The 2025 Year-End Journey: Paving the Path Ahead

Now, more than ever, we are deploying our proven toolkit—investigation, collaboration, preservation, and education—with tenacity and purpose. We cannot do this important work without your generosity and support. Please give today!

Welcome to the 2025–2026 Season of Archaeology Cafe!

Step into the 2025–2026 season of Archaeology Café: Tread. This year, we’re following the routes people have taken across time—on foot, through memory, and across landscapes.

Invite Us to Speak

We’d be pleased to share our work and Archaeology Southwest’s mission with you. Check out our new Speakers Bureau page!

The Places That Hold Our Nation's Stories Are Not for Sale

Interior Secretary Burgum’s order not only ignores places, but also the history and wisdom embedded in them. Image: Ironwood Forest National Monument, Bob Wick, USBLM

New: Respect the Land You Stand Upon T-Shirts

“Respect the Land You Stand Upon” is Hopi archaeologist, guide, and author Lyle Balenquah’s simple yet powerful message. It became the title of a special double issue of Archaeology Southwest Magazine, for which Balenquah wrote the introduction, that explores the whys and hows of ending and responding to archaeological resource crimes on Tribal lands.

Welcome

Archaeology Southwest practices Preservation Archaeology, a holistic, collaborative, and conservation-based approach to exploring and protecting heritage places while honoring their diverse values. We compile archaeological information, make it accessible and understandable, share it with the public and decision-makers, advocate for landscape-scale protection, and steward heritage properties and conservation easements. We are committed to real and ongoing collaboration with Indigenous communities. Our headquarters are located on the Homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation and the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe.

Current Magazine

Continuity and Connections: The Living Landscapes of Mesa Verde

Taw’toy’kya. Kash’katrati. Hwâalâ P’ê W ækêewâ. Tewayogeh. Gad Deelzhahi. Mesa Verde has many names and holds many stories. This edition of Archaeology Southwest Magazine gathers many strands to tell the story of Mesa Verde today and for the future.

 

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A New Kind of Archaeology

Learn more about our work to ensure that people’s histories in the land endure well into the future.