Issue editors: Glen E. Rice, Leslie D. Aragon, and William H. Doelle
Contributors to this new issue in our “Underground” series share archaeology in and around Phoenix, Arizona. Previous cities in the series include Tucson and Santa Fe.
Peoples of the Phoenix Basin—Glen E. Rice, Kate Sarther Gann, and Leslie D. Aragon, with time line design by Kathleen Bader
Townspeoples of the Salt River—Glen E. Rice
The Unrealized Presence of the Ancestors—Barnaby V. Lewis
In Brief:The Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community—Angela Garcia-Lewis
Beneath Heritage Square: The Earliest Hohokam—T. Kathleen Henderson and Leslie D. Aragon
Beneath the City and Its Airport: Ancient Canals, Floods, and Settlement Changes in the Lower Salt River Valley—Gary Huckleberry and T. Kathleen Henderson
In Brief:Beneath the Sky Train Rails: Hohokam Field Systems—T. Kathleen Henderson and Leslie D. Aragon
Beneath the Streets: La Villa—Michael A. Lindeman
Hohokam Figurines—Leslie D. Aragon
Hohokam Agricultural Labor—Chris Watkins
Hohokam Households—Glen E. Rice
Hohokam Ritual Centers and Early Towns in the Phoenix Basin—Glen E. Rice
River of Time—Catherine Gilman
Hohokam Marketplaces—David R. Abbott
Shell and the Hohokam—Arthur W. Vokes
Platform Mounds at Pueblo Grande and Mesa Grande—Todd W. Bostwick
Room for Debate:Salado in Phoenix—Glen E. Rice, Lewis Borck, Jeffery Clark, and Barnaby V. Lewis
Phoenix Aboveground: The Hohokam Landscape—Aaron M. Wright
Beneath the Neighborhoods: Historical Phoenix—J. Homer Thiel
In Brief: The Tempe That Tempe Forgot—Glen E. Rice
Beneath the Valley Metro Light Rail: Homes of Other Eras—Margerie Green and Walter Punzmann
Preservation Spotlight: Archaeology in the City of Phoenix—Laurene Montero
Back Sight—William H. Doelle
Archaeology Southwest Magazine Vol. 31, Nos. 2 and 3
Contributors to this new issue in our “Underground” series share archaeology in and around Phoenix, Arizona. Previous cities in the series include Tucson and Santa Fe.
Some of the authors’ names below are linked to their scholarly web pages. Those pages show or link to bibliographies related to the research presented in this issue. Any references specific to or specifically called out in an article are given below.
Beneath the City and Its Airport: Ancient Canals, Floods, and Settlement Changes in the Lower Salt River Valley—Gary Huckleberry and T. Kathleen Henderson
Craig, Douglas B. (editor) (2005) Archaeological Excavations at La Villa (AZ T:12:148 [ASM]): The Maricopa County Human Services Campus, Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. Report No. 05-94. Northland Research, Tempe.
Hohmann, John W. and Robert Larkin (editors) (2002) Initial Archaeological Excavations at La Villa: The Proposed Maricopa County Human Services Center, Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. Stantec Consulting, Inc., Phoenix.
Lindeman, Michael W. (editor) (2015) Excavations at La Villa: Continuity and Change at an Agricultural Village. Technical Report No. 2012-08. Desert Archaeology, Inc., Tucson.
Lindeman, Michael W. (editor) (2016) Excavations at La Villa: Building a Village. Technical Report No. 2014-7. Desert Archaeology, Inc., Tucson.
Marshall, John (2014) Results of Phase I Cultural Resources data Recovery of 1.6 acres withing the Prehistoric Site of La Villa (AZ T:12:148[ASM]), Located at the Southwest Corner of Jackson Street and 9th Avenue, Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. Report No. 13-85. Northland Research, Inc., Tempe.
Schroeder, K. J. (editor) (1994) Pioneer & Military Memorial Park Archaeological Project in Phoenix, Arizona, 1990–1992: Vol. 1 Project Parameters and Prehistoric Component. Publications in Anthropology 3. Roadrunner Archaeology and Consulting, Tempe.
Arizona Highways February 1984 issue with article by Natalie Waugh on work by Kathy Henderson, Glen Rice, and Randall McGuire at La Ciudad; photographs by Jeff Kida, who graciously permitted us to reproduce some of his images in this issue of Archaeology Southwest Magazine; and an article on Hohokam village life by Glen Rice (free PDF download available)