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- Ethnography of the Yuma Indians
- San Diego History Center Is One of the Largest and Oldest Historical Organizations on the West Coast
- Phase I Report
- Yuma County Recorded Subdivision Index
- Letter to Interested Parties
- Docket 02-Afc-2C Date Jan 2010 Recd
- The Legacy of Reclamation and Allotment on Quechan Indian Lands, 1700-1940
- A Desert Cattle Drive of 1890 Contents by Phil Brigandi Desert Cattle Drive (Brigandi)
- The Name of This Group Is the Quechan (Kwtsaan, Yuma) People, Which Means “Those Who Descended”
- Winterhaven / Quechan Reservation Rural Connector
- W-121 248 South Madison Avenue Yuma, Arizona 85364 Phone: 928-782-1841
- 2017 Files/The Southern Emigrant Trail
- Fresh Water on Fort Yuma Desert
- P"Rri, Volleys
- California Column 1 California Column
- The Mountain Springs Grade: Conquering San Diego’S Mountain Barrier to Commerce with the East Joe Streetman
- Thomas William Sweeny Papers: Finding Aid
- Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation and State Of
- Yuma Was Named After the Yuman Native Americans and Founded As a River Port
- Appendix E: Cultural Resources Study
- A Phase I Cultural Resources Assessment of Public Use Permit 778, Revised Permit No
- California Indian Tribal Homelands
- Quechan Indian Tribe
- 40 CFR Ch. I (7–1–12 Edition) § 81.305
- Stories from the Quechan Oral Literature
- Tribes in the Lower Colorado Region
- Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation, California and Arizona 350 Picacho Road Yuma, AZ 85365
- Special List 13: Cartographic Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
- Fort Yuma-Quechan Tribe P.O.Box 1899 Yuma, Arizona 85366-1899
- 5. Consultation, Coordination, and Public Involvement
- Indian Reservations in Arizona, Nevada, & Utah
- Race and Ethnicity Disaggregation
- Cultural Resource Assessment for the Base Line Road and Church Avenue Mixed Use Development
- Download Date 28/09/2021 16:24:40