Prehistoric Irrigation in Arizona: A Context for Canals and Related Cultural Resources
Author(s): Allen Dart
Year: 1989
Summary
This is a report that covers the prehistoric irrigation systems located within Arizona. Funded by the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office, this report describes the locations of irrigation works throughout Arizona, their use and descriptions, along with their importance and need for preservation. The appendices outline goals, strategies and priorities for future resource planning, suggested priorities for SHPO action, methods of dating, and lastly, historic properties eligible for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places.
Cite this Record
Prehistoric Irrigation in Arizona: A Context for Canals and Related Cultural Resources, 1. Allen Dart. 1989 ( tDAR id: 427834) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8427834
Keywords
Culture
Hohokam
Site Type
Agricultural or Herding
•
Canal or Canal Feature
•
Irrigation
Investigation Types
Archaeological Overview
•
Research Design / Data Recovery Plan
General
Irrigation System
Geographic Keywords
Agua Fria River
•
Arizona (State / Territory)
•
Colorado River
•
Gila River
•
Little Colorado River
•
Lower Salt River
•
Papagueria
•
Queen Creek
•
San Juan Valley
•
San Pedro River
•
Santa Cruz River
•
Upper Salt River
•
Verde River
Temporal Keywords
Prehistoric
Spatial Coverage
min long: -114.587; min lat: 31.279 ; max long: -109.072; max lat: 36.985 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): Salt River Project Cultural Resource Manager
Contributor(s): Allen Dart
Sponsor(s): Arizona State Historic Preservation Office
Prepared By(s): Institute for American Research
Record Identifiers
Technical Report(s): 89-1
SRP Library Barcode No.(s): 00030560
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989_Dart_PrehistoricIrrigation_OCR.pdf | 37.19mb | Jun 5, 1989 | Apr 14, 2017 3:01:40 PM | Public | |
This file is unredacted. |