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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Arizona Humanities
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DTSTART:20170101T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20180505T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20180505T140000
DTSTAMP:20260531T082756
CREATED:20180426T121917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180426T121917Z
UID:10065629-1525525200-1525528800@azhumanities.org
SUMMARY:Set in Stone but Not in Meaning: Southwestern Indian Rock Art - Phoenix
DESCRIPTION: Ancient Indian pictographs (rock paintings) and petroglyphs (symbols carved or pecked on rocks) are claimed by some to be forms of writing for which meanings are known. However\, are such claims supported by archaeology or by Native Americans themselves? Mr. Dart illustrates southwestern petroglyphs and pictographs\, and discusses how even the same rock art symbol may be interpreted differently from popular\, scientific\, and modern Native American perspectives.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nRegistered Professional Archaeologist Allen Dart has worked in Arizona and New Mexico since 1975. He is a state cultural resource specialist/archaeologist for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service and volunteer director of Tucson’s Old Pueblo Archaeology Center nonprofit organization\, which he founded in 1993 to provide educational and scientific programs in archaeology\, history\, and cultures. Al has received the Arizona Governor’s Award in Public Archaeology\, the Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society’s Victor R. Stoner Award\, and the Arizona Archaeological Society’s Professional Archaeologist of the Year Award for his efforts to bring archaeology and history to the public.
URL:https://azhumanities.org/event/set-in-stone-but-not-in-meaning-southwestern-indian-rock-art-phoenix/
LOCATION:Heard Museum\, 2301 N. Central Ave.\, Phoenix\, AZ\, 85004\, United States
CATEGORIES:AZ Speaks
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20180317T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20180317T140000
DTSTAMP:20260531T082756
CREATED:20180208T155800Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180208T155800Z
UID:10065546-1521291600-1521295200@azhumanities.org
SUMMARY:The Earliest Apache in Arizona: Evidence and Arguments - Phoenix
DESCRIPTION:How did the Apache impact late prehistoric peoples? Research provides evidence of ancestral Apaches in the southern Southwest as early as A.D. 1300. Evidence comes from chronometric dates obtained from storage features (covered with grass or leaves)\, on Apache pottery\, and from roasting pits\, all in direct association with other types of Apache material culture. A continuous sequence of use from the A.D. 1300s through the late 1700s provides new insights into a western route into this region and the presence of the earliest ancestral Apache three centuries earlier than previously thought\, even in areas where Coronado did not see them. \nDr. Seymour is an internationally recognized authority on protohistoric\, Native American\, and Spanish colonial archaeology and ethno-history. For 30 years\, she has studied the Apache\, Sobaipuri O’odham\, and lesser-known mobile groups. She has excavated Spanish presidios\, numerous Kino-period missions\, and several indigenous sites. She works with indigenous groups\, tackles the Coronado and Niza expeditions\, and is reworking the history of the pre-Spanish and colonial period of the Southwest.
URL:https://azhumanities.org/event/the-earliest-apache-in-arizona-evidence-and-arguments-phoenix-2/
LOCATION:Heard Museum\, 2301 N. Central Ave.\, Phoenix\, AZ\, 85004\, United States
CATEGORIES:AZ Speaks
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