The Hohokam, an irrigation-based society in the American South West, used the river valleys of the Salt and Gila Rivers between 500 and 1500 AD to grow their crops. Such irrigated crops are linking human agency, water sources and the general natural environment. In order to grow crops, water available through rain and river flows needs to be diverted to land where the plants are grown. With a focus on the Gila River, this paper uses the potential harvest of maize (a main Hohokam crop) as a proxy for evaluating the influence of natural water availability and climatic changes on irrigation options for maize. Available climate variables derived from tree-ring proxies are downscaled. These downscaled data are used as input for a crop growth mod...
Climate’s influence on late Pre-Columbian (pre-1492 CE), maize-dependent Native American populations...
The major tributary of the Lower Colorado River, the Gila River, is a critical source of water for h...
The Hohokam and their descendants the Akimel O'Odham have cultivated and irrigated the lower Salt ri...
The Hohokam, an irrigation-based society in the American South West, used the river valleys of the S...
From the Proceedings of the 1971 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
Water is arguably the most important resource for successful crop production in the Southwest. In th...
Humans experience, adapt to and influence climate at local scales. Paleoclimate research, however, t...
A recently completed intensive archaeological survey of Long House Valley in northeastern Arizona ha...
Funding for MJT was provided by the Department of Geography, UCLA, and the Department of Interior So...
The proposition that environment is of equal importance to time and space in the study of culture su...
The Classic period farmers living in the Tonto Basin, Arizona faced a diverse and rapidly fluctuatin...
In chapter 1, Fremont Ancestral Puebloan (AP) maize (Zea mays) cumulative growing degree days (cGDD)...
Extreme climate events such as aridity, drought, flood, cyclone and stormy rainfall are expected to ...
This study investigates the hydrologic and climatic impacts of large-scale irrigation in the US High...
Throughout the arid American West, agriculture is the dominant consumptive use of water, with farmin...
Climate’s influence on late Pre-Columbian (pre-1492 CE), maize-dependent Native American populations...
The major tributary of the Lower Colorado River, the Gila River, is a critical source of water for h...
The Hohokam and their descendants the Akimel O'Odham have cultivated and irrigated the lower Salt ri...
The Hohokam, an irrigation-based society in the American South West, used the river valleys of the S...
From the Proceedings of the 1971 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
Water is arguably the most important resource for successful crop production in the Southwest. In th...
Humans experience, adapt to and influence climate at local scales. Paleoclimate research, however, t...
A recently completed intensive archaeological survey of Long House Valley in northeastern Arizona ha...
Funding for MJT was provided by the Department of Geography, UCLA, and the Department of Interior So...
The proposition that environment is of equal importance to time and space in the study of culture su...
The Classic period farmers living in the Tonto Basin, Arizona faced a diverse and rapidly fluctuatin...
In chapter 1, Fremont Ancestral Puebloan (AP) maize (Zea mays) cumulative growing degree days (cGDD)...
Extreme climate events such as aridity, drought, flood, cyclone and stormy rainfall are expected to ...
This study investigates the hydrologic and climatic impacts of large-scale irrigation in the US High...
Throughout the arid American West, agriculture is the dominant consumptive use of water, with farmin...
Climate’s influence on late Pre-Columbian (pre-1492 CE), maize-dependent Native American populations...
The major tributary of the Lower Colorado River, the Gila River, is a critical source of water for h...
The Hohokam and their descendants the Akimel O'Odham have cultivated and irrigated the lower Salt ri...