Horses in the Southwest (ASW 18-3) (PDF)

This issue of Archaeology Southwest looks at the history of horses in the Southwest. Topics include ice age horses, Spanish explorers bringing horses into the Southwest and their adoption by indigenous people.

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SKU: ASW18-03D Category:

Description

This Issue’s Articles Include:
• Horses in the Southwest – Tobi Taylor and William H. Doelle, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Ice Age Horses of Arizona and Sonora – Jim I. Mead, Northern Arizona University
• The Indian Adoption of Spanish Horses – Diana Hadley, Office of Ethnohistorical Research, Arizona State Museum
• San Martin Caballero: Patron Saint of Horsemen – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• The Spanish Barb
• The Coronado Project
• Horses in Navajo and Apache Rock Art – Lawrence Loendorf, New Mexico State University
• Horses in Chiricahua and Western Apache Culture – Alan Ferg, Arizona State Museum
• Horses in Archaeological Sites – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Roads and Tracks: Horse Trails in the Southwest – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• The Fort Huachuca Cavalry – J. Homer Thiel, Desert Archaeology, Inc
• Heritage and Homesteads, Pima County’s Commitment to Ranch Conservation – Linda Mayro, Pima County Cultural Resources Office
• Barns in the Desert – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• The Roots of Rodeo – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• The Navajo Saddle Cinch Revival – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Ruidoso and Rillito: Storied Racetracks of the Southwest – Sandra McCoy Larson, Office of the Arizona State Auditor General and Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Back Sight – William H. Doelle, Center for Desert Archaeology