Perry Mesa (Site Name Keyword)

101-125 (144 Records)

Pueblo la Pato Agave Analysis (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

A data table pertaining to 100 agave plants at Pato Pueblo, Perry Mesa.


Pueblo la Plata Agave Analysis (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

A data table pertaining to 231 agave plants at Pueblo la Plata, Perry Mesa.


Pueblo La Plata Site 1 Agave Data, with Means and Medians (2005)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Measurements taken from agave plants at Pueblo la Plata, Site 1, Perry Mesa.


Pueblo La Plata Site 2 Agave Data, with Means and Medians (2005)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Measurements taken from agave plants at Pueblo la Plata, Site 2, Perry Mesa.


Pueblo la Plata Site 3 Agave Data, with Means and Medians (2005)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Measurements taken from agave plants at Pueblo la Plata, Site 3, Perry Mesa.


Pueblo la Plata Site 4 Agave Data, with Means and Medians (2006)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Measurements taken from agave plants at Pueblo la Plata, Site 4, Perry Mesa.


References for the Agua Fria National Monument Area (2012)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Bibliographic references for research in the Agua Fria National Monument area


Report of the 2007 Archaeological Survey of Northwestern Portions of Perry Mesa within the Agua Fria National Monument, Yavapai County, Arizona (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Melissa Kruse-Peeples. Will Russell. Hoski Schaafsma. Colleen Strawhacker. JoAnn Wallace.

In the Spring and Summer of 2007 Arizona State University (ASU) conducted pedestrian survey of approximately 300 hectares of the northwestern portion of Perry Mesa region in Yavapai County, Arizona. All survey areas were located within the Agua Fria National Monument (AFNM) managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). All survey areas and located archaeological features are within the Perry Mesa National Register District. During this field season, archaeological survey efforts were focused...


Report of the Spring 2005 Field Season (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Melissa Kruse-Peeples. John Briggs. Katie Johnson. Leshana Leslie. Todd Passick. Angela Ruggles. Hoski Shaafsma. Karen Schollmeyer.

The document begins with an overview of the Legacies Project spring 2005 fieldwork. Subsequent chapters include: Agave Types and Distributions, Agricultural Impacts on Soil Compaction and and Settlement Size at Agua Fria National Monument, Legacy Effects on Herbaceous Plants on Agua Fria National Monument, Transect Survey Report at Richinbar, Architectural Studies at Richinbar Ruin, and an Agricultural Site Survey.


Report of the Spring 2005 Field Season: Legacies on the Landscape: Archaeological and Ecological Research at Agua Fria National Monument (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Katherine A. Spielmann. John Briggs. Katie Johnson. Melissa Kruse. Leshana Leslie. Todd Passick. Angela Ruggles. Hoski Schaafsma. Karen Schollmeyer.

The Legacies project is a long-term, collaborative research and teaching project between archaeology and ecology faculty and students at Arizona State University. The goal of the project is to document and understand the long-term ecological impacts of the prehistoric occupation of the semi-arid landscape of Agua Fria National Monument in central Arizona. The field research is organized through a seminar in which ecology and archaeology faculty jointly engage students in the collection and...


Report on the 2009 Legacies on the Landscape BLM Scope of Work (2009)
DOCUMENT Full-Text David Abbott. Sophia Kelly. Melissa Kruse-Peeples. Dana Nakase. Katherine Spielmann.

Report on the 2009 Legacies on the Landscape BLM Scope of Work


Richinbar Agave Analysis (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

A data table pertaining to 75 agave plants at Richinbar Ruin, Black Mesa.


Richinbar Ruin Agave Data, with Means and Medians (2005)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Measurements taken from agave plants at Richinbar Ruin, Black Mesa.


Rock and Artifact Data from Transects at Pueblo la Plata (2004)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Rock and Artifact Data from Transects at Pueblo la Plata


Rock and Artifact Data from Transects at Richinbar Ruin (2004)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Rock and Artifact Data from Transects at Richinbar Ruin


Rocks in Space (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Steven Metzger.

Data tables pertaining to rock coverage along transects at Pueblo la Plata, Perry Mesa


Satellite Image of Perry Mesa, Showing Locations of Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin (2005)
IMAGE Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Satellite Image of Perry Mesa, Showing Locations of Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin


Seasonality and Ecosystem Response in Two Prehistoric Agricultural Regions of Central Arizona (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Jolene Trujillo.

Around the globe, prehistoric agriculture has impacted the environment in ways that are observable today. Prehistoric farmers in the Southwestern US modified the landscape with rock alignments to support rain fed agriculture in this semi-arid region. Numerous studies have shown that former agricultural fields are ecologically different than areas that have not been farmed. This thesis explores the independent effects of the manipulation of rocks into alignments, prehistoric farming, and season...


Series of Plan Maps Showing Construction Episodes at Pueblo la Plata (2005)
IMAGE Sara Mapes.

Series of plan maps showing construction episodes at Pueblo la Plata


Small Site Analysis in the Southwest: A Comparative Analysis of Two Communities on Perry Mesa, Arizona (2007)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Colleen Strawhacker.

Landscapes across the American Southwest are littered with prehistoric structures of less than 10 rooms used for a variety of functions – from seasonal field houses, to storage, to year-long residences, to boundary markers. These structures, while largely ignored in much of the archaeological literature, can provide information on the human impact across an entire landscape, instead of simply focusing on the pueblo itself or on the agricultural fields. How, then, can these small architectural...


Soil Compaction Data from Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin (2004)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Soil Compaction Data from Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin


Soil Sediment Data from Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin (2004)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Soil Sediment Data from Pueblo la Plata, Pueblo Pato, and Richinbar Ruin


Soils Data from Excavations at Site 04-761 (Note: UTM Coordinates are Incorrect) (2004)
DATASET Legacies on the Landscape Project, Arizona State University.

Soils Data from Excavations at Site 04-761 (Note: UTM Coordinates are Incorrect)


A Spatial Analysis of the Level of Constructedness of the Small Sites around Pueblo la Plata and Pueblo Pato (2007)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Colleen Strawhacker.

The level of constructedness of archaeological sites can provide insight into the amount of planning, labor and time invested into building structures. Further understanding into the time, labor and planning invested into architecture can allow for inferences to made on the residential mobility of the population, intensity of surrounding land use and social importance assigned to each pueblo (Cameron 1999). This paper will explore and compare the architectural constructedness of small sites...


Spring 2004 Architecture Studies at Pueblo La Plata (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Karen Schollmeyer.

Studies of the architecture of Pueblo La Plata, particularly room construction sequences, formed one component of the Legacies on the Landscape project research in 2004. The goals of this portion of the project were to improve our understanding of how the pueblo was built, and to gain a sense of population size and changes over time. In particular, we wished to determine whether a sizeable core area of rooms (representing the first construction phase of the pueblo) was visible, and whether the...