Walls, Mounds, and Pots: Examining the Classic Period Hohokam

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)

The Hohokam Classic Period is characterized as a time of change, social differentiation, and possible stratification. The ubiquitous use of towering compound wall, standardized platform mounds, and the wide-spread adoption of a new kind of pottery, Salado Polychrome, are some of the indicators that a new ideology had spread across the Hohokam region. Archaeological literature has shown that the Phoenix Basin, Tonto Basin, Tucson Basin, and other parts of the Hohokam world were a part of this shared ideology, but differed in how the ideology manifested. The goal of this session is to highlight recent work focused on the Classic Period. Paper topics in this session include ceremonialism and ideology, social and sociopolitical organization, social interaction, exchange, architecture and monumentality, and agriculture and subsistence. These papers, detailing aspects of the Classic Period in different parts of the Hohokam region, will provide a large-scale summary of current Classic Period research.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)

  • Documents (14)

Documents
  1. Ancestral Ties During a Period of Social Upheaval, An Example from the Early Classic Period in the Tucson Basin (2017)
  2. Classic Period Settlement Patterns along the Middle Gila River (2017)
  3. Cremation Mortuary Ritual among the Classic Period Hohokam and Trincheras Traditions (2017)
  4. Geochemical Evidence for Dispersed Ground Stone Tool Production at Hohokam Villages in the Middle Gila River Valley, Arizona. (2017)
  5. The Impact of Changes during the Hohokam Classic Period on Irrigation Agriculture and Irrigation Management in the Middle Gila River Valley, Arizona (2017)
  6. Life Between Two Rivers: A Study of the Sedentary to Early Classic Transition on the Queen Creek Delta, Arizona (2017)
  7. Measuring Household Inequality in Hohokam Society: An Analysis of Domestic Architecture at Pueblo Grande (2017)
  8. Mesa Grande and Its World: An Analysis of Intrusive Pottery Types Recovered from Mesa Grande and Their Social Implications (2017)
  9. New but Classic: An examination of Hohokam Canal System 1 during the Classic Period (2017)
  10. The Path of Hua’m A Nui: Aggrandizement among the Classic Period Phoenix Basin Hohokam (2017)
  11. Probing the Nexus between Hohokam Demography and Agricultural Productivity across the Pre-Classic/Classic Transition (2017)
  12. Testing Alternative Settlement Models at Las Colinas with Polychrome Dating (2017)
  13. Tucson Platform Mounds in the Context of Classic Period Variability (2017)
  14. Visiting a "Villagescape": The Early Classic Period Marana Mound Site (2017)