Applicants sought for Kiva Editor for Volumes 91-93. For details go to the Kiva page under the Publications Menu

Events

Fabiola E. Silva – “Hechizas: A History of Looting and Ceramic Fakes in Northwest Chihuahua”

This lecture will be presented simultaneously in person in Tucson and to you at home through Zoom. You choose the option that works for you! If participating virtually registration is required.  Use this link: https://bit.ly/2022MaySilvaREG-W If attending in person meet at this location: University of Arizona Environmental Resources Bldg. # 2 Room 107 1064 E […]

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Steve Tomka, Strong Foundations and Promising Futures: Collaborative Efforts Between the Professional and Avocational Archaeological Community

AAHS@Home

This lecture is now being offered VIRTUALLY ONLY through AAHS@Home and Zoom.  We have had to cancel the in-person option. Pre-registration is required:  Use this link: https://bit.ly/2022JuneTomkaREG   This presentation will provide a brief history of the collaborative endeavors forged between professional and avocational archaeologists over the last few decades of archaeological research. It will […]

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Barbara Roth – Lived Lives: Individuals in Mimbres Pithouse and Pueblo Communities

This lecture is now being offered VIRTUALLY ONLY through AAHS@Home and Zoom.  Pre-registration is required:  Use this link:  https://bit.ly/2022JulyRothREG We often view the occupants of past pithouse and pueblo villages as households or groups, seeing them as a collective rather than as individuals who lived, worked, played, and interacted within a community. Our recent work […]

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Caitlin Wichlacz – Re-viewing the Dishes: Considering the place of Salado polychrome ceramics in the Phoenix Basin

This lecture is being offered VIRTUALLY ONLY through Zoom. ALL AAHS LECTURES ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC BUT YOU MUST PREREGISTER. TO REGISTER CLICK HERE How were Salado polychrome (Roosevelt Red Ware) ceramics incorporated into Phoenix basin Hohokam ceramic assemblages during the late Classic period? Understanding the roles and relations of Salado pottery within local […]

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Ed Jolie – Chacoan Perishable Technologies in Regional Perspective

AAHS@Home

This lecture is brought to you by AAHS@Home and Zoom. It is free and open to the public but you must REGISTER HERE.  Between about A.D. 850 and 1140, the archaeology of Chaco Canyon in northwestern New Mexico reveals the rapid construction of large communal structures where smaller settlements had existed previously and shows that […]

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Nancy Parezo – Arizona’s and New Mexico’s Hidden Scholars: Husband and Wife Archaeological Teams

This lecture is free and open to the public but you must pre-register at: https://bit.ly/2022NovParezoREG  In 1983 I began a research project to document and honor the over 1600 women who have worked in the American Southwest between 1870 and 1940 and published articles about what they learned. We knew much about the most famous […]

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Maxwell Forton – High Places in the Painted Desert: Exploring Salient Spaces at Petrified Forest National Park

This lecture is free and open to the public but you must pre-register at:     https://bit.ly/2022DecFortonREG Petrified Forest National Park, located a few hours east of Flagstaff, is world renowned for its deposits of Triassic-era petrified wood. This landscape also contains a rich cultural history, with over 10,000 years of human habitation and use preserved […]

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Davina Two Bears – The Leupp Isolation Center Historical Site:  Interconnections of Navajo and Japanese American History during World War II

AAHS@Home

THIS LECTURE IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC BUT YOU MUST CLICK HERE TO PREREGISTER The Old Leupp Boarding School was a federal Indian boarding school in operation on the southwest Navajo Reservation in northern Arizona from 1909-1942, but after the school closed, the United States War Department reused the OLBS as a Japanese Citizen Isolation Center in […]

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Julio Amador Bech- “Rain and Fertility Symbolism in the Rock Art and Cultural Landscape of the Trincheras Sites of Northwestern Sonora

AAHS@Home

This event is open to the public. To register CLICK HERE Trincheras archaeological sites of northwestern Sonora (A.D. 200 – 1450) are located in the lower Sonoran Desert, along the Magdalena, Altar, and Asunción/Concepción river drainages and adjacent volcanic hills. The Trincheras tradition is characterized by terraced hill-sides with stairs, ramps, and pathways connecting the […]

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Patricia Crown – “Drinking Rituals and Politics in Chaco Canyon”

AAHS@Home

The presenter has asked that the session not be recorded nor posted on YouTube.   This lecture is free and open to the public. To register click HERE Drinking rituals are common throughout the world, and they impact exchange, crafts, the economy, and politics in the past.  For the last two decades, Crown has studied […]

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