• Donate
    • Donate
    • Member Circles and Benefits
    • Become a Member
    • Renew Today
    • Give a Gift Membership
    • Student Membership
  • Take Action
    • Volunteer Program
    • Make Your Voice Heard
  • About
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • What We Do
    • Position Papers
    • Team & People
    • Job Openings
    • Partners & Friends
    • Annual Reports
    • Policies & Financials
  • Things to Do
    • Events
    • Archaeology Café
    • Exhibits
    • Classes
    • Field School
  • Explore
    • Free Resources
    • Introduction to Southwestern Archaeology
    • Projects
    • Protection Efforts
    • Ancient Cultures
    • Videos
    • Places to Visit
  • Store
    • Archaeology Southwest Magazine
    • All Products
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press Releases/Announcements
    • Preservation Archaeology Today
    • Sign up for E-News
  • Donate
    • Donate
    • Member Circles and Benefits
    • Become a Member
    • Renew Today
    • Give a Gift Membership
    • Student Membership
  • Take Action
    • Volunteer Program
    • Make Your Voice Heard
X
  • About
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • What We Do
    • Position Papers
    • Team & People
    • Job Openings
    • Partners & Friends
    • Annual Reports
    • Policies & Financials
  • Things to Do
    • Events
    • Archaeology Café
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Exhibits
    • Classes
    • Field School
  • Explore
    • Free Resources
    • SW Archaeology 101
    • Projects
    • Protection Efforts
    • Ancient Cultures
    • Videos
    • Places to Visit
  • Store
    • Archaeology Southwest Magazine
    • All Products
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press Releases/Announcements
    • Preservation Archaeology Today
    • Sign up for E-News

Who Called Oro Valley Home in the Distant Past?

October 11, 2014 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
  • Home
  • >
  • Events
  • >
  • Who Called Oro Valley Home in the Distant Past?
Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

Event Navigation

  • « Archaeology Café (Tucson): Many Roads to the Truth
  • The Chuska Valley: Chacoan Hinterland or Ancient Puebloan Heartland? »

Download the full schedule <a href="/pdf/WNPA_HOBO_ArchSW_Series_flyer_090914_2.pdf">here</a> (opens as a PDF).
Download the full schedule here (opens as a PDF).
In partnership with the Western National Parks Association, Archaeology Southwest announces a series of four lectures, “You Are Here: Understanding Who Came Before Us in This Place (and Why That Matters).”

Oro Valley was a special place in the past. Although it was part of a larger Hohokam World, it was also distinctive in many ways. Though the Town of Oro Valley is relatively young, Honey Bee Village, Steam Pump Ranch, and Catalina State Park provide powerful connections to the rich past of this area. In this second lecture in the series, archaeologists Bill Doelle and Henry Wallace will take us on a journey back to the time of the Hohokam in our own backyard.

RESERVATIONS REQUIRED. Call Western National Parks Association at 520-622-6014 to reserve your seat.

Honeybee Reconstruction by Rob Ciaccio
Artist’s reconstruction of Honey Bee Village, A.D. 1150. By Rob Ciaccio.
+ Google Calendar+ iCal Export
Venue
Western National Parks Association
Phone:
(520) 622-6014
Organizer
Western National Parks Association
Website:
http://www.wnpa.org/default_html.asp

Details

Date
Oct
2014
11
12:00pm - 01:30pm

Want to help us? Make a donation

or take action

Cyber SouthwestRespect Great BendHands-On ArchaeologySave History

© 2025 Archaeology Southwest

520.882.6946
Contact
  • My Store Account
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Press Room