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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center
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TZID:America/Phoenix
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DTSTART:20180101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210810T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210810T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210629T193128Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210810T213223Z
UID:2144-1628622000-1628627400@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Arizona Humanities Virtual FRANK Talk: “What is Decolonization and Why Does it Matter?”
DESCRIPTION:  \nOn Tuesday\, August 10\, 2021\, Arizona Humanities Virtual FRANK Talk presents “What is Decolonization and Why Does it Matter?” by Rowdy Duncan. This free presentation will be held from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time\, same as Pacific Daylight Time) and is sponsored by Arizona Humanities\, Phoenix\, and Old Pueblo Archaeology Center\, Tucson. \nThe history of colonialism and how to “decolonize” is a hot topic among Indigenous peoples and some scholars\, including when it comes to archaeology. However\, probably most members of the general public and even some professional archaeologists have no concept of why an understanding of colonialism is important. To fathom what decolonization means today\, we first must understand historically what colonialism is\, and how it has shaped our thinking and actions. In the Americas\, who was\, and who was not colonized? Colonialist thinking can permeate education\, media\, government policies\, and our lived experiences every day. Colonialist thinking can empower some of us while disenfranchising\, exploiting or marginalizing others. In what ways do we consciously or unconsciously engage in colonialist practices\, beliefs\, or concepts today? What steps can we take to begin to decolonize our thinking\, and why does it matter? What is the cost to individuals or communities if we choose not to? What is the benefit to individuals or communities if we choose to “decolonize” our thinking and act differently? Join this interactive discussion about the impact of colonization and decolonization on the way we live and work together. Guest presenter Rowdy Duncan (Phoenix College and Anytown AZ) has worked in the field of diversity and inclusion for over a decade. \nTo register for the Zoom meeting go to https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0rceytqDojGtUGEWlztiWz2Q7qQdZOR2gX. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nPhoto caption: “Classroom of students with their teachers inside a Walapai Indian school at Hackbury\, Arizona\, circa 1900” photo by C. C. Pierce (USC Libraries Special Collections\, public domain). \nFlyer: 20210810(v1)FrankTalk_RowdyDuncan_WhatIsDecolonizationAndWhyDoesItMatterFlyer \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/arizona-humanities-virtual-frank-talk-what-is-decolonization-and-why-does-it-matter/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210715T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210715T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210526T044509Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210810T212026Z
UID:2115-1626375600-1626381000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought Presentation: “Talking Turkey: Domestic Turkeys in the US Southwest's Archaeological Record (and a Little on Them Today)”
DESCRIPTION:Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online dinnertime program featuring “Talking Turkey: Domestic Turkeys in the US Southwest’s Archaeological Record (and a Little on Them Today)” presentation by archaeologist Sharlot Hart will be held on July 15\, 2021 from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. \nJoin archaeologist Sharlot Hart as she recounts an often-surprising history of the domestication and husbandry of turkeys in the American Southwest and Mexican Northwest (SW/NW). Ancient turkey use in what is today’s US Southwest is well recorded\, if not publicly well known\, starting about 1 CE. While macaws are known to have ceremonial connections and are distributed along trade networks in the SW/NW\, traces of turkeys largely are found in areas where wild turkeys abound. Recent research has focused on two assumptions about archaeological turkeys: the wild subspecies that was domesticated\, and the purpose of domestication and intensive husbandry. (A spoiler . . . it wasn’t all about food!) Discover the husbandry practices and reasons behind turkey domestication yesterday and today. This presentation will walk us through recent research\, oral histories\, and examples of ancient practices that exemplify why “talking turkey” is still so important. Sharlot Hart is an archaeologist with the National Park Service – Southern Arizona Office. \nTo register go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_i1jbqpOGQvSPGLpsaus0Xg. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nPhoto caption: Turkey-feather jacket found in Tularosa Cave\, New Mexico (Figure 149 in “Culture of the Ancient Pueblos of the Upper Gila River Region\, New Mexico and Arizona” by Walter Hough (1914\, Smithsonian Institution). \nFlyer: Revised_20210715(v3)ThirdThursday_SharlotHart_TalkingTurkeyFlyer \n  \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-presentation-talking-turkey-domestic-turkeys-in-the-us-southwests-archaeological-record-and-a-little-on-them-today/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210713T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210713T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210526T043323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210526T043621Z
UID:2108-1626202800-1626208200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Indigenous Woman Coming Through: How I Went from Educator and Community Organizer to Elected Official” Zoom presentation by Gabriella Cázares-Kelly
DESCRIPTION:Gabriella Cázares-Kelly\, Pima County Recorder \nOn Tuesday\, July 13\, 2021\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s second in a series of Indigenous Interests presentations with “Indigenous Woman Coming Through: How I Went from Educator and Community Organizer to Elected Official” presentation by Pima County Recorder Gabriella Cázares-Kelly (Tohono O’odham).  This free Zoom online presentation will be held from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time). \nGabriella Cázares-Kelly (Tohono O’odham; she/her) is the current Pima County Recorder in Arizona. She leads an office that oversees voter registration\, early voting\, and document recording for the county. In this presentation she discusses the significance of her wins as a “non-traditional candidate” in the 2020 Primary and General Elections. She will share how she was inspired to run\, unexpected barriers she encountered during her campaign\, and what she and her staff are currently working on now that she’s in office. \nOld Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom webinar series\, hosted by Old Pueblo Board of Directors members Martina Dawley (Hualapai-Diné) and Maegan Lopez (Tohono O’odham) and made possible by a grant from Arizona Humanities\, provides Native American presenters with a forum for discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today. \nTo register for the program go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_R5tG9L_YSDCIQXUbD44TIg. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: 20210713(v1)IndigenousInterests_GabriellaCázares-Kelly_IndigenousWomanComingThroughFlyer \n \n \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/indigenous-woman-coming-through-how-i-went-from-educator-and-community-organizer-to-elected-official-zoom-presentation-by-gabriella-cazares-kelly/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210617T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210617T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210413T232638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210413T232638Z
UID:2059-1623956400-1623961800@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“The Goat Camp Ruin Project: Volunteer Archaeology in Central Arizona”
DESCRIPTION:Getting started on the excavation of Goat Camp Ruin’s Room 1 eight years ago\, photo courtesy of Scott Wood. \nOn Thursday\, June 17\, 2021\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program will feature “The Goat Camp Ruin Project: Volunteer Archaeology in Central Arizona” presentation by archaeologist J. Scott Wood. From 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.\, join retired Forest Service archaeologist J. Scott Wood as he tells about the Goat Camp Ruin project he has been conducting for the last 13 years for the Town of Payson in the highlands of central Arizona. Sponsored by the Arizona Archaeological Society\, this project eventually will result in this important Northern Salado site being developed for interpretation and incorporated into the Town’s recreational trail system. Goat Camp Ruin began as one of the earliest and eventually largest pre-Classic Hohokam pithouse villages in the area. As it continued its occupation into the Classic Period (1150-1450 CE) it transformed into a smaller masonry village\, which is where this all-volunteer project has concentrated its effort. At its height it contained over 20 rooms and has evidence of a later Apache reoccupation. The excavation phase is still ongoing\, but will be coming to an end in a year or so as stabilization of structures and preparation of the site for visitation take over. Scott’s presentation will walk you through the highlights of a decade’s worth of excavation\, the site’s place in Payson area history\, and the fate of the Northern Salado as they were caught up in the Great Drought of the late 13th century. \nTo register go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ZuI7jb-KTXKSK1zMNEmhrQ. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: 20210617(v1)ThirdThursday_JScottWood_TheGoatCampRuinProjectFlyer
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/the-goat-camp-ruin-project-volunteer-archaeology-in-central-arizona/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210513T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210513T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210224T205456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210224T205611Z
UID:2015-1620932400-1620937800@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Wartime Resisters of Conscience at the Catalina Federal Honor Camp on Mt. Lemmon” free Zoom online presentation
DESCRIPTION:Resisters of Conscience reunions\, 1947 and 2002 \nOn Thursday\, May 13\, 2021\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday (on the Second Thursday!) Food for Thought” free Zoom online program will feature “Wartime Resisters of Conscience at the Catalina Federal Honor Camp on Mt. Lemmon” presentation by Dr. Cherstin Lyon. This free presentation will be held from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Arizona/Mountain Standard Time).\nThe Catalina Federal Honor Camp located on the Catalina Highway from Tucson up to Mt. Lemmon housed prisoners who were largely responsible for building the highway. These prisoners were a part of a prison reform movement and the good roads movement in American history during the 1930s. During World War II\, a different set of individuals were sentenced to work at the Catalina prison. These were resisters of conscience. Prominent among them were Gordon Hirabayashi\, other Japanese Americans who came to call themselves the “Tucsonians\,” Hopi\, and Jehovah’s Witnesses. This presentation will explain why these individuals became resisters of conscience\, and how their prison experiences shaped their understanding of their own wartime citizenship. Cherstin Lyon. professor of history and director of the Honors College at Southern Oregon University\, is the author of Prisons and Patriots: Japanese American Wartime Citizenship\, Civil Disobedience\, and Historical Memory and several other books and articles on Japanese Americans\, public history\, and citizenship.\nThis month only\, Old Pueblo’s monthly program will be on the Second Thursday instead of the Third Thursday of the month. To register go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_eCJnNTJ_QHWvmLE2Yn5a8w. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201.\nFlyer: 20210513(v1)ThirdThursday_CherstinLyon_WartimeResistersOfConscienceAtTheCatalinaFederalHonorCamp
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/wartime-resisters-of-conscience-at-the-catalina-federal-honor-camp-on-mt-lemmon-free-zoom-online-presentation/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210511T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20220308T190000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210517T195527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210517T195959Z
UID:2097-1620759600-1646766000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Indigenous Interests” Online Presentations Series
DESCRIPTION:May 11\, July 13\, September 14\, & November 9\, 2021; and January 11 & March 8\, 2022 \nThe “Indigenous Interests” online presentations series is a collaboration between Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Arizona Humanities. It is designed to provide an avenue for communication between Native Americans and non-Indians that can result in more understanding of each other’s cultures\, traditions\, histories\, viewpoints\, philosophies\, and ways of life. The presenters\, all members of Native Nations\, will share their thoughts about the human experience; what it means to be human and Native American; how peoples of different cultures relate to one another; compar­a­tive religions\, ethics\, history\, jurisprudence\, language acquisition and retention\, and philosophy; and how Native Americans view the archaeologists and anthropologists who study them. \nFor more information\, watch our online events listings or contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: 20210511-20220308(v1)IndigenousInterestsPresentationsSeries
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/indigenous-interests-online-presentations-series/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210511T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210511T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210507T200255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210507T200429Z
UID:2074-1620759600-1620765000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Tohono O’odham Philosophy and Ethics” Zoom presentation by Ruben Cu:k Ba’ak
DESCRIPTION:Ruben Cu:k Ba’ak’s hiking photo \nOn Tuesday\, May 11\, 2021\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s first in a series of Indigenous Interests presentations beginning with “Tohono O’odham Philosophy and Ethics” by Ruben Cu:k Ba’ak (Tohono O’odham). This free Zoom online presentation will be held from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. ARIZONA/Mountain Standard Time (same as Pacific Daylight Time). \nRuben Cu:k Ba’ak is Curator of Education for the Tohono O’odham Nation’s Cultural Center and Museum in Topawa\, Arizona. O’odham Himdag is the connection of all things. Our way of life and our responsibilities to our way of life. O’odham Himdag\, it’s the simplicity in the connection of all things and our responsibility to that connection. It’s simply following the teachings of Our Big Brother I’itoi in how we live and treat all life\, existence\, and the balance of all things. In this first presentation of the “Indigenous Interests” series\, Ruben interviews Tohono O’odham elders who talk about the O’odham Himdag\, the destruction of land and archaeological sites in the traditional O’odham homelands both on and off of the Tohono O’odham Nation reservations\, and how elders feel obligated to react to that destruction based on their Himdag upbringing. \nOld Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Indigenous Interests” free Zoom webinar series\, hosted by Old Pueblo Board of Directors members Martina Dawley (Hualapai-Diné) and Maegan Lopez (Tohono O’odham) and made possible by a grant from Arizona Humanities\, provides Native American presenters with a forum for discussing issues important to Indigenous peoples today. \nTo register for the Zoom program go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_LibeTVc-TGmRoIQxcycz7g. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: 20210511(v1)IndigenousInterests_RubenCu-KBa-ak_TohonoO’odhamPhilosophyEthics
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/tohono-oodham-philosophy-and-ethics-zoom-presentation-by-ruben-cuk-baak/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210415T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210415T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210119T012617Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210128T153541Z
UID:1981-1618513200-1618518600@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“A History of Arizona State Museum Research around Homol’ovi and at the Ancestral Hopi Village of Homol’ovi II” Presentation
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday\, April 15\, 2021\, 7:00-8:30 p.m. (MST)\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online program will feature “A History of Arizona State Museum Research around Homol’ovi and at the Ancestral Hopi Village of Homol’ovi II” presentation by archaeologist Richard C. Lange. Rich Lange\, who served as Associate Director of the Arizona State Museum\, University of Arizona (ASM) Homol’ovi Research Program for over three decades\, will review the history of that program and the Winslow/Homol’ovi area. He will focus on the seven late ancestral-Hopi Homol’ovi Settlement Cluster villages that were founded in a roughly 140-year span between 1260 and 1400 CE. Much of these villages’ population probably came originally from the Hopi Mesas area and returned there when the Homol’ovi villages were no longer occupied on a regular basis. Rich will examine the unique role of Homol’ovi II\, the largest and latest of the Cluster’s villages where excavations occurred in 1983-84 and from 1991-1995\, and discuss how it was founded\, when\, and by whom.\nTo register go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_7XYH9D18QJaGbAYTkF-Zbg. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nPhoto caption: A view of Kiva 708 at Homol’ovi II Pueblo in Homolovi State Park near Winslow\, AZ; parallel “claw” marks in the floor (left-center of the photo) evidence of vandalism by a backhoe.\nFlyer: 20210415(v1)ThirdThursday_RichLange_ArizonaStateMuseumResearchAroundHomolovi
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/a-history-of-arizona-state-museum-research-around-homolovi-and-at-the-ancestral-hopi-village-of-homolovi-ii-presentation/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210403T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210403T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210119T011713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210316T224736Z
UID:1977-1617436800-1617451200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch” Presentation and Tours
DESCRIPTION:RESCHEDULED TO DECEMBER 4\, 2021  On Saturday\, April 3\, 2021\, 8:00 a.m to noon\, “Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch” presentation and tours will be held at Historic Canoa Ranch\, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road\, Green Valley\, Arizona (accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56). This event begins with a PowerPoint presentation by Old Pueblo’s director Allen Dart titled “Before There Was a Canoa” about Canoa-area archaeology and history. The presentation is followed by three 1-hour tours to be provided by Pima County Natural Resources\, Parks & Recreation volunteers: 1) “Anza Tour at Historic Canoa Ranch\,” 2) “Tour of Historic Canoa Ranch\,” and 3) “The Gardens of Canoa.” The presentation and each tour will be limited to 32 registrants and will not be open to other Canoa Ranch visitors. Participants are encouraged to bring a sack lunch to enjoy after the program at Canoa Ranch’s Mesquite Grove\, or to have lunch in one of the many nearby Green Valley restaurants. All participants are asked to wear face masks and to practice physical distancing during the tour to avoid spreading COVID-19 virus.\nThere is a $30 requested donation ($24 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Friends of Pueblo Grande Museum members)\, which helps cover Old Pueblo’s tour expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures. Donations are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 p.m. on Wednesday\, March 31\, whichever is earlier. To register contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nPhoto caption: Canoa Lake and historic ranch headquarters photo by Michael Mock and Random Orbit Photography\nFlyer: 20210403(v1)Archaeology&HistoryOfCanoaRanchTourFlyer
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/archaeology-and-history-of-canoa-ranch-presentation-and-tours-2/
CATEGORIES:Presentations,Tours
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210318T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210318T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20210119T005424Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210201T203517Z
UID:1969-1616094000-1616099400@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Mimbres in Context: Hohokam\, Chaco\, Casas Grandes” Free Zoom Online Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online dinnertime program will feature “Mimbres in Context: Hohokam\, Chaco\, Casas Grandes” presentation by archaeologist Stephen H. Lekson. This free presentation will be held from 7:00-8:30 p.m. (MST). \nThe ancient Mimbres people of southwestern New Mexico were interesting not only for their famous pottery\, but also as “players” in the larger history of the ancient Southwest.  We consider Mimbres history in context of its times: Hohokam up to about 1000 CE; Chaco from 1000 to 1150; and the run-up to Paquimé/Casas Grandes from 1150 to 1250.  Mimbres began as pithouse villages making red-on-brown pottery (much like Hohokam red-on-buff) and developing Hohokam-inspired canal irrigation systems in the Chihuahua Desert.  Around 1000 Hohokam waned as Chaco waxed – the “Pueblo II Expansion” of old textbooks. Emil Haury\, long ago\, identified 1000 as approximately the time Mimbres was transformed into stone pueblos making black-on-white pottery; he insisted that Mimbres (a subset of the larger Mogollon region) essentially ceased being Mogollon and became much more Anasazi-like.  Mimbres flourished while Chaco flourished\, from 1000 to shortly before 1150.  Political shifts after 1125 at Chaco were reflected at the same time by mass depopulation and social change in the Mimbres river valleys.  Post-Mimbres people moved south into the desert\, and formed new communities in mud-walled-pueblo villages (some of considerable size) with little or no locally produced painted pottery.  Those post-Mimbres societies almost certainly contributed substantially to the base population for Paquimé\, the Casas Grandes regional center from 1300 to 1450. \nTo register for the Zoom meeting go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SX6CKc5dTxGpCHJEuhfc2g. \nPhoto caption: Color images on some Classic Mimbres pottery bowls in the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History\, and drawing of a Mimbres bowl from the Saige-McFarland site\, courtesy of Stephen H. Lekson. \nFlyer: 20210318(v1)ThirdThursday_SteveLekson_MimbresInContext-HohokamChacoCasasGrandes
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/mimbres-in-context-hohokam-chaco-casas-grandes-free-zoom-online-presentation/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210218T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210218T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20201211T225637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210128T153243Z
UID:1955-1613674800-1613680200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought online Zoom program featuring “¡Buen Provecho! A Multicultural History of Mexico and the Borderlands through Food and Taste”
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday\, February 18\, 2021\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” online Zoom program will feature “¡Buen Provecho! A Multicultural History of Mexico and the Borderlands through Food and Taste” by historian Dr. Michael Brescia. This free presentation will be held at 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Arizona/Mountain Standard Time. \nThis presentation examines how the fusion of foods and diet of the Americas and beyond transformed Mexico in the wake of the Spanish conquest and the establishment of Spanish colonialism in North America. Historian Dr. Michael Brescia will provide a food history of Mexico and the northern Borderlands region and discuss the cultural significance of a mestizaje of taste\, or the blending of foodways and nutritional regimes that changed global palates. In a richly illustrated lecture\, Michael will show how different cuisines and dishes reflect the broad sweep of the Mexican and Borderlands historical experiences. \nTo register for the program go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_kFEYAxk3RiSZvBDyPE_bcw. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nPhoto caption: Thick crust pizza? No\, it’s tortilla de patata (Spanish potato omelet) \nLink to flyer: 20210218(v2)ThirdThursday_MichaelBrescia_BuenProvecho!AMulticulturalHistory
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-online-zoom-program-featuring-buen-provecho-a-multicultural-history-of-mexico-and-the-borderlands-through-food-and-taste/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210121T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20210121T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200405T011823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201211T224722Z
UID:1733-1611255600-1611261000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought free online Zoom program featuring “Droughts and Floods Structured Social Interaction in the Pre-Hispanic Southwest”
DESCRIPTION:Maps showing southwestern environmental change through time provided by Dr. Gauthier \nOn Thursday January 21\, 2021 you are invited to attend Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free online Zoom program featuring “Droughts and Floods Structured Social Interaction in the Pre-Hispanic Southwest.” This free presentation by Dr. Nicolas E. Gauthier\, will be held at 7:00-8:30 p.m. Arizona/Mountain Standard Time \nWhen droughts and floods struck ancient agricultural societies\, complex networks of exchange and interaction channeled resources into affected settlements and migrants away from them. Did these networks evolve in part to connect populations living in differing climate regimes? Dr. Nicolas Gauthier examines this relationship with a long-term archaeological case study in the pre-Hispanic North American Southwest\, analyzing 7.5 million artifacts from nearly 500 archaeological sites spanning 250 years. He uses these artifacts to estimate how the flow of social information changed over time and to measure how the intensity of social interaction among sites varied as a function of distance and several regional drought patterns. \nTo register for the program go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN__RbawYwLSWis2JSbF4IzAw. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nLink to flyer:  20210121(v2)ThirdThursday_NicolasGauthier_Droughts&FloodsStructuredSocialInteraction \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-dinner-featuring-droughts-and-floods-structured-social-interaction-in-the-pre-hispanic-southwest/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201210T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201210T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200518T020717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200518T153129Z
UID:1819-1607623200-1607632200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday on the Second Thursday Food for Thought Dinner Presentation -  “Paint it Here\, but Never There: Landscapes of Reverent Avoidance in the Chiricahua Mountains”
DESCRIPTION:A view from the inside: Looking out into Cave Creek Canyon\, Arizona\, from one of its namesakes (Jonathan Patt photo). \nOn Thursday\, December 10\, 2020\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday on the Second Thursday Food for Thought” dinner presentation will feature “Paint it Here\, but Never There: Landscapes of Reverent Avoidance in the Chiricahua Mountains.” This presentation is by archaeologist Kelsey E. Hanson and will be held in the Dining Hall and Petroglyph Auditorium of the Picture Rocks Redemptorist Renewal Center\, 7101 W. Picture Rocks Road\, Tucson. The presentation is free but dinner is $16 per person. Dinner starts at 6 p.m.\, presentation will start around 7:00 and end around 8:30 p.m. \nSoutheastern Arizona is located on the fringes of several named cultural traditions – the Hohokam\, Mogollon\, and Casas Grandes\, and then was later occupied by the Apache. This borderlands region has received only sporadic scholarly attention. In 2018\, Kelsey E. Hanson and Jonathan Patt conducted a systematic survey of caves in the eastern Chiricahua Mountains\, at the heart of this cultural overlap. Their survey produced data on several new pictograph sites\, representing at least three different named pictograph traditions. Interestingly\, their spatial distributions demonstrate that different pictograph traditions rarely overlap in space but seem to occupy starkly different physiographic settings. In this talk\, archaeologist Kelsey Hanson will illustrate these spatial patterns and propose an interpretation she tentatively refers to as reverent avoidance of those who have come before. The results of her study have important implications for understanding identity and territoriality through time and space in this borderlands region. This month only\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s usual “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner program will be held on the Second Thursday of the month – December 10 – due to a schedule conflict on the Third Thursday (December 17). \nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. Tuesday December 8; dinner payments are due 10 days after reservation request or by 5 p.m. December 8\, whichever is earlier: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \nFlyer: 20201210(v1)Third(Second)Thursday_KelseyHanson_PaintItHereButNeverThere_LandscapesOfReverentAvoidanceFlyer \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-on-the-second-thursday-food-for-thought-dinner-presentation-paint-it-here-but-never-there-landscapes-of-reverent-avoidance-in-the-chiricahua-mountains/
LOCATION:Picture Rocks Redemptorist Renewal Center\, 7101 W. Picture Rocks Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201119T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201119T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200518T015200Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201104T201307Z
UID:1811-1605808800-1605817800@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought Dinner Presentation - "People and Politics behind the Construction of the Catalina Highway to Mount Lemmon”
DESCRIPTION:Example of prisoners’ workmanship at a drainage feature on the Catalina Highway (Coronado National Forest photo). \nOn November 19\, 2020\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” free Zoom online presentation will feature “People and Politics behind the Construction of the Catalina Highway to Mount Lemmon.” This presentation will be given by archaeologist Bill Gillespie from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m.. \nIn October 1948 the Tucson Chamber of Commerce sponsored a ceremony to dedicate the nearly complete Hitchcock Highway\, named to commemorate Frank H. Hitchcock\, the man whose astute lobbying efforts made the construction of the new highway a reality.  After 15 years of intensive work by men from Federal Prison Camp No. 10\, the 25-mile long highway was nearly completed.  As many years as the project took\, spanning much of the Great Depression and World War II\, it was preceded by decades of earlier\, unsuccessful efforts to build a road to connect Tucson with the cool high elevations of Mount Lemmon.  At various times citizen groups\, county supervisors\, the U.S. Forest Service\, and federal and state highway agencies strove to find ways to get the road built before 1933 when Hitchcock succeeded in negotiating a successful solution. Guest speaker Bill Gillespie did archaeological fieldwork at Mesa Verde\, Chaco Canyon\, and in Jordan before moving to southern Arizona in the mid-1980s to work as an archaeologist for the Coronado National Forest for 25 years. \nTo register for the program go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_bSfb3okVQRe8T6-zgx2s9A.\nFor more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: 20201119(v3)ThirdThursday_BillGillespie_CatalinaHighwayToMountLemmon \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-dinner-presentation-people-and-politics-behind-the-construction-of-the-catalina-highway-to-mount-lemmon/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201015T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201015T200000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200518T013422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200820T025907Z
UID:1802-1602784800-1602792000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought Online Zoom Presentation - “Revisiting Santa Cruz de Terrenate Presidio”
DESCRIPTION:Footprints found in dirt floor of a house excavated at Santa Cruz de Terrenate\, photo courtesy of Deni J. Seymour. \nOn October 15\, 2020\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” Zoom webinar will feature “Revisiting Santa Cruz de Terrenate Presidio” with archaeologist Dr. Deni J. Seymour. This free online presentation will be held from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Arizona/Mountain Standard Time). \nIn 1775-1776\, the government of New Spain created a series of frontier presidios along its northern frontier. Three of these are in Arizona. Archaeologist Deni Seymour\, Ph.D. conducted a multiyear field research program at what remains of Santa Cruz de Terrenate\, located along the San Pedro River near Sierra Vista. This is the best preserved of all the Spanish period presidios in the American Southwest. Join Dr. Seymour for a discussion of the history of this adobe fortress\, information about recent archaeological and ethnohistoric investigations\, and revisions to interpretations of work carried out by archaeologist Charles Di Peso almost 70 years ago. New findings include 240-year-old footprints\, information relevant to the location of the Sobaípuri sites of Quiburi and Santa Cruz\, and insights into hygiene\, population\, and status. \nTo register for the Zoom meeting go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_UPwKPkMyRQ-_woMJKk5rgw. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: OPAC_20201015(v2)ThirdThursday_DeniSeymour_RevisitingSantaCruzDeTerrenatePresidio
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-dinner-presentation-revisiting-santa-cruz-de-terrenate-presidio/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201010T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20201010T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200405T010139Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201008T153744Z
UID:1728-1602316800-1602331200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:"Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch" Presentation and Tours
DESCRIPTION:Caption: Canoa Lake and historic ranch headquarters photo by Michael Mock and Random Orbit Photography. \nRESCHEDULED TO APRIL 3\, 2021 On October 10\, 2020\, “Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch” presentation and tours will be held at Historic Canoa Ranch\, located at 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road\, Green Valley\, Arizona (accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56)\, starting from 8:00 a.m. to noon. There is a $30 requested donation ($24 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members)\, which helps cover Old Pueblo’s tour expenses and supports its education programs about archaeology and traditional cultures. \nThis event begins with a PowerPoint presentation by Old Pueblo’s director Allen Dart titled “Before There Was a Canoa” about Canoa-area archaeology and history. The presentation is followed by a 1-hour “Anza Tour at Historic Canoa Ranch” and a “Tour of Historic Canoa Ranch” to be provided by Pima County Natural Resources\, Parks & Recreation volunteers\, then the morning’s program will conclude with a “Behind the Scenes Restoration Tour” by Pima County architectural preservationist Simon Herbert. The presentation and each tour will be limited to 32 registrants and will not be open to other Canoa Ranch visitors. Participants are encouraged to bring a sack lunch to enjoy after the program at Canoa Ranch’s Mesquite Grove\, or to have lunch in one of the many nearby Green Valley restaurants. \nDonation prepayment is required within 10 days of reservation request; last day to request reservations is 5 p.m. Wednesday September 30: 520-798-1201 or info@oldpueblo.org. \n20201010(v2)Archaeology&HistoryOfCanoaRanchTourFlyer
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/archaeology-and-history-of-canoa-ranch-presentation-and-tours/
LOCATION:Historic Canoa Ranch\, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road (along I-19 East Frontage Road between the Continental and Canoa exits)\, Green Valley\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations,Tours
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200917T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200917T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200518T011100Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200820T030223Z
UID:1790-1600365600-1600374600@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought Online Zoom Presentation - “Camp Rucker: Apache Wars Outpost in the Chiricahua Mountains”
DESCRIPTION:1879 map of Camp John A. Rucker showing facilities then present at the Army post (Coronado National Forest photo). \nOn September 17\, 2020\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Third Thursday Food for Thought online Zoom presentation by Bill Gillespie featuring “Camp Rucker: Apache Wars Outpost in the Chiricahua Mountains.” This free online presentation will be held from 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. (Arizona/Mountain Standard Time). \nIn the summer of 1878\, the US Army established a small outpost called Camp Supply in the Chiricahua Mountains\, in the heart of the Chiricahua Apache homeland.  The initial purpose of the post was to serve as base of operations and supply depot for companies of Indian Scouts.  That function was cut short when the two young officers leading Indian Scout companies both drowned during a summer storm in the canyon. The camp was renamed Camp John A. Rucker in honor of one of them.  Although officially in use for less than three years\, the Army continued to make occasional use of the camp for nearly 20 more years\, most notably in its final campaign against Geronimo in the summer of 1886. Ranchers who lived at Camp Rucker in the decades that followed were an interesting lot\, some of whom wrote about life at Rucker in the 1880s through 1930s. As an archaeologist for the Coronado National Forest for 25 years\, guest speaker Bill Gillespie and his Forest Service colleague Mary Farrell conducted volunteer projects at Camp Rucker and successfully nominated the Rucker Canyon Archaeological District to the National Register of Historic Places.\nTo register for the Zoom meeting go to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_K6HS7IkdS0KNbXxxp44cJg. For more information contact Old Pueblo at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. \nFlyer: OPAC_20200917(v2)ThirdThursday_BillGillespie_CampRuckerApacheWarsOutpost
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-dinner-presentation-camp-rucker-apache-wars-outpost-in-the-chiricahua-mountains/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200416T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200416T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200211T202825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200406T203610Z
UID:1664-1587060000-1587069000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Droughts and Floods Structured Social Interaction in the Pre-Hispanic Southwest” Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Maps showing southwestern environmental change through time provided by Dr. Gauthier \nRESCHEDULED JANUARY 21\, 2021 – On Thursday\, April 16\, 2020\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner presentation will feature “Droughts and Floods Structured Social Interaction in the Pre-Hispanic Southwest” by Dr. Nicolas E. Gauthier. When droughts and floods struck ancient agricultural societies\, complex networks of exchange and interaction channeled resources into affected settlements and migrants away from them. Did these networks evolve in part to connect populations living in differing climate regimes? Dr. Nicolas Gauthier examines this relationship with a long-term archaeological case study in the pre-Hispanic North American Southwest\, analyzing 7.5 million artifacts from nearly 500 archaeological sites spanning 250 years. He uses these artifacts to estimate how the flow of social information changed over time and to measure how the intensity of social interaction among sites varied as a function of distance and several regional drought patterns. \nThis free presentation (order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense) will be held at El Molinito Mexican Restaurant\, 10180 N. Oracle Rd\, Oro Valley from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. Reservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date:  info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \n20200416(v1)ThirdThursday_NicolasGauthier_ReconstructingLandUseAndGlobalEnvironmentalChange
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/reconstructing-land-use-and-global-environmental-change-in-the-holocene-presentation/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200404T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200404T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200102T213432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200102T213432Z
UID:1646-1585987200-1586001600@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Presentation: “Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch”
DESCRIPTION:Canoa Lake and historic ranch headquarters photo by Michael Mock and Random Orbit Photography. \nOn Saturday\, April 4\, 2020 from 8:00 a.m. to noon\, join us for the “Archaeology and History of Canoa Ranch” presentation and tours at Historic Canoa Ranch\, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road\, Green Valley\, Arizona (accessible from I-19 Canoa Road Exit 56). There is a $30 requested donation ($24 for Old Pueblo Archaeology Center and Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary members). \n This event begins with a PowerPoint presentation by Old Pueblo’s director Allen Dart titled “Before There Was a Canoa” about Canoa-area archaeology and history. The presentation is followed by a 1-hour “Anza Tour at Historic Canoa Ranch” and a “Tour of Historic Canoa Ranch” to be provided by Pima County Natural Resources\, Parks & Recreation volunteers\, then the morning’s program will conclude with a “Behind the Scenes Restoration Tour” by Pima County architectural preservationist Simon Herbert. The presentation and each tour will be limited to 32 registrants and will not be open to other Canoa Ranch visitors. Participants are encouraged to bring a sack lunch to enjoy after the program at Canoa Ranch’s Mesquite Grove\, or to have lunch in one of the many nearby Green Valley restaurants. Reservations and prepayment required by 5 p.m. Thursday March 26: 520-798-1201 or  info@oldpueblo.org. \nLink to flyer: 20200404(v1)Archaeology&HistoryOfCanoaRanchTourFlyer
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/presentation-archaeology-and-history-of-canoa-ranch/
LOCATION:Historic Canoa Ranch\, 5375 S. I-19 Frontage Road (along I-19 East Frontage Road between the Continental and Canoa exits)\, Green Valley\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations,Tours
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200319T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200319T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200211T202024Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200318T194844Z
UID:1661-1584640800-1584649800@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Subjective Color in Mimbres Black-on-white Pottery” Presentation
DESCRIPTION:A Mimbres pottery design that produces subjective color; pot illustration courtesy of Dr. Whittlesey\, “Pastel Background New 2” image from www.rbgstock.com \nCANCELLED DUE TO COVID-19 CONCERN – On Thursday\, March 19\, 2020\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Third Thursday Food for Thought dinner presentation will feature “Subjective Color in Mimbres Black-on-white Pottery” by archaeologist Dr. Stephanie M. Whittlesey. Many Mimbres black-on-white geometric designs produce the illusion of color when rotated rapidly\, much like the subjective-color hallucination that has been known in the psychology of perception for more than a century. Subjective color is one of numerous neurophysiologically induced visual hallucinations that are universal in human beings and are produced by epilepsy\, migraines\, hallucinogens\, certain diseases\, and other causes. In her presentation for Old Pueblo\, Dr. Stephanie Whittlesey will describe the phenomenon and the design characteristics that produce it\, discuss similar visual hallucinations in the scientific literature\, suggest that some of the designs may have been created by shamans based on visions they had experienced during trances and shamanic journeys\, and speculate on the contribution of subjective color to Mimbres ritual organization. \nThis free presentation (order your own dinner off the restaurant’s menu at your expense) will be held at Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant (5252 S. Mission Rd\, Tucson) from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. Reservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date:  info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \n20200319(v1)ThirdThursday_StephanieWhittlesey_SubjectiveColorInMimbresPottery
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/subjective-color-in-mimbres-black-on-white-pottery-presentation/
LOCATION:Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200220T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200220T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20200102T205901Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200102T205901Z
UID:1635-1582221600-1582230600@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought: "Living with the Canals: Water\, Ecology\, and Cultural Memory in Banámichi\, Sonora"
DESCRIPTION:Sculpture in Plaza Juarez/Plaza de la Piedra Histórica (Plaza of the Historic Rock)\, Banámichi\, Mexico\, photo courtesy of Elizabeth Eklund. \nOn Thursday\, February 20\, 2020\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner featuring the presentation “Living with the Canals: Water\, Ecology\, and Cultural Memory in Banámichi\, Sonora” by anthropologist Elizabeth Eklund at Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson. Time: 6 to 8:30 p.m.\, presentation is free (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense.). \nRain falls from the sky\, some never reaches the ground\, some runs off down rivers\, and some soaks down into the aquifer. In Banámichi\, northwestern Mexico\, which has a close but uneasy\, centuries-old history with mining operations\, water emerges from a natural spring and flows through a human-made canal system that was modernized in the 1930s and 1940s. The system is older\, but how much older remains unclear. Early explorer Cabeza de Vaca reported an area with permanent houses and many stores of maize and frijoles. One particular historical narrative that emerged from archaeological research in the 1970s and 1980s is currently displayed in Banámichi’s Plaza Juarez/Plaza de la Piedra  Histórica (Plaza of the Historic Rock): a fountain featuring a corn stalk and a boulder supported by four Ópata-inspired figures representing four Río Sonora pueblos founded by Father Bartolome Casteñedos. On that boulder is a petroglyph that William Doolittle interpreted in the 1980s as depicting the pre-Hispanic canals and fields in the floodplain below. That narrative is often repeated today by water managers who attribute the tradition of canal irrigation to the Ópata peoples\, as attested by the petroglyph displayed in the town center. \n        Reservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \nLink to flyer: 20200220(v1)ThirdThursday_ElizabethEklund_LivingWithTheCanals
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-living-with-the-canals-water-ecology-and-cultural-memory-in-banamichi-sonora/
LOCATION:Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200116T060000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20200116T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190820T232030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190820T232030Z
UID:1578-1579154400-1579206600@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Mescal Agave Use in Arizona: Food\, Fiber\, and Vessel” - Third Thursday Food for Thought Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Agaves at sunset photo by Allen Dart \nOn Thursday\, January 16\, 2020\, 6:00 – 8:30 p.m.\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner featuring the presentation “Mescal Agave Use in Arizona: Food\, Fiber\, and Vessel” at El Molinito Mexican Restaurant\, 10180 N. Oracle Rd.\, Oro Valley\, Arizona; cosponsored by Arizona Humanities. The presentation is free – order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense. \nThe agave plant\, also known as mescal (not mescaline)\, was used by Native peoples for numerous utilitarian items. Mescal served as a valuable food source still being harvested and prepared to this day by many Indigenous groups. For millennia people have pit-roasted the heart of the plant yielding a nutritious food staple rich in calcium and zinc. This talk includes the life history of mescal\, and the multitude of Tribal uses of this intriguing plant and their long relationship with this plant from centuries ago to the modern era. Guest speaker Carrie Cannon\, a member of the Kiowa tribe of Oklahoma and also of Oglala Lakota descent\, is an ethnobotanist for the Hualapai Tribe’s Department of Cultural Resources. Carrie Cannon is a Native American Ethnobotanist for the Hualapai Tribe’s Department of Cultural Resources. This program is made possible by Arizona Humanities. \nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \nflyer  20200116(v1)ThirdThursday_CarrieCannon_MescalAgaveUse(1)
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/mescal-agave-use-in-arizona-food-fiber-and-vessel-third-thursday-food-for-thought-presentation/
LOCATION:El Molinito Mexican Restaurant\, 10180 N. Oracle Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191219T070000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191219T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190801T181951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190801T183141Z
UID:1559-1576738800-1576787400@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:“Feminist Theory and an Engendered Archaeology: Where We’ve Been and Where We Are Going”
DESCRIPTION:Female ceramic figurine photo courtesy of Suzanne Eckert. \nOn Thursday\, December 19\, 2019\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner will feature a presentation titled “Feminist Theory and an Engendered Archaeology: Where We’ve Been and Where We Are Going” by archaeologist Suzanne Eckert\, Ph.D.\, in the Dining Hall and Petroglyph Auditorium of the Picture Rocks Redemptorist Renewal Center\, 7101 W. Picture Rocks Road\, Tucson. Dinner starts at 6 p.m.\, presentation around 7-8:30 p.m.; dinner is $16 per person\, presentation is free. \nCan’t we study archaeology without modern politics? Did people multi-task in the past? Woman the Hunter – WHAT? How did people figure out how to domesticate plants? If there are only two sexes\, then why is it important to identify third genders in the past? How much strength does it take to flintknap? Is gender difference the same as gender inequality? Why are children and the elderly mostly invisible in archaeological research? Each of these questions can and has been addressed by feminist archaeology and an engendered archaeology. While some archaeologists would argue that feminist archaeology and an engendered archaeology are the same\, other archaeologists have argued for a distinction between the two. Dr. Eckert will present her current perspective on this topic\, discuss the feminist critique of archaeology\, and consider how the study of gender provides for a richer understanding of the past. Along the way\, she will provide examples from archaeological research around the world and anecdotes collected from her 20 years of struggling with this topic.\nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. Tuesday December 17 at info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\n      IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about the above-listed activity send an email to info@oldpueblo.org with “Send December 19 Third Thursday dinner flyer” in your email subject line.
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/feminist-theory-and-an-engendered-archaeology-where-weve-been-and-where-we-are-going/
LOCATION:Picture Rocks Redemptorist Renewal Center\, 7101 W. Picture Rocks Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191121T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191121T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190403T195812Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190801T171248Z
UID:1505-1574359200-1574368200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought - “Excavations at the Creekside Village Archaeological Site near Tularosa\, New Mexico”
DESCRIPTION:Photo of the Rio Tularosa\, courtesy of David Greenwald. \nJoin Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner on November 21\, 2019 from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m.\, featuring “Excavations at the Creekside Village Archaeological Site near Tularosa\, New Mexico” presentation by archaeologist David Greenwald\, at U-Like Oriental Buffet Asian Cuisine\, 5101 N. Oracle Rd.\, Tucson. \nArchaeological investigations at the Creekside Village archaeological site in south-central New Mexico now demonstrate that the Jornada Mogollon undertook strategies that included intensive agriculture. It is now clear that the Jornada Mogollon people who occupied places such as Tularosa Canyon possessed a much more complex social and ritual structure than previously recognized. Additionally\, they possessed a greater understanding of hydraulic technology and water management strategies that allowed them to focus at a very high level on agricultural production as their primary subsistence strategy. Investigations thus far indicate that strategies involving collecting/gathering and hunting were represented to a limited extent. As investigations have progressed\, it is now apparent that the Jornada Mogollon possessed comparable levels of knowledge and applications as other agriculturalists in the American Southwest during this time. This presentation will demonstrate the level of sophistication that the people at Creekside Village possessed as expressed through their material culture. \nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\n        20191121(v1)ThirdThursday_DavidGreenwald_ArchaeologicalSignificanceOfCreeksideVillage(2)
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-excavations-at-the-creekside-village-archaeological-site-near-tularosa-new-mexico/
LOCATION:U-Like Oriental Buffet Asian Cuisine\, 5101 N. Oracle Road\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191017T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20191017T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190403T194328Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190410T180454Z
UID:1499-1571335200-1571344200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought - “University Indian Ruin: A Classic Period Center in the Eastern Tucson Basin”
DESCRIPTION:Photo of partly excavated Hohokam horno (earth oven) with heating stones\, at University Indian Ruin\, courtesy of Paul and Suzanne Fish. \nOn Thursday\, October 17\, 2019 from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m.\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner will feature “University Indian Ruin: A Classic Period Center in the Eastern Tucson Basin” free presentation by Professors Suzanne K. Fish and Paul R. Fish\, at a Tucson-area restaurant to be announced. \nUniversity Indian Ruin\, one of the most prominent Hohokam platform-mound community centers between A.D. 1200 and 1450\, is located in Tucson’s Indian Ridge Estates neighborhood about seven miles from downtown Tucson. In 1930\, an archaeology student donated a 13-acre portion of this archaeological site to the University of Arizona’s Department of Archaeology for student training. Eminent archaeologists Byron Cummings\, Emil Haury\, and Julian Hayden conducted extensive excavations there throughout the 1930s\, however\, only Hayden’s 1957 investigations in the vicinity of the platform mound have been comprehensively reported. The University of Arizona School of Anthropology Archaeological Field School resumed fieldwork at the site in 2010\, conducting controlled surface artifact collections over the 13-acre archaeological preserve and excavating some of the site’s residential architecture. In our October program\, guest speakers Paul and Suzanne Fish will discuss the recent investigations\, and their insights into the changing regional interaction of the Hohokam Classic period evidenced by the site’s differential acquisition of polychrome pottery and other resources from far away\, including obsidian from distant quarries\, exotic cherts\, and pottery of Zuni and Sonoran origin.\nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\n        IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about the above-listed activity send an email to info@oldpueblo.org with “Send October 17 Third Thursday dinner flyer” in your email subject line.
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-university-indian-ruin-a-classic-period-center-in-the-eastern-tucson-basin/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190919T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190919T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190403T192340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190813T231357Z
UID:1491-1568916000-1568925000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought - "The Manila Galleon and the Opening of the Trans-Pacific West"
DESCRIPTION:Galleon illustration provided by Father Greg. \nOn Thursday\, September 19\, 2019 from 6:00-8:30 pm\, join us for dinner at Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant (located at 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson)\, followed by a presentation by Father Greg Adolf who will discuss “The Manila Galleon and the Opening of the Trans-Pacific West.” In this presentation\, local historian Father Greg Adolf will introduce the Spanish Empire’s Manila Galleons – the first  and perhaps most enduring cultural bridge of the trans-Pacific region. The first of the Galleons crossed the Pacific in 1565\, and the last in 1815. During the two and a half centuries between\, the galleons made the long and lonely voyage between Manila in the Philippines and Acapulco in Mexico. The Manila Galleons forever changed the material culture of the Spanish Americas. To the Californias and the Spanish settlements of Arizona’s and Sonora’s Pimería Alta\, they furnished the motive and drive to explore and populate the long California coastline. The Manila Galleon trade impacted every level of Spanish American culture. \nThis presentation is free (order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense). Reservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\n   LINK TO FLYER:     20190919(v2)_ThirdThursday_FrGregAdolf_Manila Galleon
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-the-manila-galleon-and-the-opening-of-the-trans-pacific-west/
LOCATION:Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190418T060000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190418T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190205T202731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190205T202731Z
UID:1457-1555567200-1555619400@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought presents "“Whiskey is for Drinking\, Water is for Fighting Over: Spain’s Impact on Law and Natural Resources in the American West”
DESCRIPTION:Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner will feature the presentation “Whiskey is for Drinking\, Water is for Fighting Over: Spain’s Impact on Law and Natural Resources in the American West” by historian Dr. Michael M. Brescia at a Tucson-area restaurant to be announced. This free presentation will be held from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense). \nWe tend to think that Spain’s historical influence in Arizona and the greater Southwest is confined to language and religion\, but its impact on law and agrarian practices tells us the fascinating story of water and the rhythms of daily life. Despite the 164 years that have passed since Arizona and southwestern New Mexico entered the United States (and 170 years for other places like California and northern New Mexico)\, American Indians and the Hispanic descendants of the first Spanish conquistadors continue to call upon old Spanish law to defend their rights to natural resources. Dr. Brescia examines how the Spanish empire defined property and natural resources during the colonial period\, the reasons why Spanish water rights are taken into consideration by the U.S. judicial system today\, and the inevitable clash that has taken place between two legal systems — American common law and Hispanic civil law – in the adjudication of water disputes in the Southwest.\nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\nIF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about the above-listed activity send an email to info@oldpueblo.org with “Send April 18 Third Thursday flyer” in your email subject line.
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-presents-whiskey-is-for-drinking-water-is-for-fighting-over-spains-impact-on-law-and-natural-resources-in-the-american-west/
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190321T060000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190321T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190205T202303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190226T200209Z
UID:1455-1553148000-1553200200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Third Thursday Food for Thought - "The Hohokam Landscape during Times of Transition”
DESCRIPTION:Photo by Henry D. Wallace showing partial excavation of the ancient Hohokam settlement at the Pima Animal Care Center\, courtesy of Desert Archaeology\, Inc. \nOn Thursday\, March 21\, 2019\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s Third Thursday Food for Thought dinner presentation will be “The Hohokam Landscape during Times of Transition” by archaeologist Dr. Michael Lindeman. This free presentation will be held at Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu at your expense.) \nPartially covered by the parking lots and outbuildings of the Pima Animal Care Center (PACC)\, lay a unique piece of the prehistoric Hohokam landscape. Settlement at PACC can be divided into two distinct episodes. The Tortolita phase (ca. A.D. 570-670) occupation corresponds with the founding of Hohokam villages throughout southern and central Arizona. The Late Rincon/Tanque Verde phase (ca. A.D. 1150-1250) occupation occurred during the transition between the Hohokam pre-Classic and Classic periods. Environmental constraints combined with the existing social landscape likely led to the abandonment of the Tortolita habitation at PACC\, but not the place. Investments made in the land and the rights to those lands remained tied to the social group who moved from PACC. Evidence suggests that the floodplain adjacent to PACC continued to be farmed long after habitation at PACC ceased. As pre-Classic villages began to fragment in the 11th and 12th centuries\, people returned to the abandoned settlement at PACC\, drawn by their long-held ties to the land. New habitation structures were constructed within the old plaza\, the physical and social center of the abandoned village. Though not “occupied” for 450 years\, the rights to the farmlands associated with the place had been maintained through time. During a time of social stress\, the holders of those rights\, real or created\, returned. \nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts.\n      IF YOU WOULD LIKE US TO EMAIL YOU A FLYER with color photos about the above-listed activity send an email to info@oldpueblo.org with “Send March 21 Third Thursday flyer” in your email subject line. \n20190321(v1)ThirdThursday-HohokamLandscapeDuringTimesOfTransition_MichaelLindeman
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-the-hohokam-landscape-during-times-of-transition/
LOCATION:Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190302T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190303T173000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190205T194629Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190226T194217Z
UID:1448-1551519000-1551634200@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:Old Pueblo Archaeology at Science City at Tucson Festival of Books
DESCRIPTION:Entrance to last year’s Science City at Tucson Festival of Books. Photograph by Rigoberto H. Valencia\, courtesy of the University of Arizona. \nDuring the Tucson Festival of Books\, March 2 & 3\, 2019\, Old Pueblo Archaeology Center will have a free science and activity station at Science City\, located at the University of Arizona Mall (1601 E. University Blvd\, Tucson)\, 9:30 – 5:30 each day. Stop by Old Pueblo’s outreach tables at the “Science of Everyday Life” neighborhood. Enjoy demonstrations of flintknapping (flaked-stone tool making) and other hands-on activities including making your own petroglyphs. Science City is huge (it’s called a city for a reason)\, spanning a third of the Tucson Festival of Books footprint\, and within its boundaries are six neighborhoods to explore – Science of Everyday Life\, Science in Art\, Science of Food\, Science of the Natural World\, Science of Tomorrow\, and Science of You. Co-hosted by The University of Arizona’s College of Science and BIO5 Institute\, Science City features more than 90 hands-on activities\, demonstrations\, informative talks\, author panels\, book signings\, and presentations for all ages. There’s a lot to do and see there in addition to visiting Old Pueblo’s outreach and demonstration area in the Science of Everyday Life neighborhood!\nNo reservations are needed. For more information about Old Pueblo’s involvement in Science City (or to assist as a volunteer!) contact Old Pueblo at 520-798-1201 or info@oldpueblo.org. \n20190302-0303(v1)OldPuebloScienceCityAtTucsonFestivalOfBooks
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/old-pueblo-archaeology-at-science-city-at-tucson-festival-of-books/
LOCATION:University of Arizona\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Children's Activities,News,Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190221T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20190221T203000
DTSTAMP:20260417T133820
CREATED:20190102T202013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190102T202013Z
UID:1436-1550772000-1550781000@www.oldpueblo.org
SUMMARY:"Third Thursday Food for Thought" Presents “Layering Diverse Relationships to Place: A View from the Top of Inscription Rock”
DESCRIPTION:“Paso por aqui” pictograph created in 1605 by Spanish explorer Juan de Oñate on Inscription Rock\, now part of El Morro National Monument\, photograph by Kelsey Hanson. \nOn Thursday\, February 21\, 2019\, join Old Pueblo Archaeology Center’s “Third Thursday Food for Thought” dinner featuring the presentation “Layering Diverse Relationships to Place: A View from the Top of Inscription Rock” by Kelsey Hanson. This free presentation (order your own dinner off of the restaurant’s menu) will be held at Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant located at 5252 S. Mission Road\, Tucson from 6:00 to 8:30 pm. \nTowering high above El Morro Valley in New Mexico\, Inscription Rock is a massive sandstone promontory that has attracted diverse groups of people for centuries. Principally known for its early Spanish inscriptions\, Inscription Rock manifests a deeper\, centuries-long reverence in hundreds of petroglyphs and pictographs\, hand-and-toe-hold trails\, and pueblos. In this talk\, University of Arizona School of Anthropology Ph.D. student Kelsey Hanson addresses the question “How can we both recognize and protect diverse relationships to a single place without privileging some relationships over others?” Drawing from ongoing work to nominate the Inscription Rock Archaeological District to the National Register of Historic Places\, she demonstrates the importance of underappreciated legal mechanisms for layering historic relationships to places. This presentation will highlight the benefits of working with multiple stakeholders and the importance of proactively seeking multiple layers of protection for places of cultural significance. \nReservations must be requested AND CONFIRMED before 5 p.m. on the Wednesday before the program date: info@oldpueblo.org or 520-798-1201. PLEASE WAIT TO HEAR FROM OLD PUEBLO WHETHER YOUR RESERVATION HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BEFORE ATTENDING because the Fire Code limits how many guests we can have in the restaurant meeting room. Guests may select and purchase their own dinners from the restaurant’s menu. There is no entry fee but donations will be requested to benefit Old Pueblo’s educational efforts. \n20190221(V1)_ThirdThursday_KelseyHanson_InscriptionRock \n 
URL:https://www.oldpueblo.org/event/third-thursday-food-for-thought-presents-layering-diverse-relationships-to-place-a-view-from-the-top-of-inscription-rock/
LOCATION:Karichimaka Mexican Restaurant\, 5252 S. Mission Rd.\, Tucson\, AZ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Presentations
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR