Archaeological Investigations at La Ciudad, AZ T:12:1(ASM), The Frank Luke Addition Locus, Volume 1: Introduction, Feature Descriptions, Chronology, and Canals
Autor: | System User |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Schist
Turquoise Mesquite Sacaton Phase La Ciudad Archaeological Overview Salt River Petrographic Analysis Flotation Analysis Mesa AZ Agricultural or Herding Sedentary Period Lower Colorado Subdivision Ground Stone Analysis Faunal Analysis Archaeological Feature Buffware Gila Butte Phase Redware Canal or Canal Feature Hohokam Pollen Analysis South Mountain Ground Disturbance Monitoring Fauna Ground Stone Post Hole / Post Mold Charcoal Colonial Period Site Stewardship Monitoring Pollen Red-on-Buff Gila River Hearth Plainware Agricultural Field or Field Feature Bead Pit House / Earth Lodge Daub Fire Cracked Rock Ceramic Analysis Roasting Pit / Oven / Horno Snaketown Phase Mano Pioneer Period Ash Arizona (State / Territory) Obsidian Analysis Domestic Structures Shell Analysis Santa Cruz Phase Shell AZ T:12:1 (ASM) Huhugam Maricopa (County) Mineral Sonoran Desert Creosote Reservoir Phoenix Mountains Caliche Historic Background Research Phoenix AZ Fire Pit Chipped Stone Phoenix Basin Prehistoric Cesspit Ceramic Research Design / Data Recovery Plan Data Recovery / Excavation Pit Cobble Storage Pit Trash Pit Human Remains Classic Period |
DOI: | 10.48512/xcv8446124 |
Popis: | Logan Simpson conducted archaeological excavations between February and June 2013 for the City of Phoenix’s Frank Luke Addition (FLA) Project. The excavations were completed within a 9.1-acre parcel situated within the prehistoric site of La Ciudad (AZ T:12:1[ASM]), a Hohokam village located north of the Salt River. The FLA Project is located within a highly urbanized portion of the City of Phoenix (COP) in the Phoenix Basin, south-central Arizona. Historical documents indicate that the FLA parcel was used for farming until about 1906, when it was subdivided for private housing. In 1950, the COP purchased the 12.2-acre parcel for redevelopment as public housing and named the development in honor of the World War I flying ace Frank Luke. The 1950s public housing complex consisted of 39 1-story apartment buildings separated by grass lawns, play areas, and a curving street. The apartments were built in 1952 and were demolished in 2012, following appropriate documentation, to make way for a larger complex of multiple-story apartments to be developed by the COP using a combination of Low Income Housing Tax Credits, General Obligation bonds, and a U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development HOPE VI grant. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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