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Two new books were Archaeological Series 210. The new books are Arch Series 214, Vol I Part 1 and Vol I Part 2. Part 1: Table of Contents & Chaps 1-5; Part 2: Table of Contents, Chaps 6-10, References, and Appendixes. Described are the early BM and Pueblo occupations of Chaco Canyon, leading up to the more familiar fluorescence of the Great Houses.
A description of the human use of Montezuma Canyon in SE Utah and the relationship of that use to the depositional history of the canyon.
Chevelon was the focus of archaeological investigation by the Homol'ovi Research Program, Arizona State Museum, from 2002 to 2006. Chevelon Pueblo is a 500-room village that was built and occupied by ancestral Hopi from 1290 to the 1390s C.E. Particularly interesting is the use of fire to ritually close many structures.
Tumamoc Hill is a prominent landmark west of downtown Tucson, and has a rich diversity of archaeological remains associated with a long-term use of the hill. It is a cerro de trincheras with numerous large stone walls that define prehistoric public spaces and houses, farm plots, and trails. There is abundant rock associated with the hill, and some of the glyphs seem to have functioned as solar calendar markers. All of these topics are addressed in this volume. Much of the work reported here was done by University of Arizona archaeological field schools and volunteers, and was part of the ultimately successful process of preparing a National Register nomination for Tumamoc Hill.
Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 204Excavations at Cerro de Trincheras reports the work of a collaborative bi-national effort to study the important trincheras site of Cerro de Trincheras in Sonora, Mexico. The chapters summarize and discuss artifacts and other data collected from eight months of excavation in 1995-96. The volumes evaluate the structure, organization, and role of this particular site in relation to the Hohokam and other trincheras sites. This report constitutes a significant and important contribution to the understanding of this site and the general archaeology of Sonora.This is Volume 1 of a two-volume set.
Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 204Excavations at Cerro de Trincheras reports the work of a collaborative bi-national effort to study the important trincheras site of Cerro de Trincheras in Sonora, Mexico. The chapters summarize and discuss artifacts and other data collected from eight months of excavation in 1995-96. The volumes evaluate the structure, organization, and role of this particular site in relation to the Hohokam and other trincheras sites. This report constitutes a significant and important contribution to the understanding of this site and the general archaeology of Sonora.This is Volume 2 of a two-volume set.
A revised edition of the summary report first published in 1997 of work done at the Hardy Site in Ft Lowell Park in Tucson.
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