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City Fish: An Analysis of Demand for and Value of Urban Sport Fishing in Tucson and Scottsdale, ArizonaGarifo, Susan Ellen January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Outdoor Recreation in the Salt-Verde Basin of Central Arizona: Demand and ValueSublette, Werner J., Martin, William E. 06 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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The Chinese of Early Tucson: Historic Archaeology from the Tucson Urban Renewal ProjectLister, Florence D., Lister, Robert H. January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Archaeological Explorations in Caves of the Point of Pines Region, ArizonaGifford, James C. January 1980 (has links)
"The volume contains a wealth of ceramic type-variety descriptive and interpretive data, as well as an excellent descriptive treatment of the ethnobotanical remains, and solid coverage of the lithic, faunal, and other classes of artifactual materials. The quality of illustrative material is excellent, including outstanding field and artifact photography and carefully prepared charts and line drawings."—American Antiquity
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Modeling of Ground-Water Flow and Surface/Ground-Water Interaction for the San Pedro River Basin Part I Mexican Border to Fairbank, ArizonaVionnet, Leticia Beatriz, Maddock, Thomas January 1992 (has links)
Many hydrologic basins in the southwest have seen their perennial streamflows
turn to ephemeral, their riparian communities disappear or be jeopardized, and their
aquifers suffer from severe overdrafts. Under -management of ground -water exploitation
and of conjunctive use of surface and ground waters are the main reasons for these
events.
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CONFUSION WHERE GROUND AND SURFACE WATERS MEET: GILA RIVER GENERAL ADJUDICATION, ARIZONA AND THE SEARCH FOR SUBFLOWSobczak, Robert V., Maddock, Thomas, III 10 1900 (has links)
Arizona is presently in the midst of a general adjudication for the Gila River system
-- the watershed which comprises the southern two- thirds of the state. The purpose of the
adjudication is to prioritize all water claims in the river system: both state -established and
federally reserved rights. Arizona adheres to a bifurcated (or divided) system of water law
which only recognizes a component of ground water -- called subflow -- to be
appropriable. Wells which pump non-appropriable water -- called tributary flow -- are not
to be included in the adjudication. The problem is that federal laws do not recognize this
artificial bifurcation.
The challenge lies in identifying a subflow zone which satisfies the hydrologic
fiction of existing state precedents and the hydrologic reality of federal statutes. At the
core of the problem lies the fate of Arizona's perennial stream water and the fulfillment of
federally reserved tribal water rights. Thus, larger questions loom: can Arizona law
reconcile its glutinous past with a water -scarce future, will the adjudication ever reach a
finality, and even if it does, will it be a finality that all sides can live with?
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Water Resources of the Woody Mountain Well Field Area, Coconino County, ArizonaMontgomery, Errol L., DeWitt, Ronald H. 12 April 1975 (has links)
From the Proceedings of the 1975 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. and the Hydrology Section - Arizona Academy of Science - April 11-12, 1975, Tempe, Arizona / Conclusions drawn from a water resources study of the woody mountain area are: the average coefficients of transmissibility and of storage of the principal aquifer are approximately 30,000 gpd/ft and 0.05 respectively; drawdown in wells is greater than predicted using theoretical calculations due to the turbulent flow near the well bore in the fractured Coconino aquifer; the computed interference between pumped wells in the field ranges from 10.5 ft. To 19.7 ft. Interference would be negligible between wells spaced at distances greater than 6,000 ft. For pumping periods as long as two hundred days; the negative boundary effect of off-set on the oak creek fault may be balanced by the recharge effect of groundwater located in the highly permeable fractured zone adjacent to the fault; and the quantity of recharge water to the well field is greater than withdrawals from the wells.
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In the aftermath of migration assessing the social consequences of late 13th and 14th century population movements into southeastern Arizona /Neuzil, Anna A. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Arizona, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 537-572).
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Past adaptive patterns in western Papagueria: an archaeological study of nonriverine resource useDoelle, William Harper January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Between Desert and River: Hohokam Settlement and Land Use in the Los Robles CommunityDownum, Christian E. January 1933 (has links)
"Downum's book provides a comprehensive overview of prehistoric settlement patterns within the Los Robles region of southern Arizona. . . . An important contribution to understanding the prehistoric patterns of settlement for the project area and surrounding region."—Journal of the West
"Downum's carefully done volume is an important contribution to Hohokam archaeology. . . . Clearly written and illustrated."—AM Indian Quarterly
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