Late Sedentary (Temporal Keyword)
1-4 (4 Records)
This project encompasses a portion of the area owned by Cottonwood Properties known as the Dove Mountain Development in the southern foothills of the Tortolita Mountains. Testing was conducted at 11 sites and more extensive excavations were done at three sites. The sites selected for more intensive investigations were the only ones that had evidence of habitation structures. Site AZ AA:12:172 (ASM) contained a single pithouse and, although only plain ware ceramics were recovered, the...
A Cultural Resource Survey Along 75th and Southern Avenues, Maricopa County, Arizona (2000)
The city of Phoenix proposes to install a 25 million gallons per day (MGD) sewer lift station, gravity sewer routes, and a water line in Maricopa County, Arizona. A gravity sewer will be constructed along Southern Avenue. This sewer will terminate at a proposed 25 million gallons per day (MGD) permanent lift station. The lift station discharge will be carried north, by force mains, through the Salt River Crossing. The waterline will be constructed from the lift station. Logan Simpson Design Inc....
A Research Design for the Investigation of the Marana Community Complex (1985)
The Central Arizona Project (CAP) is a major undertaking by the Bureau of Reclamation to bring water from the Colorado River to central and southern Arizona. The aqueduct, which will help accomplish this feat, extends from the town of Parker, on the Colorado River to the west, across the western desert of Arizona to Phoenix. From the Phoenix metropolitan area the aqueduct turns south, crosses the Gila River in the vicinity of Florence and will terminate slightly to the south of Tucson. In...
A Supplemental Class III Archaeological Survey of the Phase A, Reach 3 Corridor, Tucson Aqueduct, Central Arizona Project: Late Sedentary and Early Classic Period Tucson Basin Hohokam Occupation in the Lower Santa Cruz River Basin, Marana to Rillito, Arizona (1984)
Approximately 600 acres of additional right-of-way in Reach 3 were surveyed in late 1983 and early 1984. Fourteen new sites were identified, of which nine received ASM site numbers. The remaining five sites were not given an ASM site number, but merit reevaluation for assignment of a site number. This supplemental survey has altered considerably an earlier view of prehistoric occupation in Reach 3 that resulted from the original 1982 survey of the reach. Reach 3 now appears to pass through a...