essay

A San Pedro Valley perspective on ancestral pueblo migration in the Hohokam world

hohokam millenniumSanta Fe, N.M. • Published In 2007 • Pages: 98-107

By: Clark, Jeffrey J..

Abstract
Clark describes Hohokam settlement pattern in the San Pedro valley of southeastern Arizona. He describes some of the changes that occurred to the Hohokam as a result of two separate migrations of people from the Kayenta regions. He also describes some of the cultural traditions that the migrants continued once they settled in the San Pedro valley, such as continuing to build domestic structures such as one would see in northern Arizona and continuing to make Kayenta ceramics.
Subjects
Settlement patterns
Sociocultural trends
External migration
Dwellings
Ceramic technology
tradition
Hohokam
HRAF PubDate
2010
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Archaeologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Sarah Berry; 2009
Field Date
1990-2005
Coverage Date
1300-550 BP (AD 700-1450)
Coverage Place
San Pedro River valley, Arizona, United States
Notes
Jeffrey J. Clark
For bibliographical references see document 89:Fish and Fish
LCCN
2007024336
LCSH
Hohokam culture--Arizona--Phoenix
Excavations (Archaeology)--Arizona--Phoenix
Phoenix (Ariz.)--Antiquities