Hohokam Along the Cañada Del Oro

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Archaeological field training
Arizona archeology
canada del Oro
Category=NHK
Category=NK
Category=WQH
Early Agricultural Period
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eq_history
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flaked stone
forthcoming
Hohokam archaeology
hohokam sites
Pima Community College
Pima County archaeology
Prehistoric agave processing
Romero ruin
Santa Catalina mountains history
Southwestern prehistory
Tucson Archaeology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780816557431
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 216 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Arizona Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This work presents the results of more than a decade of archaeological fieldwork at the Rooney Ranch site in Oro Valley, Arizona—an upland Hohokam village that played a key role in regional agave production. Edited by Jeffrey T. Jones and Helen L. O'Brien, this volume synthesizes extensive data collected by the Pima Community College Centre for Archaeological Field Training, offering a rare and richly detailed look at how small peripheral settlements contributed to the sustainability of larger Hohokam communities in the Sonoran Desert. Through GIS-based mapping and the analysis of ceramics, lithics, and faunal and botanical remains, the book reveals how specialized land use shaped the economic and social fabric of the region for centuries.

This legacy project stands out not only for its depth but also for its educational significance. As one of the few long-term, community-college-led excavations in the Southwest, the Rooney Ranch project highlights the vital role of student training and local collaboration in archaeological research. With more than seventy data-rich tables and contributions from leading specialists, this volume is an essential resource for archaeologists, historians, and anyone interested in Indigenous land use, desert adaptation, and the enduring legacy of the Hohokam in southern Arizona.

Contributors
Jon Boyd
Chance Copperstone
Michael W. Diehl
Linda M. Gregonis
Lea Mason-Kohlmeyer
Christine H. Virden-Lange

Jeffrey T. Jones is a retired cultural resource management (CRM) archaeologist with more than thirty-five years of experience in the American Southwest and northwest Mexico. He last worked as a field/project director for Tierra Right of Way Services in Tucson.

Helen L. O'Brien is an archaeologist specializing in field mapping, GIS, and student training at Pima Community College. She has done field mapping and cartography at sites in Arizona, Brazil, France, Hawai'i, Egypt, and Sudan.