USDI Bureau of Reclamation, PXAO, Gila River Indian Community
Part of: USDI Bureau of Reclamation, PXAO, Tribal Projects
The Gila River Indian Community is located to the south of the city of Phoenix, in Arizona. This collection includes work done on their land by the Bureau of Reclamation, Phoenix Area Office.
Site Name Keywords
Butte Camp •
Camp Rivers •
Canal Camp •
AZ U:13:4 (ACS) •
AZ U:13:3 (ACS) •
Sewer Farm
Site Type Keywords
Non-Domestic Structures •
Ball Court •
Structure •
Historic Structure •
Archaeological Feature •
Artifact Scatter •
Internment Camp •
Dairy •
Resource Extraction / Production / Transportation Structure or Features •
Agricultural or Herding
Other Keywords
Pipe •
Can •
Bottle •
Bowl •
Thermometer •
Jar •
Cup •
Plate •
Needle •
Knife
Culture Keywords
Historic •
Japanese American •
Hohokam •
Euroamerican •
Historic Native American •
Papago •
Mexican •
Anglo-American •
Pima
Investigation Types
Collections Research •
Historic Background Research •
Site Evaluation / Testing •
Systematic Survey
Material Types
Glass •
Building Materials •
Metal •
Cement •
Ceramic •
Chipped Stone •
Ground Stone •
Mineral •
Wood •
Textile
Temporal Keywords
20th Century •
Prehistoric •
1940s •
World War II •
Historic •
Protohistoric
Geographic Keywords
Arizona (State / Territory) •
United States of America (Country) •
Pinal County (County) •
North America (Continent) •
Arizona •
Pima County •
US (ISO Country Code) •
Gila River Indian Reservation •
Maricopa County •
Sonoran Desert
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-5 of 5)
- An Archeological Survey of the Gila River Farms Expansion, Pinal County, Arizona (1987)
- Recovery of Additional Information from the Gila River Farm Expansion Area (1988)
- Sacaton Farms Irrigation System Project: Investigations at Butte Camp, a Japanese-American World War II Relocation Center
- Return To Butte Camp: A Japanese-American World War II Relocation Center: Report (1993)
- Supplemental Study of Butte Camp at the Rivers Relocation Center: A Japanese-American World War II Relocation Center: Interim Report (1993)