Snaketown

E256899

Snaketown is a significant archaeological site in southern Arizona known for its extensive remains of the Hohokam culture, including irrigation canals, ball courts, and pit houses.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Snaketown canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Hohokam archaeological site
archaeological site
accessPolicy restricted access
associatedWithEthnicGroup Akimel O'odham
surface form: Akimel O’odham (Pima)

Tohono O'odham
surface form: Tohono O’odham
continent North America
country United States of America
culture Hohokam culture
discoveredInCentury 20th century
endDate circa 1200 CE
excavatedBy Emil W. Haury
University of Arizona
hasArchaeologicalFeature ball court
burial features
irrigation canal system
pit house village
trash mounds
hasEvidenceOf ceramic production
cotton cultivation
long-distance trade with Mesoamerica
maize agriculture
shell trade from Gulf of California
heritageDesignation National Historic Landmark
heritageDesignationDate 1964
knownFor ceramic artifacts
pit houses
platform mounds
prehistoric ball courts
prehistoric irrigation canals
shell jewelry
trade networks
locatedIn Arizona
Southern Arizona
surface form: southern Arizona
locatedInAdministrativeEntity Gila River Indian Community
Pinal County, Arizona
surface form: Pinal County
majorExcavation 1934
1964
management Gila River Indian Community
namedAfter nearby Snaketown Ranch
partOf Hohokam culture
surface form: Hohokam regional system
period Hohokam Colonial period
Hohokam Pioneer period
Hohokam culture
surface form: Hohokam Sedentary period
researchFocus Hohokam social organization
prehistoric ball game rituals
prehistoric irrigation agriculture
startDate circa 300 BCE

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Hohokam culture majorSite Snaketown