Expert to Discuss Petroglyphs and Hohokam Cosmology on May 8th

Janine Harbrodem and Rock Art. Photo by Bob Harbrode.

Janine Harbrode. and Rock Art. Photo by Bob Harbrode.

March 23, 2019

Courtesy Arizona Archaeology Society, Desert Foothills Chapter
By Roger Kearney

 

The Wednesday, May 8th meeting of the Desert Foothills Chapter of the Arizona Archaeology Society (DFC-AAS) features Janine Hernbrode. Janine will present Patterns in Petroglyphs: Hints of the Hohokam Cosmology on the Landscape.

The meeting is open to the public at no charge. There are refreshments available at 7:00 p.m. and the meeting begins at 7:30 p.m., usually ending prior to 9:00 p.m.  The meeting is being held in the community room (Maitland Hall) at The Good Shepard of the Hills Episcopal Church, 6502 East Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, AZ  85331 (near the Dairy Queen).

About the Presentation

One is nice; two is interesting; three is a pattern.  Fifteen years of rock art recording on four major petroglyph sites in Southern Arizona has enabled assembly of motif details, drawings and photographs of more than 16,000 glyphs located in landscapes with similar characteristics.  This is a vast collection of data in searchable spreadsheets representing images known to anthropologists for some time recording the belief systems of the inhabitants.  By carefully recording these images, we can say we have found no scenes of everyday life, of grinding corn, or plans for constructing pit houses.  The basis for belief is interwoven into lines and circles and more complex images placed carefully on the landscape.  By applying the methods of science to the patterns observed, by working with ethnographic accounts and linguistic analysis by others, and by consulting with indigenous people we gained some understanding and identified threads of continuity between Native American belief systems and the rock art motifs.  This talk is about a tiered universe, how and in what form people emerged from a lower world, flowers and their connections, bell rocks, and the importance of the boulder upon which the petroglyph was made.  These basic understandings can enhance your own visits and enjoyment of petroglyph sites.

 

Janine Harbrode and Petroglyph. Photo by Gordon P. Hanson.

About the Speaker

Janine Hernbrode is an independent rock art recorder and researcher based in and working near Tucson, Arizona.  Wary of becoming relentless quantifiers through rock art recording, she and her research partner, Dr. Peter Boyle, worked together to collect and analyze data obtained from their recordings of Tumamoc Hill (a three-year project of the Archaeological and Historical Society and the University of Arizona), the Sutherland Wash Rock Art District (a six-year project for the Coronado National Forest), Cocoraque Butte and Cocoraque Ranch (a five-year project for the Bureau of Land Management, the Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, and the private owner of Cocoraque Ranch).  Peter and Janine demonstrate that ethnographic and linguistic information can suggest links to both sacred landscapes and some motifs found in rock art.  Janine is the Leader of the Rock Band, a group of volunteer rock art recorders whose work was honored by the State Historic Preservation Office.  Janine and the Rock Band currently are working to inventory and record the rock art in the Tucson Mountain District of Saguaro National Park as part of an effort to understand the variety of sites in a portion of the Avra Valley.

 

About DFC-AAS

AAS is a 501-C celebrating over 50 years of existence in 2014 and the Desert Foothill Chapter is a youngster at 40 years old.  The chapter meets September through May on the second Wednesday of each month in Cave Creek and features well known guest lecturers during these meetings.  The meetings are open to the general public at no cost with the exception of the December Christmas Party that is members only.

The meetings are held in the community room (Maitland Hall) at The Good Shepard of the Hills Episcopal Church, 6502 East Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, AZ  85331 (near the Dairy Queen).  www.azarchsoc.wildapricot.org/desertfoothills

 

Author: The Peak

The Peak was originally printed and distributed in 1983 by the Greater Pinnacle Peak Association (GPPA) as a six-page neighborhood newsletter for the hundred or so residents who lived in the Pinnacle Peak area of Scottsdale, Arizona. Today, GPPA publishes an expanded online version for tens of thousands of readers as a free community service serving Scottsdale and neighborhing communities.

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