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- Hohokam - Wikipedia
The Hohokam cultivated varieties of cotton, tobacco, maize, beans, and squash, and harvested a vast variety of wild plants Late in the Hohokam Chronological Sequence, they also used extensive dry-farming systems, mainly to grow agave for food and fiber
- Hokokam culture | Facts, Achievements, Disappearance | Britannica
Hohokam culture, prehistoric North American Indians who lived approximately from 200 to 1400 ce in the semiarid region of present-day central and southern Arizona, largely along the Gila and Salt rivers The term Hohokam is said to be Pima for “those who have vanished ”
- Hohokam Culture - U. S. National Park Service
The word Hohokam is a Piman language term for “all used up” or “exhausted,” and the name given by archeologists to the ancient farming peoples of the southern deserts of Arizona
- Culture History of Southern Arizona: Hohokam - Arizona State Museum
In the Sonoran Desert regions of southern Arizona, researchers call this developing tradition the “Hohokam” culture
- Who or What Is Hohokam? - Archaeology Southwest
Archaeologists recognize the material culture of the ancestors who lived from about A D 400 to 1450—which researchers call “Hohokam”—as something distinct from what came before and what followed
- The Hohokam: Preshistoric People of the Desert Southwest - DesertUSA
The Hohokam were creative artisans who became famous for their intricate work with shells obtained from the Gulf of California and the Pacific coast They created a coiled pottery finished with a paddle and painted with red designs
- The Hohokam - Arizona Ruins
Occupying the region around modern-day Phoenix along the Salt and Gila Rivers, the Hohokam were one of several relatively advanced cultures in the American Southwest during that period
- The Hohokam: The Land The People - Google Arts Culture
The Hohokam lived in central and southern Arizona from about AD 1 to 1450 They were expert farmers, and engineered over 1000 miles of canals to irrigate fields
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