange
their own lodging are available in and near Farmington and Gallup;
camping also is available in Chaco Canyon, first come, first served.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday October 11-Sunday October 14, 2012
	“Canyon de Chelly Archaeology and Cultures” educational tour with
archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center. Drive your own vehicle and meet tour in Chinle, Arizona. Actual
touring begins Friday and continues through Saturday, with Sunday
reserved for return trip home
	Fee $130 for the full two days of touring ($115 for Old Pueblo
Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members), or $70
per day to attend tour on individual days ($60/day for Old Pueblo and
PGMA members). Participants are responsible for their own transportation,
meals, and lodging.
	Canyon de Chelly National Monument in northeastern Arizona is one of the
most beautiful and unique places on the planet.  Towering sandstone
cliffs, abundant streamside vegetation, ancient cliff dwellings, and
Navajo families who have lived n the canyon for generations make Canyon
de Chelly a must-see destination in the Southwest. Old Pueblo’s intensive
four-day tour will take you inside the Canyon’s geology, environment,
prehistory, and history with archaeologist Ronald H. Towner, Ph.D., the
Agnese N. Haury Endowed Chair of Archaeological Dendrochronology at the
University of Arizona’s Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. A native
southwesterner, Dr. Towner has 30+ years experience in the archaeology
and history of the Southwest and in guiding tours to archaeological
sites. TRIP ITINERARY: THURSDAY DAY 1: Travel; meet at Best Western
Canyon de Chelly Inn in Chinle, AZ (canyondechelly.com). FRIDAY DAY 2: 
8:30 AM. Short drive to Canyon de Chelly Visitor Center; morning tour of
South Rim of Canyon; afternoon tour of North Rim of Canyon. SATURDAY DAY
3:  8:30 AM, short drive to Thunderbird Lodge; all day Thunderbird Lodge
4-wheel-drive vehicle tour inside Canyon de Chelly (www.tbirdlodge.com).
SUNDAY DAY 4:  Return travel from Chinle to home. Other hotels, camping,
and other accommodations may be available in or near Chinle for those who
wish to arrange their own lodging.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Friday and Saturday October 19 and 20, 2012
	“Patterns, Problems, and Possibilities” First Biennial Verde Valley
Archaeology Conference-Fall 2012 Arizona Archaeological Council
Conference cosponsored by the Arizona Archaeological Council and the
Verde Valley Archaeology Center, at Cliff Castle Casino Hotel Conference
Center, Camp Verde, Arizona*
	Following an conference-opening reception on October 18, this conference
will examine the archaeology of central Arizona’s Verde Valley region.
Topics will include whether or not the “Southern Sinagua” is still a
valid cultural construct, and the Yavapai-Apache cultures of central
Arizona. Hikes to archaeological sites in the Verde Valley will be
included. Abstract submission deadline is August 10, 2012.
	* This is not an Old Pueblo Archaeology Center-sponsored event. For more
information contact Todd Bostwick at [log in to unmask]
or Steward Deats at [log in to unmask]; or visit
arizonaarchaeologicalcouncil.org.


Saturday and Sunday November 3 and 4, 2012
	“Sinagua Archaeology of the Flagstaff and Verde Valley Areas” with
archaeologist Peter J. Pilles, Jr., sponsored by Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center. Drive your own vehicle and meet tour at Elden Pueblo near
Flagstaff, Arizona.
	Fee $95 for both tour days ($76 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members), or $50 to attend for just one
day ($40/day for Old Pueblo and PGMA members). Participants are
responsible for their own transportation, meals, and lodging. Hotels,
camping, and other accommodations are available in and near Flagstaff and
Camp Verde.
	Visit some of the most famous but rarely visited sites of Arizona’s
prehistoric Sinagua archaeological culture with one of the leading
researchers who has studied and written about the Sinagua: Coconino
National Forest Archaeologist Peter J. Pilles, Jr. Starting at 10 a.m.
Saturday, we will meet at and tour Elden Pueblo, where Peter and company
have excavated and surveyed for years. Then we will spend the rest of the
day visiting the Turkey Hill Pueblo, Winona Village, Ridge Ruin, and Two
Kivas sites. If time allows we may also be able to squeeze in visits to
Medicine Fort and the Jack Smith Alcove House in the Cohonina area. On
Sunday we will go to the V-V (V Bar V) Petroglyphs site, Sacred Mountain
and ballcourt, the Beaver Creek prehistoric agricultural fields, the Red
Tank Draw petroglyphs, and a Sinagua field house.  Time permitting on
Sunday, we might also be able to include a visit to the Fewkes Petroglyph
boulder on Salt Mine Road, and to the Salt Mine itself.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer”/ and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday November 7, 2012
	Library Presenters “Archaeology and Cultures of Arizona” free
presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart at Pima County Public Library
Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch, 8959 E. Tanque Verde Rd. (at Bear Canyon Rd.),
Tucson
	6:30-7:30 p.m. Free
	Many different peoples have contributed to making Arizona such a unique
and fascinating cultural place. In this program archaeologist Allen Dart
summarizes and interprets the archaeology of Arizona from the earliest
“Paleoindians” through Archaic period hunters and foragers, the
transition to true village life, and the later prehistoric archaeological
cultures (Puebloan, Mogollon, Sinagua, Hohokam, Salado, and Patayan). He
also discusses connections between archaeology and history, and provides
an overview of the Native American, European, Mexican, African, and Asian
peoples who have formed our state’s more recent history. Funding for
program provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Rona Rosenberg at
Tucson telephone 520-594-5274 or [log in to unmask]; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday November 10, 2012
	"Deer Valley & Spur Cross Ranch Petroglyphs & Pueblo Ruins” guided
archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen Dart, starting
at Deer Valley Rock Art Center, 3711 W. Deer Valley Road, Phoenix
	10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fee $35 ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members) includes all park entry fees
	Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger Shelley Rasmussen (an
archaeological Site Steward) and archaeologist Allen Dart guide this tour
to see hundreds of ancient petroglyphs and the rock art museum at Deer
Valley Rock Art Center north of Phoenix, and more petroglyphs in Spur
Cross Ranch Regional Park near Carefree, Arizona. Deer Valley Rock Art
Center features a museum with video, artifacts, interpretive signs, and a
gift shop. Along its outdoor, quarter-mile-long rock art trail we’ll view
some of the 47-acre preserve’s 1,571 known petroglyphs, which range from
700 to 10,000 years old and represent the Archaic, Hohokam, and Patayan
cultures. The Spur Cross Conservation Area intermediate-level hike is
about 3 miles roundtrip and takes about 3 hours of hill-climbing to a
Hohokam pueblo and two petroglyph sites. Bring your own picnic lunch and
water, wear comfortable hiking shoes.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Saturday December 1, 2012
	“White Tank Mountains – Petroglyphs of Waterfall Canyon & Mesquite
Canyon” guided archaeological site tour with Shelley Rasmussen and Allen
Dart, starting at White Tank Mountain Regional Park Visitor Center, 13025
N. White Tank Mountain Road in Waddell.
	10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fee $35 ($28 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and
Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members) includes all park entry fees
	Maricopa County Parks Interpretive Ranger Shelly Rasmussen (an
archaeological Site Steward) and archaeologist Allen Dart guide this tour
to see hundreds of ancient petroglyphs in the 30,000-acre White Tank
Mountain Regional Park west of Phoenix. Tour includes a 3-hour walk along
the 2.5-mile-roundtrip, fairly flat Black Rock Loop Trail to see and
photograph dozens of Archaic and Hohokam petroglyphs; lunch at ramadas
with picnic facilities; then afternoon visits to three petroglyph sites
with Archaic and Hohokam rock art in a 3-hour, 2.5-mile-roundtrip hike
along the Mesquite Canyon trail, which includes some bush-whacking and
boulder-hopping. Bring your own picnic lunch and water, wear comfortable
hiking shoes.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Wednesday December 5, 2012
	“Southwestern Rock Calendars and Ancient Time Pieces” free presentation
by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist Allen Dart,
for the Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary meeting at Pueblo Grande Museum,
4619 E. Washington St., Phoenix. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	7:30-9 p.m. Free
	Native Americans in the Southwest developed sophisticated skills in
astronomy and predicting the seasons, centuries before Old World peoples
first entered the region. In this presentation archaeologist Allen Dart
discusses historically known sky-watching practices of various
southwestern peoples, and how their ancestors’ observations of the
heavens may have been commemorated in ancient architecture and rock
symbols. The program illustrates cardinal, solstice, and equinox
alignments and possible calendrical reckoning features at such places as
Arizona’s Casa Grande Ruins and Picture Rocks petroglyphs sites, New
Mexico’s Chaco Canyon archaeological district, the Hovenweep area of
Utah, and the Mesa Verde and Chimney Rock regions of Colorado. Mr. Dart
also offers interpretation of how these discoveries may relate to ancient
Native American ritual. Funding for program provided by the Arizona
Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact the Pueblo Grande
Museum in Phoenix at 602-495-0901 or Don Appel at [log in to unmask]; for
information about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at
Tucson telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]

Friday December 21, 2012
	“Winter Solstice Tour of Los Morteros and Picture Rocks Petroglyphs
Archaeological Sites” with archaeologist Allen Dart
departs from northeast corner of Silverbell Road & Linda Vista Blvd. in
northwestern Tucson metro area
	8 a.m. to noon. $15 ($12 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo
Grande Museum Auxiliary members)
	To explore ancient people’s recognition of solstices 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 and bedrock mortars, and
to Picture Rocks, where ancient petroglyphs include a solstice and
equinox marker, dancing human-like figures, whimsical animals, and other
rock symbols made by Hohokam Indians between A.D. 650 and 1450. LIMITED
TO 32 PEOPLE.
	Reservations required. 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Thursday January 10, 2013
	"Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art" free
presentation by Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's director, archaeologist
Allen Dart, at the Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 North Apache Trail,
Apache Junction, Arizona. Cosponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	2-3 p.m. Free
	Archaeologist Allen Dart, Executive Director of Tucson, Arizona’s
nonprofit Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, illustrates pictographs (rock
paintings) and petroglyphs (symbols carved or pecked on rocks), and
discusses how even the same rock art symbol may be interpreted
differently from popular, scientific, and modern Native American
perspectives. Funding for program provided by the Arizona Humanities
Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Barbara Atkinson in
Apache Junction at 480-983-4888 or  [log in to unmask]; for information
about the presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson
telephone 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]


Saturday January 19, 2013
	“Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social
Sustainability” free presentation by archaeologist Allen Dart for Rim
Country Chapter, Arizona Archaeological Society, at Church of the Holy
Nativity, 1414 Easy Street in Payson, Arizona
	10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Free
	The deep time perspective that archaeology provides on natural hazards,
environmental change, and human adaptation not only is a valuable
supplement to historical records, it sometimes contradicts historical
data that modern societies use to make decisions affecting social
sustainability and human safety. What can be learned from archaeological
evidence that virtually all prehistoric farming cultures in Arizona and
the Southwest eventually reach a threshold of unsustainability, which
probably was a factor in the ultimate 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 prehistoric
archaeological evidence of tsunamis? This presentation looks at some of
the archaeological 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. Funding for program
provided by the Arizona Humanities Council.
	No reservations needed. For meeting details contact Evelyn Christian in
Payson at 928-476-3092 or [log in to unmask]; for information about the
presentation subject matter contact Allen Dart at Tucson telephone
520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.


Friday March 1-Wednesday March 6, 2013
	“A Dozen Southern New Mexico and West Texas Rock Art Sites” archaeology
education tour guided by Marc Thompson, Glenn Omundson, Bob White, and
Allen Dart, starting at Three Rivers Petroglyph site 17 miles north of
Tularosa, NM, and 28 miles south of Carrizozo, NM on US 54; and ending at
a site northwest of Lordsburg, NM.
	1 p.m. MST Friday to 4 p.m. MDT Wednesday (Daylight Saving Time goes into
effect Sunday morning at 2 a.m.) Fee $395 for the full six days of
touring ($375 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum
Auxiliary members), or $70 per day to attend tour on individual days
($65/day for Old Pueblo and PGMA members); cost includes all park entry
fees. Participants are responsible for their own transportation, meals,
and lodging.
	El Paso-area rock-art site guides Glenn Omundson and Bob White team up
with archaeologists Marc Thompson, Ph.D. (Director Emeritus, El Paso
Museum of Archaeology) and Allen Dart, RPA (tour coordinator; Executive
Director, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, Tucson) to lead this six-day
tour to twelve of the most spectacular prehistoric and historical
petroglyph and pictograph sites in southern New Mexico and West Texas.
ALL sites to be visited have multiple hundreds of rock art elements.
Tentative schedule is as follows:
•	Friday March 1, Marc will guide us to the famous Three Rivers site near
Tularosa, NM, where more than 25,000 petroglyphs have been recorded.
•	Saturday March 2, Centipede Cave petroglyphs and pictographs, Little
Cunningham Tank petroglyphs (and maybe the site’s four pictographs), and
the Mullen site petroglyphs with Glenn.
•	Sunday March 3, 6-hour tour to Hueco Tanks State Park (90+% pictographs,
less than 10% petroglyphs) with Bob.
•	Monday March 4, Alamo Mountain petroglyphs with Glenn.
•	Tuesday March 5, Jaguar Cave petroglyphs and pictographs, Story Teller
Panel petroglyphs, and a great Archaic period petroglyphs site with Glenn.
•	Wednesday March 6 (last day), Glenn leads us to the Archaic and Jornada
culture petroglyphs and trincheras features on Canador Peak, and to the
petroglyphs and pictographs in Cottonwood Canyon and the Lower Gila Box
petroglyphs northwest of Lordsburg, NM.
	The tour will be based in El Paso Friday (Day 1) through Tuesday (Day 5)
nights and will depart from a hotel there each morning on Days 2-6. On
the evening of Day 6 you can return home or stay in Lordsburg overnight. 
Hotels, camping, and other accommodations (to be arranged individually by
the tour registrants) are available in and near El Paso and Lordsburg.
	Although some sites on Days 1 and 3-5 are accessible in regular cars,
high-clearance vehicles (HCVs) and 4-wheel-drive are highly recommended.
HCVs are essential (4WD highly recommended) for Days 2 and 6, so anyone
without HCVs can tour on those days only if the registrants who do have
the HCVs can take extra riders.
	Most of the rock art is accessible via foot trails, but there will be
some bush-whacking and boulder-hopping. Bring your own picnic lunch and
water each day, and wear comfortable hiking shoes.
	Reservations required: 520-798-1201 or [log in to unmask]
	**** IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about
the above-listed activity please reply with “Send flyer” and INCLUDE THE
EVENT’S DATE in your email subject line.

# # #


	Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s mission is to educate children and adults
to understand and appreciate archaeology and other cultures, to foster
the preservation of archaeological and historical sites, and to develop a
lifelong concern for the importance of nonrenewable resources and
traditional cultures. Old Pueblo is recognized as a 501(c)(3)
not-for-profit organization under the U.S. tax code, therefore donations
and Old Pueblo membership fees are tax-deductible up to amounts allowed
by the Internal Revenue Service.

	If you are a member of Old Pueblo Archaeology Center, THANK YOU FOR YOUR
SUPPORT! If you are not an Old Pueblo member we would be grateful if you
would become a member so you can provide more support for our education
and research programs and receive membership benefits. You can become a
member by going to Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s
http://www.oldpueblo.org/member.html web page, scrolling to the bottom of
that page, and following the instructions for using our secure online
membership form or our printable Enrollment/Subscription form.

	Membership fees, and donations, also can be made using cash or check.
Checks may be made payable to “OPAC” and mailed to Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center, PO Box 40577, Tucson AZ 85717-0577. (Please do not send cash
through the mail.) You can also donate using your Visa, MasterCard, or
Discover credit card, either by calling Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or by
clicking on “Donation Form” at Old Pueblo’s secure
www.oldpueblo.org/donate.html web page.

	All of us at Old Pueblo Archaeology Center appreciate your support!


Regards,

Allen Dart, RPA, Executive Director
Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
PO Box 40577
Tucson AZ 85717-0577 USA
 	(520) 798-1201 office, (520) 798-1966 fax
	Email: [log in to unmask]
 	URL: www.oldpueblo.org

# # #

	Disclosure: Old Pueblo Archaeology Center's Executive Director Allen Dart
volunteers his time to Old Pueblo. Mr. Dart works full-time as a cultural
resources specialist for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
in Arizona. Views expressed in communications from Old Pueblo Archaeology
Center do not necessarily represent views of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture or of the United States.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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