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Index 1 INDEX
Index 1 INDEX A Blue Spring 76, 106, 110, 115 Bluff Spring Trail 184 Adeii Eechii Cliffs 124 Blythe 198 Agate House 140 Blythe Intaglios 199 Agathla Peak 256 Bonita Canyon Drive 221 Agua Fria Nat'l Monument 175 Booger Canyon 194 Ajo 203 Boundary Butte 299 Ajo Mountain Loop 204 Box Canyon 132 Alamo Canyon 205 Box (The) 51 Alamo Lake SP 201 Boyce-Thompson Arboretum 190 Alstrom Point 266, 302 Boynton Canyon 149, 161 Anasazi Bridge 73 Boy Scout Canyon 197 Anasazi Canyon 302 Bright Angel Canyon 25, 51 Anderson Dam 216 Bright Angel Point 15, 25 Angels Window 27 Bright Angel Trail 42, 46, 49, 61, 80, 90 Antelope Canyon 280, 297 Brins Mesa 160 Antelope House 231 Brins Mesa Trail 161 Antelope Point Marina 294, 297 Broken Arrow Trail 155 Apache Junction 184 Buck Farm Canyon 73 Apache Lake 187 Buck Farm Overlook 34, 73, 103 Apache-Sitgreaves Nat'l Forest 167 Buckskin Gulch Confluence 275 Apache Trail 187, 188 Buenos Aires Nat'l Wildlife Refuge 226 Aravaipa Canyon 192 Bulldog Cliffs 186 Aravaipa East trailhead 193 Bullfrog Marina 302 Arch Rock 366 Bull Pen 170 Arizona Canyon Hot Springs 197 Bush Head Canyon 278 Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum 216 Arizona Trail 167 C Artist's Point 250 Aspen Forest Overlook 257 Cabeza Prieta 206 Atlatl Rock 366 Cactus Forest Drive 218 Call of the Canyon 158 B Calloway Trail 171, 203 Cameron Visitor Center 114 Baboquivari Peak 226 Camp Verde 170 Baby Bell Rock 157 Canada Goose Drive 198 Baby Rocks 256 Canyon del Muerto 231 Badger Creek 72 Canyon X 290 Bajada Loop Drive 216 Cape Final 28 Bar-10-Ranch 19 Cape Royal 27 Barrio -
MOCA Visitors Guide Issue 5
2 0 0 6 VOLUME 1 • NUMBER 5 VISITORVMONTEZUMAI WELLS • MONTEZUMAIT CASTLEO NATIONALR MONUMENT GUIDEG • TUZUIGOOT NAITIONADL MONUMEENT Welcome To The Monuments Of The 1906: It Was a Very Good Year! Verde Valley HONORING 100 YEARS OF MONTEZUMA CASTLE The Verde Valley, lying under the spectacular NATIONAL MONUMENT AND THE ANTIQUITIES ACT pine-clad cliffs of the Mogollon Rim of central Arizona, forms an immense biological milestone in the administrative history transition between desert, grassland and forest vegetation zones. and stewardship of Montezuma Castle As the seasons change, this endangered A will be observed on December 8, 2006: riparian or streamside habitat of the Verde one hundred years ago, President Theodore River serves as a migration corridor for many Roosevelt proclaimed the site one of the United animals traveling from summer to winter State’s fi rst National Monuments. ranges in the south. But for thousands of The legislation that granted the president sole years, the Verde Valley was also a haven for authority to designate such areas of signifi cant the movement of people, providing the food historic and scientifi c interest is the Antiquities and water all life needs for survival. Act of 1906. Signed into law on June 8, 1906, The National Monuments of the Verde the Antiquities Act has been praised as the Valley —Montezuma Castle, Montezuma most signifi cant piece of legislation to protect Well and Tuzigoot —protect and interpret the legacy of the Sinagua, an Ancestral the rapidly disappearing cultural and natural Pueblo people who fl ourished in the area for resources on public lands. -
The Best of Arizona Planning
05_287767-ch01.qxp 9/18/08 3:59 PM Page 4 1 The Best of Arizona Planning a trip to a state as large and diverse as Arizona involves a lot of decision making (other than which golf clubs to take), so in this chapter I’ve tried to give you some direction. Below, I’ve chosen what I feel is the very best the state has to offer— the places and experiences you won’t want to miss. Although sights and activities listed here are written up in more detail elsewhere in this book, this chapter should help you plan your trip. 1 The Best Places to Commune with Cactus • Desert Botanical Garden (Phoenix): scorpions, black widows, and Gila There’s no better place in the state to monsters). See p. 359. learn about the plants of Arizona’s • Saguaro National Park (Tucson): Sonoran Desert and the many other Lying both east and west of Tucson, deserts of the world. Displays at this this park preserves “forests” of Phoenix botanical garden explain saguaro cacti and is the very essence plant adaptations and how indige- of the desert that so many imagine it nous tribes once used many of this to be. You can hike it, bike it, or drive region’s wild plants. See p. 121. it. See p. 364. • Boyce Thompson Arboretum (east • Tohono Chul Park (Tucson): of Phoenix): Just outside the town of Although this park is not that large, it Superior, this was the nation’s first packs a lot of desert scenery into its botanical garden established in a modest space. -
Sedona and the Grand Canyon Hiking Arizona’S Best!
Sedona and the Grand Canyon Hiking Arizona’s Best! Saturday, March 19 - Sunday, March 27, 2022 (trip #2222) The desert, when the sun comes up. I couldn't tell where heaven stopped and the Earth began. -Tom Hanks Overview Join us for five days of hiking in the Red Rock Country of Sedona, Arizona ending with two spectacular days in the Grand Canyon. March is the perfect time to visit the desert, with its spring flowers amidst the stunning landscape, deep canyons, soaring mesas and gentle streams. This is an area of serene and breathtaking beauty with many wonderful and accessible trails. During our hikes, we will have beautiful views of vivid red sandstone, towering pinnacles, sheer canyon walls and massive red-rock formations. This is also the land of contrasts with lush, thick vegetation along flowing streams, such as at the mouth of the spectacular Oak Creek Canyon alongside the dry high desert. While in Sedona we will visit The Palatki Heritage site. “Palatki,” the Hopi word for “red house,” has a set of ancient cliff dwellings in the red sandstone cliffs, built from 1100 to 1400 CE by the Sinagua people of the Ancestral Puebloans. These people left behind enduring rock art as well as ruins of their pueblos and cliff dwellings. If you read about Sedona, you will discover it has long been regarded as a place both sacred and powerful. People travel from all across the globe to experience the mysterious cosmic forces said to emanate from the red rocks - the vortexes. Sedona vortexes are thought to be swirling centers of energy conducive to healing, meditation and self-exploration. -
Free PDF Download
ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST CONTINUE ON TO THE NEXT PAGE FOR YOUR magazineFREE PDF (formerly the Center for Desert Archaeology) is a private 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization that explores and protects the places of our past across the American Southwest and Mexican Northwest. We have developed an integrated, conservation- based approach known as Preservation Archaeology. Although Preservation Archaeology begins with the active protection of archaeological sites, it doesn’t end there. We utilize holistic, low-impact investigation methods in order to pursue big-picture questions about what life was like long ago. As a part of our mission to help foster advocacy and appreciation for the special places of our past, we share our discoveries with the public. This free back issue of Archaeology Southwest Magazine is one of many ways we connect people with the Southwest’s rich past. Enjoy! Not yet a member? Join today! Membership to Archaeology Southwest includes: » A Subscription to our esteemed, quarterly Archaeology Southwest Magazine » Updates from This Month at Archaeology Southwest, our monthly e-newsletter » 25% off purchases of in-print, in-stock publications through our bookstore » Discounted registration fees for Hands-On Archaeology classes and workshops » Free pdf downloads of Archaeology Southwest Magazine, including our current and most recent issues » Access to our on-site research library » Invitations to our annual members’ meeting, as well as other special events and lectures Join us at archaeologysouthwest.org/how-to-help In the meantime, stay informed at our regularly updated Facebook page! 300 N Ash Alley, Tucson AZ, 85701 • (520) 882-6946 • [email protected] • www.archaeologysouthwest.org ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTHWEST SPRING 2014 A QUARTERLY PUBLICATION OF ARCHAEOLOGYmagazine SOUTHWEST VOLUME 28 | NUMBER 2 A Good Place to Live for more than 12,000 Years Archaeology in Arizona's Verde Valley 3 A Good Place to Live for More Than 12,000 Years: Archaeology ISSUE EDITOR: in Arizona’s Verde Valley, Todd W. -
ARIZONA TRAVEL GUIDE Antelope Canyon
UK/ENGLISH DISCOVER UNFORGETTABLE PLACES & AMAZING WONDERS TRAVEL GUIDE 2020 ARIZONA STATE MAP St. George U T A H GLEN CANYON Colorado KAIBAB- FOUR Littlefield 15 PAIUTE Fredonia MONUMENT City VERMILION Page VALLEY CORNERS 389 CLIFFS Lees Ferry 160 TRIBAL ? 163 TRIBAL PARK Mexican Teec PARK PIPE Jacob Marble Water Nos SPRING Lake Canyon Pos ALT Kayenta 89 NAVAJO Vermilion 20 NEVADA Cliffs 98 Shonto 59 191 Round r e Rock v i Cow R 67 Springs GRAND CANYON— 89 SAN JUAN 12 GRAND SOUTHERN PARASHANT o NAVAJO Many CANYON d PAIUTE a Tsaile r Farms o Las Vegas er GRAND l Tonalea iv Supai o CANYON C Tuba R HUALAPAI City 160 NORTHERN 64 North Rim Temple HILLTOP HAVASUPAI Chinle CANYON HOOVER DE CHELLY Bar Grand DAM SKYWALK Moenkopi o Canyon LAKE Meadview GRAND d MEAD a Village ? CANYON r 264 o Tusayan Hotevilla l 18 64 Walpi o Polacca C Cameron Keams Fort 1 Oraibi Canyon 64 Gray Kykotsmovi Defiance HUALAPAI Mountain Second 93 Mesa Ganado 264 Peach ? Window Springs Valle 89 HOPI HUBBELL TRADING St. Michaels Rock 66 WUPATKI 6 POST Chloride 180 2 87 Indian 15 12 ? SUNSET Wells Valentine 64 CRATER 191 Bullhead Seligman Ash Leupp Lupton Laughlin City 68 Fork ? ? Flagstaff 15 ? ? ? 40 Chambers Williams RIORDAN 77 Sanders Kingman MANSION WALNUT 95 CANYON HOMOLOVI Oatman 89 DEAD HORSE ? Joseph Navajo 191 FORT RANCH ALT MOJAVE 89 Winslow City PETRIFIED HUALAPAI SLIDE ROCK 40 FOREST 61 Paulden TUZIGOOT Needles Sedona ? Mormon Lake Topock Chino Clarkdale RED Holbrook ? WEST JEROME Cottonwood ROCK Valley ? 87 Wikieup Jerome Village ? 179 of ALT Oak Creek 61 95 COAST Prescott Valley 89 260 377 180 ZUNI Bagdad MONTEZUMA CASTLE 77 ? Lake Montezuma ? Lake Havasu 169 FORT VERDE 93 Prescott YAVAPAI- ? ? City ? PRESCOTT Dewey ?Camp 260 St. -
Vestiges February 2013 Volume 33 Number 1
February May2013 Volume 3 20063 NumberVolume 1 26 Number 5 Monthly newsletter of URARA, the Utah Rock Art Research Association Table of Contents President’s Letter ........................................ 1 Rock Art 101--Coso Range ........................ 4 Calendar of Events ..................................... 2 2013 IFRAO Conference............................ 5 Upcoming Fieldtrip-April ........................ 2 Call for URARA Fieldtrip Leaders ......... 5 Mansard Site Documentation .................. 3 Friends of Edge of Cedars Museum ....... 6 Rock Art Recording Project ...................... 4 URARA Board Contacts ............................ 7 Upper Sand Island Exhibit ....................... 4 President’s Letter By Ben Everitt Another great year behind us, I want to thank everyone for a great symposium. And thanks to outgoing board members Nina Bowen and Jeff Allen. Neither is retiring, but remains active participants in the enterprise. Jeff will be the Vestiges Editor for 2013, and Nina remains on the publications and preservation committees. You may expect Vestiges quarterly, with shorter newsletters as needed. Activities will be posted on the web calendar (http://www.utahrockart.org/) as URARA Board Retreat Attendees in Washington Fields: they come available, so check now and Nina Bowen, Oscar Olson, Richard Jenkinson, Joe Brame, Ben then. Everitt, Margaret Grochocki. Photo by Francois Gohier. The Board of Directors met on January 18 to organize itself and lay out plans for the year. Then they went off to look at rock art. Treasurer’s Report – Ben Everitt The year 2012 posted an inflow of $14,068.92, and an outflow of 12,756.15, resulting in a net gain of 1330.77, which is almost exactly the amount generated by the auction. A table of expense and income by category is attached. -
Echoes Fall 2009 Final.Pdf
National Park Service Park News and Visitor Guide U.S. Department of Interior Montezuma Castle and Tuzigoot National Monuments VO L UM E 4 • N UMB ER 1 FALL 2009 / WINTER 2010 Welcome To The Monuments Of The Verde Valley Echoes from the Past The Verde Valley, lying under the spectacular pine-clad cliffs of the Mogollon Rim of central Arizona, forms an immense biological transition between desert, grassland and forest vegetation zones. DISCOVERING THE 10,000 YEAR LEGACY As the seasons change, this endangered riparian or streamside habitat of the Verde River serves as a migration corridor for many OF PEOplE IN THE VERDE VALLEY animals traveling from summer to winter ranges in the south. But for thousands of years, the Verde Valley was also a haven for the visit to Montezuma Castle, Montezuma Well and movement of people, providing the food and water all life needs for Tuzigoot National Monuments provokes many survival. A questions. Why did they live here? Where did they The National Monuments of the Verde Valley - Montezuma Castle, go? And, perhaps most importantly, how did they live in Montezuma Well and Tuzigoot - protect and interpret the legacy of this land of seemingly harsh contrasts: hot and arid in the the Sinagua culture, an Native people who flourished in the area for summer, cool in the winter? centuries, long before Columbus claimed to have discovered this New World. continued on page 4 Montezuma Castle has been described as the best preserved and most dramatic cliff dwelling in the United States. Montezuma Well is CO NTENT S a natural limestone sinkhole with prehistoric sites and several animal General Information 2 species found nowhere else in the world. -
Weekend Getaways Flagstaff, Sedona, Bisbee
The snow-cloaked San Francisco Peaks loom over a wintry landscape near Flagstaff.| TOM BROWNOLD Weekend Getaways Flagstaff, Sedona, Bisbee ... there’s a lot to do in those three places, and trying to fit it all into one weekend can be tough. To make things a little easier, we put together itineraries of where to eat, sleep, hike and splurge. We also threw in some history, something for the kids and more. By Noah Austin, Robert Stieve & Kelly Vaughn Kramer 16 JANUARY 2015 www.arizonahighways.com 17 WEEKEND GETAWAYS Flagstaff EAT ally through an open grove of downtown, the Riordan Mansion Brix ponderosas, past the Kachina is actually two homes connected “Our menu changes season- Trail and into the Kachina Peaks by a “rendezvous room.” It was ally to ensure that we serve only Wilderness. Just past the wilder- built in 1904 for Timothy and the freshest ingredients from ness boundary, it skirts the ridge Michael Riordan, two brothers our local and regional network of a shaded canyon. The trees are who owned the Arizona Lumber of friends.” That’s the philoso- a kaleidoscope of greens in spring and Timber Co. They were phy at Brix, which is located in and summer. Moving on, the partners in just about every the historic Carriage House in trail becomes a series of gradual way — they even married a set of downtown Flagstaff. Among switchbacks, and the vegetation sisters. Today, the 13,000-square- others, its network includes changes from ponderosas and foot home is a state park, which Hayden Mills in Tempe, Ridgeview aspens to alpine species, includ- gives a detailed look at the lives Farms in Paulden and Black Mesa ing corkbark firs and Engelmann of the rich and famous in the Ranch in Snowflake. -
From Craggy Sandstone Spires to Deeply Hued Buttes, Arizona's Red
ROUTE 66 Road Trip By Kimber Williams A Land From craggy sandstone spires to deeply hued buttes, 20 Arizona’s Red Rock Country radiates natural beauty Scenic Route Vol. 2 / No. 6 ROUTE 66 Road Trip he first rays of sunlight told. “Fact is, you’ll be hard-pressed brush gingerly over to find a bad place to take a picture.” Red Rock Country, as if In many ways, it is a fierce nudging colors awake. land. The pebbled desert floor is TPigments emerge cautiously: populated by thorny, angry-look- deep violets gradually giving way ing vegetation. Prickly pear cactus to bands of burnt umber and cin- and cat claw acacia compete with namon, streaks of rusty iron and manzanita, juniper and larkspur. tawny buff. Within moments, the Summer heat can be oppressive rocky land surrounding Sedona — peak visitor’s season runs fall ignites with intense, eye-popping through spring. Signs everywhere hues, blushing with the slightest caution about rattlesnakes. In fact, shift of sunlight. gaze upon this vast, wrinkled topog- To a group of early-rising onlook- raphy and it’s hard to imagine this ers, perched atop a windy mesa land giving life to anything. And above the small northern Arizona yet, Red Rock Country seems to town, it was as if someone had flung pulse with its own eccentric energy, open the lid to an artist’s paintbox, awash in a thundering silence. the desert exposed in a palette of vibrant shades. Red Rock by RV All around, cameras click and The secret to visiting this natural hum like a herd of paparazzi. -
Copyrighted Material
INDEX A Apache Trail, 205–207 Arizona Outback Adventures, The Abyss, 283 Aravaipa Canyon Preserve, 67, 174, 327 Accommodations, 76–77 522 Arizona Raft Adventures, 61 best, 18–23 Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness, Arizona Renaissance Festival, INDEX best swimming pools at, 522 50 23–24 The Arboretum at Flagstaff , Arizona River Runners, 61 Active vacations, 4–5, 66–75 310 Arizona Science Center Actors Theatre (Phoenix), 204 Arcosanti, 209 (Phoenix), 158 Adventure trips, 64 Area codes, 551 Arizona Snowbowl (near Agate Bridge, 354 Arizona Antique Shows Flagstaff ), 74, 308–309 Agate House, 354 (Phoenix), 187 Arizona Soaring (Maricopa), Agua Fria National Arizona Association of Bed & 173 Monument, 209 Breakfast Inns, 77, 414 Arizona-Sonora Desert Airplane and helicopter Arizona Biltmore Golf Club Museum (Tucson), 443, tours, 249 (Phoenix), 176 446 Glen Canyon, 376 Arizona Biltmore (Phoenix), Arizona State Museum Grand Canyon South Rim, 160 (Tucson), 451 290–291 Arizona Biltmore Spa Arizona State University Art Grand Canyon West, 327 (Phoenix), 186 Museum at Nelson Fine Phoenix area, 174 Arizona Capitol Museum Arts Center (Tempe), 154 Airport Mesa, 242, 243 (Phoenix), 156 Arizona Strip Field Offi ce, Airport Mesa Trail, 250–251 Arizona Cardinals, 184 303 Air travel, 54–56 Arizona Cowboy College Arizona Theatre Company, Alcantara Vineyards, 237 (Scottsdale), 73 475–476 Alpine, 401–403 Arizona Diamondbacks, Arizona Trail Association, 65 American Airlines Vacations, 183, 184 Arizona Trails Travel 65 Arizona Doll & Toy Museum Services, 77, 111, 414 American -
Newsletter of the Arizona Archaeological Society
PETROGLYPH Newsletter of the Arizona Archaeological Society Volume 46, Number 1 www.AzArchSoc.org September 2009 Arizona Archaeological Society State Meeting Winslow, Arizona – May 16-17, 2009 Hosted by Homolovi Chapter I. Welcome - Chair Sylvia Lesko welcomed all attendees and offered special thanks to the Homolovi Chapter for organizing the event. Darlene Brinkerhoff added her welcome and reviewed the event schedule for the weekend as well as the logistics of where everything would be located. Attendees were asked to sign the Hubble Trading Post register, information was given on the Silent Auction, and all going on field trips were asked to sign field trip releases and give them to the leader. The lunch speaker will be followed by the raffle. II. Call to Order - Chair Sylvia Lesko called the meeting to order at 9:15 a.m. Roll call followed: Chapter Present Voting Proxy Chapter Present Voting Proxy Agua Fria 8 3 3 Northern Arizona 2 5 2 Ajo 0 0 0 Phoenix 5 0 6 Agave House 3 3 0 Rim Country 4 4 4 Desert Foothills 11 5 1 San Tan 0 0 0 Homolovi 4 2 0 Tubac/Santa Cruz 1 0 0 Little Colorado 0 0 0 Verde Valley 9 2 0 Mohave 0 0 0 Yavapai 7 2 0 Proxies were collected from Agua Fria, Northern Arizona, Desert Foothills, Phoenix, and Rim Country III. Approval of January 2009 State Meeting Minutes - The minutes were approved as published. IV. State Treasurer’s Report – submitted via email to Ginger Johnson for placement in secretary’s file V.