Based on more than ten years of field work, this is the only modern interpretive site report on the Sinagua culture.
Lizard Man Village is one of many small settlements in the Flagstaff vicinity occupied by the Sinagua between AD 1050 and 1300. Generally considered affiliated with the Mogollon, the major archaeological culture group in central Arizona, the Sinagua inhabited a region where three distinct groups intersected: the Mogollon, the Hohokam, and the Anasazi.
Sinagua survival strategy in this very arid region combined dispersed agriculture with hunting and foraging. It appears...
Based on more than ten years of field work, this is the only modern interpretive site report on the Sinagua culture.
Camels Back Cave is in an isolated limestone ridge on the southern edge of the Great Salt Lake Desert. Recent archaeological investigations there have exposed a series of stratified deposits spanning the entire Holocene era (10,000 BP-present), deposits that show intermittent human occupations dating back through the past 7,600 years. Most human visits to the cave were brief--many likely representing overnight stays--and visitors did not dig pits or move sediment. As a result, fieldworkers were able...
University of Utah Anthropological Papers No. 125
Anthropology and Archaeology
Camels Back Cave is in an isolated limestone ridge on th...