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DOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE Founded over 30 years ago as Archaeology in Tucson, Archaeology Southwest’s membership publication, Archaeology Southwest Magazine, continues to serve as our flagship publication.Issued four times a year, it provides timely, synthetic treatments of some of the most current topics and issues in Southwestern archaeology. WHAT’S THE POINT: ALL ABOUT CLOVIS POINTS Casts of three points from a cache at the East Wenatchee Clovis site in Washington state. Casts of five points from the Fenn cache, which may have come from the area where Wyoming, Idaho, and Utah meet. Clovis points range in size. At the time of manufacture, the average Clovis point was probably about 4 to 5 inches long. ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for BESH BA GOWAH ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK Banner image by Steven C. Price, via Wikimedia Commons. This is a partially reconstructed village inhabited by people whom archaeologists associate with the Salado archaeological culture. “Besh Ba Gowah” is an Apache name for the place—”place ofmetal.”
R. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MAIZE, THE MOTHER OF ALL THINGS Maize, the Mother of All Things. I’ll be brief today. Our first link will take you to a wonderful essay by Robin Wall Kimmerer. It’s a powerful consideration of relationships among “sun, soil, water, plant, and farmer.”. Kimmerer states that, “They have entered into a covenant of reciprocity: if the maize will take care of the people TRIBAL ELDERS AND LEADERS SHARE INFORMATION ON HOW TO Tribal Elders and Leaders Share Information on How to Visit with Respect. Bears Ears National Monument is a tapestry of landscapes, identities, and histories of Indigenous peoples in the Southwest. As spring turns to summer, visitors from far and wide bustle through to see for themselves the stories and mysteries held within BearsEars—the
WHO OR WHAT IS MIMBRES? The Mimbres region of the American Southwest is celebrated for the beautiful and expressive black-on-white pottery made there in the distant past. Archaeologists often use the term “Mimbres culture” to refer generally to groups who lived in the region and produced Mimbres Black-on-white pottery. Mimbres culture is included in thebroader
TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWESTJOINDONATETAKE ACTIONABOUTTHINGS TODOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE Founded over 30 years ago as Archaeology in Tucson, Archaeology Southwest’s membership publication, Archaeology Southwest Magazine, continues to serve as our flagship publication.Issued four times a year, it provides timely, synthetic treatments of some of the most current topics and issues in Southwestern archaeology. WHAT’S THE POINT: ALL ABOUT CLOVIS POINTS Casts of three points from a cache at the East Wenatchee Clovis site in Washington state. Casts of five points from the Fenn cache, which may have come from the area where Wyoming, Idaho, and Utah meet. Clovis points range in size. At the time of manufacture, the average Clovis point was probably about 4 to 5 inches long. ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for BESH BA GOWAH ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK Banner image by Steven C. Price, via Wikimedia Commons. This is a partially reconstructed village inhabited by people whom archaeologists associate with the Salado archaeological culture. “Besh Ba Gowah” is an Apache name for the place—”place ofmetal.”
R. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MAIZE, THE MOTHER OF ALL THINGS Maize, the Mother of All Things. I’ll be brief today. Our first link will take you to a wonderful essay by Robin Wall Kimmerer. It’s a powerful consideration of relationships among “sun, soil, water, plant, and farmer.”. Kimmerer states that, “They have entered into a covenant of reciprocity: if the maize will take care of the people TRIBAL ELDERS AND LEADERS SHARE INFORMATION ON HOW TO Tribal Elders and Leaders Share Information on How to Visit with Respect. Bears Ears National Monument is a tapestry of landscapes, identities, and histories of Indigenous peoples in the Southwest. As spring turns to summer, visitors from far and wide bustle through to see for themselves the stories and mysteries held within BearsEars—the
WHO OR WHAT IS MIMBRES? The Mimbres region of the American Southwest is celebrated for the beautiful and expressive black-on-white pottery made there in the distant past. Archaeologists often use the term “Mimbres culture” to refer generally to groups who lived in the region and produced Mimbres Black-on-white pottery. Mimbres culture is included in thebroader
TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
A NONRENEWABLE RESOURCE Taylor Cole, Arizona State University (June 9, 2021)—Within anthropology, archaeology serves as a tool to understand and piece together how cultures have changed over time and how material culture—things people make and use—helped us become one of the most widespread species on Earth. By examining artifacts, we can learn about migrations, social and trade networks, 115 YEARS OF THE ANTIQUITIES ACT Dear Friends, There is a strong theme in today’s articles. Anticipation. At the moment President Biden took his oath of office, he gained the potential to use the power of the Antiquities Act. FIELD SCHOOL IN THE TIME OF COVID Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, Fordham University (June 5, 2021)—I think field school would feel a little like an island at the best of times, but COVID-19 has made everything even more isolated. It’s a bit weird, because for some of us, this is the biggest group of VOLUNTEER - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST Your participation is critical to our projects and initiatives—we simply can’t do it without you! Thank you for giving of your time and your skills. In order to volunteer with us, you must be a current Archaeology Southwest member.Opportunities vary, and include data entry, office assistance, event support, site monitoring, mapping, survey, limited excavation, and outreach. NATIVE AMERICAN FIRE MANAGEMENT AT AN ANCIENT WILDLAND Video: Native American Fire Management at an Ancient Wildland–Urban Interface. Presenters: Chris Roos, Southern Methodist University; Chris Toya and John Galvan, Jemez Pueblo. As residential development continues into flammable landscapes, wildfires increasingly threaten homes, lives, and livelihoods in the wildland–urban interface (WUI).LOS MORTEROS
Los Morteros. Los Morteros is the site of a large Native American village inhabited between about 850 and 1300 CE. The site stretches north and south along the Santa Cruz River and extends west of the river past the current right-of-way of Silverbell Road. For centuries, Los Morteros was a large village and the center of an extendedcommunity
ROMERO RUIN
Romero Ruin (Catalina State Park) Nestled in the shadows of the Santa Catalina Mountains in a relatively undisturbed stretch of the Sonoran Desert, the Romero Ruin trail in Catalina State Park guides visitors on a short (3/4 mile) walk through several centuries of human history. From the trail, you can see evidence of an ancient Hohokam villageHONEY BEE VILLAGE
From July 2006 to January 2007, Archaeology Southwest provided Oro Valley and Pima County residents a number of opportunities to learn more about the Honey Bee Village archaeological site, including site tours, a lecture series, computer models of the site, and a panel discussion on interpretive ideas and challenges. WHO OR WHAT IS MIMBRES? The Mimbres region of the American Southwest is celebrated for the beautiful and expressive black-on-white pottery made there in the distant past. Archaeologists often use the term “Mimbres culture” to refer generally to groups who lived in the region and produced Mimbres Black-on-white pottery. Mimbres culture is included in thebroader
COURSE GOALS AND ACTIVITIES Our days off include field trips to nearby archaeological and historic sites. Past field seasons have generally included visits to other archaeological field schools in the area, national parks and monuments (including the Gila Cliff Dwellings, El Morro National Monument, and Chaco Canyon), and Native American communities (including the Tohono O’odham Cultural Center and the Pueblos of Zuni HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWESTJOINDONATETAKE ACTIONABOUTTHINGS TODOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteR. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MOUNDS AND MIGRANTS TOUR Archaeology Southwest is partnering with Southwest Seminars to present Mounds and Migrants: A Clash of Religions in the Late Hohokam World, a special six-day tour from February 24–March 2, 2018.Join us as we explore key sites that helped shape the Southwest’s past. We are no longer accepting reservations for the 2018 tour.TUCSON ORIGINS
Tucson Origins. Archaeology Southwest has a long-term commitment to the archaeology and history of our home community. In the 1990s, we conducted a series of small excavations to locate buried adobe walls of the Tucson Presidio. Beginning in 2000, we played a role in the Tucson Origins Project funded by Tucson’s Rio Nuevo Project. HANDS-ON ARCHAEOLOGY: HOW TO MAKE FLINTKNAPPING TOOLS Then I will show how to grind your billet down to a good working shape. How long you make you make the billet is kind of a personal choice, though if it has a longer handle, that adds more mass to it—and in most cases that can’t hurt. Incise a deep notch all the way around antler, then tap it on a rock and snap the antler in half.WOMEN'S WORK
As more women became anthropologists and archaeologists, new ideas and research emerged to understand how gender, and relationships between men and women, form identities and shape culture. These viewpoints, sometimes labeled as feminist archaeology and gender archaeology, have sprouted an abundance of groundbreaking and thought-provoking work TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
DIAMONDS, MAMMOTHS, AND COMETS EVENT: Diamonds, Mammoths, and Comets DATE/TIME: March 3, 2009, at 6:00 p.m. LOCATION: Casa Vicente, 375 S. Stone Avenue, Tucson, AZ. At this lively Archaeology Café meeting, Dr. West discussed the provocative, internationally-debated theory that an enormous space object—probably a fragmented comet—exploded over the northern hemisphere 12,900 years ago. Allen is one of 26 HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWESTJOINDONATETAKE ACTIONABOUTTHINGS TODOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteR. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MOUNDS AND MIGRANTS TOUR Archaeology Southwest is partnering with Southwest Seminars to present Mounds and Migrants: A Clash of Religions in the Late Hohokam World, a special six-day tour from February 24–March 2, 2018.Join us as we explore key sites that helped shape the Southwest’s past. We are no longer accepting reservations for the 2018 tour.TUCSON ORIGINS
Tucson Origins. Archaeology Southwest has a long-term commitment to the archaeology and history of our home community. In the 1990s, we conducted a series of small excavations to locate buried adobe walls of the Tucson Presidio. Beginning in 2000, we played a role in the Tucson Origins Project funded by Tucson’s Rio Nuevo Project. HANDS-ON ARCHAEOLOGY: HOW TO MAKE FLINTKNAPPING TOOLS Then I will show how to grind your billet down to a good working shape. How long you make you make the billet is kind of a personal choice, though if it has a longer handle, that adds more mass to it—and in most cases that can’t hurt. Incise a deep notch all the way around antler, then tap it on a rock and snap the antler in half.WOMEN'S WORK
As more women became anthropologists and archaeologists, new ideas and research emerged to understand how gender, and relationships between men and women, form identities and shape culture. These viewpoints, sometimes labeled as feminist archaeology and gender archaeology, have sprouted an abundance of groundbreaking and thought-provoking work TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
DIAMONDS, MAMMOTHS, AND COMETS EVENT: Diamonds, Mammoths, and Comets DATE/TIME: March 3, 2009, at 6:00 p.m. LOCATION: Casa Vicente, 375 S. Stone Avenue, Tucson, AZ. At this lively Archaeology Café meeting, Dr. West discussed the provocative, internationally-debated theory that an enormous space object—probably a fragmented comet—exploded over the northern hemisphere 12,900 years ago. Allen is one of 26 ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE Founded over 30 years ago as Archaeology in Tucson, Archaeology Southwest’s membership publication, Archaeology Southwest Magazine, continues to serve as our flagship publication.Issued four times a year, it provides timely, synthetic treatments of some of the most current topics and issues in Southwestern archaeology. FIELD SCHOOL IN THE TIME OF COVID Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, Fordham University (June 5, 2021)—I think field school would feel a little like an island at the best of times, but COVID-19 has made everything even more isolated. It’s a bit weird, because for some of us, this is the biggest group of VOLUNTEER - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST Your participation is critical to our projects and initiatives—we simply can’t do it without you! Thank you for giving of your time and your skills. In order to volunteer with us, you must be a current Archaeology Southwest member.Opportunities vary, and include data entry, office assistance, event support, site monitoring, mapping, survey, limited excavation, and outreach. ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE ARCHIVE ARCHAEOLOGY IN TUCSON. From 1986 to 1998, when Archaeology Southwest was still the Center for Desert Archaeology, our primary publication was entitled Archaeology in Tucson.Although some of this material may be a bit dated, we provide this newsletter as a JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteHONEY BEE VILLAGE
From July 2006 to January 2007, Archaeology Southwest provided Oro Valley and Pima County residents a number of opportunities to learn more about the Honey Bee Village archaeological site, including site tours, a lecture series, computer models of the site, and a panel discussion on interpretive ideas and challenges.LOS MORTEROS
Los Morteros. Los Morteros is the site of a large Native American village inhabited between about 850 and 1300 CE. The site stretches north and south along the Santa Cruz River and extends west of the river past the current right-of-way of Silverbell Road. For centuries, Los Morteros was a large village and the center of an extendedcommunity
WHO OR WHAT IS MIMBRES? The Mimbres region of the American Southwest is celebrated for the beautiful and expressive black-on-white pottery made there in the distant past. Archaeologists often use the term “Mimbres culture” to refer generally to groups who lived in the region and produced Mimbres Black-on-white pottery. Mimbres culture is included in thebroader
EARLY ROCK ART OF THE MIDDLE LITTLE COLORADO PLATEAU Palavayu, a Hopi term meaning “red river,” is a name applied to several style designations of a kind of rock art that is only found in the middle portion of the lower Little Colorado River area. Ghostly Palavayu Linear Style anthropomorphic figures watch over a deer passing along Silver Creek. PRESERVATION AT SHERWOOD RANCH PUEBLO—CHRONOLOGY Some time around A.D. 1250, Sherwood Ranch Pueblo was transformed. Archaeologists suspect that the north half of the village was left almost empty, and new blocks of pueblo rooms were built to the south. These rooms were built around a large central plaza space in the middle of the village. This reorganization transformed the villagefrom the
HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWESTJOINDONATETAKE ACTIONABOUTTHINGS TODOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteR. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MOUNDS AND MIGRANTS TOUR Archaeology Southwest is partnering with Southwest Seminars to present Mounds and Migrants: A Clash of Religions in the Late Hohokam World, a special six-day tour from February 24–March 2, 2018.Join us as we explore key sites that helped shape the Southwest’s past. We are no longer accepting reservations for the 2018 tour.TUCSON ORIGINS
Tucson Origins. Archaeology Southwest has a long-term commitment to the archaeology and history of our home community. In the 1990s, we conducted a series of small excavations to locate buried adobe walls of the Tucson Presidio. Beginning in 2000, we played a role in the Tucson Origins Project funded by Tucson’s Rio Nuevo Project. HANDS-ON ARCHAEOLOGY: HOW TO MAKE FLINTKNAPPING TOOLS Then I will show how to grind your billet down to a good working shape. How long you make you make the billet is kind of a personal choice, though if it has a longer handle, that adds more mass to it—and in most cases that can’t hurt. Incise a deep notch all the way around antler, then tap it on a rock and snap the antler in half.WOMEN'S WORK
As more women became anthropologists and archaeologists, new ideas and research emerged to understand how gender, and relationships between men and women, form identities and shape culture. These viewpoints, sometimes labeled as feminist archaeology and gender archaeology, have sprouted an abundance of groundbreaking and thought-provoking work TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
DIAMONDS, MAMMOTHS, AND COMETS EVENT: Diamonds, Mammoths, and Comets DATE/TIME: March 3, 2009, at 6:00 p.m. LOCATION: Casa Vicente, 375 S. Stone Avenue, Tucson, AZ. At this lively Archaeology Café meeting, Dr. West discussed the provocative, internationally-debated theory that an enormous space object—probably a fragmented comet—exploded over the northern hemisphere 12,900 years ago. Allen is one of 26 HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWESTJOINDONATETAKE ACTIONABOUTTHINGS TODOEXPLORE
Welcome. For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections ARCHAEOLOGY CAFÉ ONLINE: EXTENDED CONTENT Archaeology Café Online: Extended Content. Knowledge seekers of every kind are welcome at Archaeology Café—now happening live and online for all to enjoy from the comfort of home. Join us live and in real-time for our 2020–2021 season. Enjoy extended content related to our online presentations at the links below, and thank you for JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteR. E. BURRILLO
R. E. Burrillo. Born and raised in upstate New York, Ralph “R. E.” Burrillo moved to New Orleans at 18 to continue becoming a writer. Five years later, ready for a change, he took a seasonal job at a lodge in Glacier National Park, and ultimately spent another five years working for a series of concessionaires in wildernessdestinations
MOUNDS AND MIGRANTS TOUR Archaeology Southwest is partnering with Southwest Seminars to present Mounds and Migrants: A Clash of Religions in the Late Hohokam World, a special six-day tour from February 24–March 2, 2018.Join us as we explore key sites that helped shape the Southwest’s past. We are no longer accepting reservations for the 2018 tour.TUCSON ORIGINS
Tucson Origins. Archaeology Southwest has a long-term commitment to the archaeology and history of our home community. In the 1990s, we conducted a series of small excavations to locate buried adobe walls of the Tucson Presidio. Beginning in 2000, we played a role in the Tucson Origins Project funded by Tucson’s Rio Nuevo Project. HANDS-ON ARCHAEOLOGY: HOW TO MAKE FLINTKNAPPING TOOLS Then I will show how to grind your billet down to a good working shape. How long you make you make the billet is kind of a personal choice, though if it has a longer handle, that adds more mass to it—and in most cases that can’t hurt. Incise a deep notch all the way around antler, then tap it on a rock and snap the antler in half.WOMEN'S WORK
As more women became anthropologists and archaeologists, new ideas and research emerged to understand how gender, and relationships between men and women, form identities and shape culture. These viewpoints, sometimes labeled as feminist archaeology and gender archaeology, have sprouted an abundance of groundbreaking and thought-provoking work TOP TEN MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY By Paul F. Reed, Preservation Archaeologist. (October 3, 2015)—This past June, I joined Scott Michlin on the Morning Show ( San Juan College KSJE) and offered my list of the Top Ten Myths and Misconceptions in Archaeology (link goes to podcast). I treated this as a fairly light-hearted exercise—certainly nothing to get tooworked up over!
DIAMONDS, MAMMOTHS, AND COMETS EVENT: Diamonds, Mammoths, and Comets DATE/TIME: March 3, 2009, at 6:00 p.m. LOCATION: Casa Vicente, 375 S. Stone Avenue, Tucson, AZ. At this lively Archaeology Café meeting, Dr. West discussed the provocative, internationally-debated theory that an enormous space object—probably a fragmented comet—exploded over the northern hemisphere 12,900 years ago. Allen is one of 26 ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE Founded over 30 years ago as Archaeology in Tucson, Archaeology Southwest’s membership publication, Archaeology Southwest Magazine, continues to serve as our flagship publication.Issued four times a year, it provides timely, synthetic treatments of some of the most current topics and issues in Southwestern archaeology. FIELD SCHOOL IN THE TIME OF COVID Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, Fordham University (June 5, 2021)—I think field school would feel a little like an island at the best of times, but COVID-19 has made everything even more isolated. It’s a bit weird, because for some of us, this is the biggest group of VOLUNTEER - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST Your participation is critical to our projects and initiatives—we simply can’t do it without you! Thank you for giving of your time and your skills. In order to volunteer with us, you must be a current Archaeology Southwest member.Opportunities vary, and include data entry, office assistance, event support, site monitoring, mapping, survey, limited excavation, and outreach. ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST MAGAZINE ARCHIVE ARCHAEOLOGY IN TUCSON. From 1986 to 1998, when Archaeology Southwest was still the Center for Desert Archaeology, our primary publication was entitled Archaeology in Tucson.Although some of this material may be a bit dated, we provide this newsletter as a JOHN WELCH - HOME - ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST John Welch. John R. Welch directs Archaeology Southwest’s Landscape and Site Preservation Program. Welch has spent more than three decades facilitating research, resource management, and outreach partnerships with Tribes in upland Arizona and New Mexico. Welch served as the archaeologist and historic preservation officer for the WhiteHONEY BEE VILLAGE
From July 2006 to January 2007, Archaeology Southwest provided Oro Valley and Pima County residents a number of opportunities to learn more about the Honey Bee Village archaeological site, including site tours, a lecture series, computer models of the site, and a panel discussion on interpretive ideas and challenges.LOS MORTEROS
Los Morteros. Los Morteros is the site of a large Native American village inhabited between about 850 and 1300 CE. The site stretches north and south along the Santa Cruz River and extends west of the river past the current right-of-way of Silverbell Road. For centuries, Los Morteros was a large village and the center of an extendedcommunity
WHO OR WHAT IS MIMBRES? The Mimbres region of the American Southwest is celebrated for the beautiful and expressive black-on-white pottery made there in the distant past. Archaeologists often use the term “Mimbres culture” to refer generally to groups who lived in the region and produced Mimbres Black-on-white pottery. Mimbres culture is included in thebroader
EARLY ROCK ART OF THE MIDDLE LITTLE COLORADO PLATEAU Palavayu, a Hopi term meaning “red river,” is a name applied to several style designations of a kind of rock art that is only found in the middle portion of the lower Little Colorado River area. Ghostly Palavayu Linear Style anthropomorphic figures watch over a deer passing along Silver Creek. PRESERVATION AT SHERWOOD RANCH PUEBLO—CHRONOLOGY Some time around A.D. 1250, Sherwood Ranch Pueblo was transformed. Archaeologists suspect that the north half of the village was left almost empty, and new blocks of pueblo rooms were built to the south. These rooms were built around a large central plaza space in the middle of the village. This reorganization transformed the villagefrom the
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* Press Releases/Announcements * Southwest Archaeology Today * Sign up for E-News JOIN US IN WELCOMING WYSS FELLOW SKYLAR BEGAY As Archaeology Southwest’s Tribal Outreach Fellow, Mr. Begay will play a key role in planning and implementing an initiative to establish the Great Bend of the Gila National Conservation Area.Read More
LEASING PAUSE IS IMPORTANT Paul Reed's statement: “Places that are sacred to these communities, including Chaco Canyon, Bears Ears, and Chimney Rock National Monument, were all threatened by reckless oil and gas leasing proposals. ...This decision to pause leasing is a much-needed firststep.”
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JOIN US IN WELCOMING WYSS FELLOW SKYLAR BEGAY As Archaeology Southwest’s Tribal Outreach Fellow, Mr. Begay will play a key role in planning and implementing an initiative to establish the Great Bend of the Gila National Conservation Area.Read More
LEASING PAUSE IS IMPORTANT Paul Reed's statement: “Places that are sacred to these communities, including Chaco Canyon, Bears Ears, and Chimney Rock National Monument, were all threatened by reckless oil and gas leasing proposals. ...This decision to pause leasing is a much-needed firststep.”
Read More
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For three decades, Archaeology Southwest has practiced a holistic, conservation-based approach to exploring the places of the past. We call this Preservation Archaeology. By exploring what makes a place special, sharing this knowledge in innovative ways, and enacting flexible site protection strategies, we foster meaningful connections to the past and respectfully safeguard its irreplaceable resources.CURRENT MAGAZINE
RESPECT THE LAND YOU STAND UPON This double issue explores the hows and whys of ending and responding to archaeological resource crime (ARC) on Tribal lands. We are particularly honored to share the perspectives of members of seven different Tribes, some of whom are Tribal cultural resource managers. All speak to the very real toll ARC takes on Tribal communities.View Highlights
CONNECT TO THE SOUTHWEST’S DEEP PAST—FREE AND ONLINE People have been living in this part of the world for 13,000 years. Learn more about people’s lives on these landscapes through our online resources. Don’t know where to start? Use our curated guide to help you explore.EXPLORE
SOUTHWEST ARCHAEOLOGY TODAYJun 01
Dear Friends, A three-day weekend has given me a respite. A chance to pause and ponder. A ...May 25
Dear Friends, The Archaeology Southwest–University of Arizona Preservation Archaeology F...May 18
Dear Friends, It’s getting warm in the southern Southwest. Triple-digit temperatures lea...May 11
Dear Friends, Archaeology Southwest wrapped up our 2020–2021 Archaeology Café series la...FROM OUR BLOG
FIELD SCHOOL IN THE TIME OF COVID Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, Fordham University (June 5, 2021)—I think field school would feel a little like an island at the best of times, but COVID-19 has made everything even more isolated. It’... 2021 PRESERVATION ARCHAEOLOGY FIELD SCHOOL KICKOFF Karen Schollmeyer, Preservation Archaeologist and Director, Preservation Archaeology Field School (May 31, 2021)—The 2021 season of our Preservation Archaeology Field School just started, and i... WANT TO HELP US? MAKE A DONATIONor take action
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