Sedentary Period (Temporal Keyword)

376-398 (398 Records)

Tonto Creek Archaeological Project: Life and Death Along Tonto Creek (2001)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Rachel Fernandez

The Tonto Creek Archaeological Project (TCAP) area was located in the Tonto Basin of east-central Arizona. The project, funded by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), was undertaken by Desert Archaeology, Inc., in advance of the 1994-1996 realignment of Arizona State Route (SR) 188. The area available for investigation was a 61-m- (200-ft-) wide corridor, centered on the planned route for the realigned highway. This corridor, on Tonto National Forest land, followed a 13.3-km (8-mi)...


Topo map 1 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument


Topo map 10 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 11 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 12 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 13 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 14 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 15 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 16 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 2 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 3 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 4 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 5 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 6 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 7 (1932)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 8 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Topo map 9 (1931)
IMAGE Roy Fetter.

This image is a 1931 topo map of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument.


Trails, Rock Features, and Homesteading in the Gila Bend Area: A Report on the State Route 85, Gila Bend to Buckeye Archaeological Project (2008)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: adam brin

The Arizona Department of Transportation plans to widen State Route 85 to a four-lane freeway in the area between Buckeye and Gila Bend. This report presents the results of archaeological data recovery investigations conducted along State Route (SR) 85 for the Arizona Department of Transportation (Contract No. 02-59) by a research team assembled by the Office of Cultural Resource Management, Department of Anthropology at Arizona State University. The Area of Potential Effect (APE) was located...


Tucson Aqueduct Project Phase B
PROJECT Lynn S. Teague. Jon Czaplicki. John C. Ravesloot. USDI Bureau of Reclamation, Phoenix Area Office.

The Tucson Aqueduct Phase B Project represents the first substantial archaeological investigations and excavations to be conducted in the Avra Valley. Prior to the 1983 intensive survey of the Phase B alignment by archaeologists from the Arizona State Museum, archaeological investigation of the Avra Valley had been limited primarily to occasional clearance surveys and test excavations. The identification of 47 prehistoric sites during the 1983 survey (Downum and others 1986) and the...


Upper Davidson Canyon Arizona Site Steward File (1993)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Bill Gillespie. Shereen Lerner. Deni J. Seymour. Catherine M. Cameron. M. M. E.. McClellan. Danziger.

This is an Arizona Site Steward file for the Upper Davidson Canyon Archaeological District, located on Coronado National Forest land. The sites within the district contain Hohokam, Archaic, Historic, and possibly Paleo Indian cultural deposits. The sites are comprised of a wide variety of features and artifacts including village sites, pit houses, a corral, a historic house, agricultural features, resource extraction and production sites, hearths, and a roasting pit. The file consists of a...


Vanishing River Volume 4: Chapter 14: Prehistoric Settlement and Demography in the Lower Verde Region (1997)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Richard Ciolek-Torello.

In Chapter 14, Ciolek-Torello presents one of the first full syntheses of indigenous settlement and demographic patterns in the Verde Valley, without reference to interaction in the Hohokam core area. He begins with a summary of prehistoric settlement patterns from pre-ceramic periods through the Late Classic period across the entire Transition Zone of central Arizona. He then characterizes settlement systems in the lower Verde Valley through time and describes the archaeological sites and...


Vanishing River Volume 4: Chapter 18: Research Design Revisited: Processual Issues in the Prehistory of the Lower Verde Valley (1997)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Richard Ciolek-Torello. Stephanie M. Whittlesey.

Chapter 18 provides a summary of the LVAP’s research themes and offers an overview of the research results. Ciolek-Torello synthesizes the chronology and cultural sequence of the lower Verde Valley. He places this sequence and its cultural developments in the context of other cultural sequences in central and southern Arizona. Whittlesey then summarizes the argument for an indigenous cultural tradition in the Transition Zone of central Arizona, one with roots in Mogollon prehistory and with...


Villages of Tortolita: Phase II Data Recovery at AZ AA:7:500 (ASM) and AZ AA:12:682 (ASM), Town of Marana, Pima and Pinal Counties, Arizona (2009)
DOCUMENT Full-Text David M. R. Barr.

Phase II data recovery was conducted at AZ AA:7:500 (ASM) and AZ AA:12:682 (ASM) on the Villages of Tortolita property after Phase I data recovery revealed the presence of subsurface cultural deposits. Forty-five features were identified during Phase II data recovery at AZ AA:7:500 (ASM), including pit structures, roasting pits, miscellaneous extramural pits, middens, surface rock concentrations, and cremations. At AZ AA:12:682 (ASM), five highly ephemeral, poorly defined features (charcoal...