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VOLUME 42, NO. 1 SPRING 2014 ISSN 0749-1816 ASNM NEWS A Message from President CJ (Carolyn) Johnson I’m looking forward to welcoming everyone to the 2014 Annual meeting in Silver City. This year’s meeting promises to be interesting, educational, and fun. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if all out Affiliate Societies were represented! During the business meeting on Saturday I will be calling on each organization to briefly report to the membership about their activities over the past year, and I am asking that those attending select a representative to do so. We also ask you to provide a hard copy of your report to La Jornada Editor Helen Crotty for inclusion in the summer newsletter. I’m hoping to see lots of familiar faces and even more new faces. ASNM and Silver City – what more could you ask? Still Time to Register for the ASNM Annual Meeting in Silver City April 11-13 Bill Hudson, Chair of Silver City’s Annual Meeting announces that registration and field trip signups will begin at 4 pm in the newly renovated historic Murray Hotel, followed by a “meet and greet” time from 5-7 pm. There will be no formal Friday evening program, and attendees are encouraged to seek out one of the fine local restaurants for dinner (reservations advised). There will be a full program of papers on Saturday, most of them related to theme “Mimbres Connections—Then and Now” The business meeting is scheduled right after lunch [Please see Candidates Biographies, the Financial Report for 2013, and the Proposed Budget on pages 4 to 6 and vote the ballot on page 7]. More papers follow the business meeting, and then—after a short break—a social hour and the Awards Banquet. Barbara Roth, Chair of the Anthropology Department at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas will be the Bandelier Lecturer, speaking on “Life in a Mimbres Pithouse Village—A.D. 500 to 1000.” Dr. Roth has excavated several sites in the Mimbres Valley and most recently concluded a multi- season excavation of the Harris Site. Field trips on offer are to Gila Cliff Dwellings, the Woodrow Ruin, the Elk Ridge and Upper Mimbres sites, the Pony Hills rock art site, and to the Nan Ruin exhibit at Western New Mexico University Museum. Group size is limited for all the field trips, and signups begin at 4 pm Friday. A registration form is attached (page 9). More information about the meeting can be found on the Grant County Archaeological Society website: https://sites.google.com/site/grantcountyarchaeologysociety/gcas-calendar/asnm-annual-meeting Note: Dues for 2014 are now payable for all but Life Members. If you have not already paid, please fill out the attached renewal form or download it from the ASNM website and return with your check to P.O. Box 3845, Albuquerque NM 87190-3485. Questions? Contact Dolores Sundt at the above address or [email protected].

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VOLUME 42, NO. 1 SPRING 2014 ISSN 0749-1816

ASNM NEWS

A Message from President CJ (Carolyn) Johnson

I’m looking forward to welcoming everyone to the 2014 Annual meeting in Silver City. This year’s meeting promises to be interesting, educational, and fun. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if all out Affiliate Societies were represented! During the business meeting on Saturday I will be calling on each organization to briefly report to the membership about their activities over the past year, and I am asking that those attending select a representative to do so. We also ask you to provide a hard copy of your report to La Jornada Editor Helen Crotty for inclusion in the summer newsletter. I’m hoping to see lots of familiar faces and even more new faces. ASNM and Silver City – what more could you ask? Still Time to Register for the ASNM Annual Meeting in Silver City April 11-13

Bill Hudson, Chair of Silver City’s Annual Meeting announces that registration and field trip signups will begin at 4 pm in the newly renovated historic Murray Hotel, followed by a “meet and greet” time from 5-7 pm. There will be no formal Friday evening program, and attendees are encouraged to seek out one of the fine local restaurants for dinner (reservations advised). There will be a full program of papers on Saturday, most of them related to theme “Mimbres Connections—Then and Now” The business meeting is scheduled right after lunch [Please see Candidates Biographies, the Financial Report for 2013, and the Proposed Budget on pages 4 to 6 and vote the ballot on page 7]. More papers follow the business meeting, and then—after a short break—a social hour and the Awards Banquet. Barbara Roth, Chair of the Anthropology Department at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas will be the Bandelier Lecturer, speaking on “Life in a Mimbres Pithouse Village—A.D. 500 to 1000.” Dr. Roth has excavated several sites in the Mimbres Valley and most recently concluded a multi-season excavation of the Harris Site. Field trips on offer are to Gila Cliff Dwellings, the Woodrow Ruin, the Elk Ridge and Upper Mimbres sites, the Pony Hills rock art site, and to the Nan Ruin exhibit at Western New Mexico University Museum. Group size is limited for all the field trips, and signups begin at 4 pm Friday. A registration form is attached (page 9). More information about the meeting can be found on the Grant County Archaeological Society website: https://sites.google.com/site/grantcountyarchaeologysociety/gcas-calendar/asnm-annual-meeting

Note: Dues for 2014 are now payable for all but Life Members. If you have not already paid, please fill out the attached renewal form or download it from the ASNM website and return with your check to P.O. Box 3845, Albuquerque NM 87190-3485. Questions? Contact Dolores Sundt at the above address or [email protected].

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Highlights from the February Meeting of the Trustees

Executive Secretary: Dolores Sundt reported a total of 9 Affiliate, 28 Institutional, and 244 individual, family, and honorary memberships for a total of 281 members in 2013.

Treasurer: Anna Walters distributed copies of the 2013 tear-end report and her proposed budget for 2014 [attached]. The proposed budget was approved by the Trustees for a vote by the membership at the Annual Meeting.

Committee Reports

Internal Financial Review: John Hayden, Patricia Wing, and George Ruebelmann reviewed the books for 2013 and found them in good order.

Certification Council: Roger Moore reported that nine people qualified and willing to teach archaeological seminars are currently listed on the Council database. More teachers are needed, and interested people are invited to submit a résumé. More copies of the certification brochure are being printed.

Richard A. Bice Award for Archaeological Achievement: Bill Simms provided a slate of candidates nominated by the Affilate Societies. The Trustees selected two candidates for the 2014 award.

Nominations: Charlie Barnes presented a slate of six candidates for the four openings on the Board of Trustees. Of the four Trustees whose terms expire in 2014, two—Carol Condie and Gary Hein—are retiring; CJ Johnson and Patricia Wing will run for re-election. Four candidates new to the Board were nominated by various Affiliates. They are Janet Mackenzie of the Mesa Prieta Project, Matt Barbour of Jemez Historic Site, and Sally McLaughlin and John Guth of the Albuquerque Archaeological Society. The Trustees approved the slate.

Annual Volume Honoree: Hayward Franklin presented nominations of several candidates to the Trustees by email, and John Hayden was selected at the meeting to be the 2015 Honoree.

Special Publications: Emily Brown reported for David Kirkpatrick that the long-awaited Mera publication is in the final stages and will be ready for sale at the Annual Meeting.

Scholarship: Greg Sagemiller announced that to address rising costs, students may now apply for scholarships in excess of the previous amounts of $100-$500 normally awarded. Brochures have been sent to New Mexico universities with degree programs in anthropology and related disciplines, and information and applications forms are posted on the website.

Rock Art Council: Carol Chamberland announced that Richard Ford has agreed to fill the vacancy in the office of Council Vice President. A new group from the Torrance County Archaeological Society has joined the Council and is working the Diablo site. John Guth, Council Secretary, and two others are volunteering with Anna Naruta Moya at ARMS to process the huge backlog of recorded rock art data housed there. John, Carol, and Gary Hein, with input from Anna Naruta Moya, have developed an official standard for report filing at ARMS that is now on the RAC website.

Greg Sagemiller Resigns as ASNM Elected Trustee

After 21 years as an elected Trustee, some of them as ASNM president and most of them as Chair of the Scholarship Committee, Greg Sagemiller has resigned to devote more time to his new career as a writer. Greg was instrumental in the re-establishment of the ASNM scholarships and has given countless hours to developing and implementing the scholarship program, which over the past 19 award years has granted 74 awards to 67 recipients, totaling $37,815. He has continued to supervise the 2014 Scholarship awards, but his resignation, effective at the close of the Annual Meeting, leaves a fifth Trustee position open and a very important Chairmanship to be filled.

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LONG-AWAITED MERA VOLUME TO BE AVAILABLE AT THE ANNUAL MEETING Since Mera: The Original Eleven Bulletins with Essays and Opinions Derived from Recent Reseach, compiled and edited by Emily J. Brown, Regge N. Wiseman, and Rory P. Gauthier, with contributions by Hayward H. Franklin and Theodore R. Frisbie, will be available for sale ($40) at the Annual Meeting in Silver City or by mail for $40 plus $5 shipping and handling (order form on ASNM website).

This 400-page book contains high quality and accurate reproductions of the entire original 11 Laboratory of Anthropology Technical Bulletins by H. P. Mera and his colleagues in the form of scanned versions of every page, plate, and oversized chart and map.

Each Bulletin is prefaced by an introduction by a scholar in the field, addressing the state of current research on its subject. The book also contains a biography of H. P. Mera by Theodore Frisbie, a bibliography of Mera's publications, and a preface describing Mera's accomplishments and his place in the field of Southwestern archaeology by Hayward Franklin.

The original Bulletins have become scarce in recent years and, while still widely cited by scholars, few researchers have access to them, even as faded Xerox copies, much less the chance to own one. This reproduction utilizes scanned versions of the original pages so that the bulletins can be viewed and cited as they were printed while making them much more widely available and affordable by the general public. The introductions put the original research in perspective, identifying where new information has come to light and recognizing where Mera's ideas have stood the test of time.

NEWS AND NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE

Major Pre-Hohokam Site Found in Arizona. A major pre-Hohokam settlement with 37 pit houses, an irrigation canal, 6 burials, and features outside of the main area have been uncovered by con-struction in Marana, Arizona. The site is dated at 2,500-1,500 BCE. More burial finds are expected. Later Hohokam-era remains are at the surface of the site. The possible canal is dated to 1000 BCE-1 CE. Many other sites have been found in this area near the Santa Cruz River. There will be an ongoing battle as to how long archaeologists can work on the site before modern development buries it. The site study will help in determining the earliest agricultural techniques in the Southwest. See the Arizona Daily Star http://bit.ly/1hWkH73. [From Mike Ruggeri's Ancient Southwest Magazine]

CALENDAR CHECK

50th Annual Symposium of the Southwestern Federation of Archaeological Societies, sponsored by the Panhandle Archeological Society at the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas, May 2-4. Contact Paul Katz at [email protected].

Annual Salmon Ruins Director’s Tour of the Dinétah, a free all-day caravan journey Saturday, May 10. Meet at Salmon Ruins at 9 AM. For pre-registration and details, contact Salmon Ruins at 505-632-2013.

Archaeoastronomy in the American Southwest “Charting a Formal Methodology for Cultural Astronomy Research." June 6-8, 2014, at the Marston Exploration Theater of the School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

Salmon Ruins Summer Solstice Observation Event, June 21 or 22. Meet at Salmon Ruins parking lot at 7 AM for approximately one hour event. For details, contact Salmon Ruins at 505-632-2013.

Pecos Conference 2014. August 7-10, Blue Mountain Scout Camp on the Manti-LaSal National Forest north of Blanding, Utah. Details at http://www.swanet.org/2014_pecos_conference.

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Candidates for Trustee 2014 (Vote for five)

Matthew J. Barbour holds BA (2002) and MA (2010) degrees in Anthropology from the University of New Mexico and has worked for the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs since 2002. Most of this time has been spent with the Office of Archaeological Studies, where he headed a number of large-scale archaeological excavation and survey projects throughout New Mexico but mostly in and around the cities of Deming and Santa Fe. Currently he is the Manager of Jemez Historic Site (Giusewa Pueblo/San Jose de los Jemez Mission) in Jemez Springs. Matt’s research interests are varied, ranging from the impacts of colonialism on indigenous populations to urban expansion during the Prohibition and Depression Eras. He has published more than 100 nonfiction articles and monographs on the archaeology and history of the American Southwest and is a regular contributor to the Red Rocks Reporter (Jemez Pueblo Newsletter) and Sandoval Signpost. In 2012, he was awarded the City of Santa Fe Heritage Preservation Award for Excellence in Archaeology. Matt has been ASNM member since 2006 and served as Program Chair for the Annual Meeting in Santa Fe in 2010.

John Guth is a systems engineer and management consultant with a long interest in New Mexico history, geology, and archaeology. He is an active participant in the Albuquerque Archaeological Society, currently serving as Treasurer, and ASNM’s Rock Art Council, serving as Secretary. He participated, as a team member and then leader, in the three-year San Pedro Creek, Sandoval County, rock art recording project, learning from experienced AAS members. Currently he is a volunteer at the Laboratory of Anthropology in Santa Fe, focusing on archiving rock art reports, many resulting from recording projects by ASNM affiliates. He helped to develop archival-ready guidelines for rock art reports that is enabling prompt filing and availability for research of new submissions to the New Mexico Archaeological Records Management Section (ARMS). John is also a Board member with the Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project.

Carolyn J. (CJ) Johnson holds a BS degree in Geography from California State University, Hayward, but admits to never having used her degree in an official, professional endeavor. She retired in 2001 after 35 years in the telecommunications and financial services industries as a software specialist. CJ became an active member of the Taos Archaeological Society in 2003, just months after moving to Taos from California. She developed a website for TAS and served as president 2007-2011. During her presidency, TAS’s role in community outreach programs greatly expanded. She oversaw coordinated efforts of several very active committees. In 2008, after attending the first New Mexico SiteWatch training class offered in Taos, she agreed to be the Taos/North Central New Mexico SiteWatch coordinator. CJ has participated in rock art recording projects at Mesa Prieta and numerous Taos area sites. She has also volunteered at the Ghost Ranch rock shelter archaeological excavations. In 2011 CJ joined the ASNM Board of Trustees and in 2013 was elected President.

Janet MacKenzie is an archaeologist who has done excavation and survey in Britain, Canada, and Peru since 1972, with particular emphasis on fortified sites associated with a walled trade route on the continental divide in the northern sierra of Peru. She has conducted research and writing for exhibit creation at the Saskatchewan Western Development Museum. At first a volunteer with the Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project in northern New Mexico, she became Project Coordinator in 2010 and oversees MPPP's archaeological recording and award-winning Summer Youth Intern and Fourth Grade Curriculum programs, docent-led tours of the Wells Petroglyph Preserve, and other MPPP activities in the community. Janet is a past volunteer with the ASNM Rock Art Council, the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area, and New Mexico SiteWatch Program. She volunteers at the Archaeological Records Management Section of the New Mexico Historic Preservation Office and MPPP. She is a member of the ASNM, the New Mexico Association of Museums, and the Albuquerque Archaeological Society. Since last September she has served as Secretary pro tem at meetings of the ASNM Board of Trustees.

Sally McLaughlin became interested in Archaeology in the late 1990s while living in Farmington and took a few classes at San Juan College and a field school at the Bolack Ranch under Linda Wheelbarger. She attended Rock Art Recording School in Arizona for three years, helping with record-keeping the last year. After moving to Albuquerque 2001, she became active in the Albuquerque Archaeological Society and served as Secretary for one year and is currently "greeter" for monthly meetings. As a member of the Certification Council of ASNM, she co-developed the certification recruiting brochure. She has just returned from a two week archaeological dig in Jordan at the Tell al Hammam, an Early, Mid and Late Bronze age site in Madaba. (Proposed site of Sodom of Biblical mention). She is interested in promoting archaeological preservation in the Southwest and other areas of the world.

Patricia Wing holds BA degree in Economics/English from the University of Arizona and an MA degree in Anthropology from Arizona State University. On completing her Master’s she expected to work in field of anthropology but instead found employment at the Arizona state capitol in the Governor’s Office and also served as assistant director of the Arizona Solar Energy Commission. Subsequently, she worked as a science and technical writer/editor at Los Alamos National Laboratory for 14 years. Over the past two years, she has assisted ASNM by proofreading and doing the mailings for the newsletter. She has also worked on editing papers for the annual volume under the direction of one of the senior editors. Currently, she is doing some information-gathering for the Scholarship Committee.

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF NEW MEXICO

2013 FINANCIAL REPORT

as of December 31, 2013

ITEMCARRY-

OVERINCOME TRF/ADJ ITEM EXPENSE TRF/ADJ BALANCE

200 OPERATING ACCOUNT 0.00

210 INCOME 250 EXPENSE

211 DUES 6,895.00 251 OPERATIONS 1,749.72

212 OTHER 1,580.00 252 NEWSLETTER 233.62

253 248 DUES @ 19.50 EA. 0.00 4,836.00

254 OTHER 1,655.66

SUBTOTAL 0.00 8,475.00 0.00 SUBTOTAL 1,983.34 6,491.66 0.00

300 ANNUAL VOL ACCOUNT 2,566.56

310 INCOME 350 EXPENSE

311 TRF FROM 253 4,836.00 351 ANNUAL VOLUME 5,424.46

312 INV INTEREST 0.00 352 POSTAGE 519.15

313 SALES/GRANT 483.68

SUBTOTAL 483.68 4,836.00 5,943.61 0.00 1,942.63

400 CERTIFICATION ACCOUNT 914.32

410 INCOME 450 EXPENSE

411 REGISTRATION 0.00 451 ADMINISTRATION

412 OTHER 0.00 452 OTHER 240.75

SUBTOTAL 0.00 0.00 SUBTOTAL 240.75 0.00 673.57

500 ENDOWMENT ACCOUNT 19,364.17

510 INCOME 550 EXPENSE

511 ENDOW principal gifts 16,560.00 0.00 551 GENERAL 0.00

512 ENDOW operating gifts 2,438.63 0.00 552 OTHER

513 ENDOW CD interest 365.54 161.78

SUBTOTAL 19,364.17 161.78 0.00 SUBTOTAL 0.00 0.00 19,525.95

PRINCIPAL 16,560.00

OPERATING 2,438.63

CD INTEREST 527.32

SUBTOTAL 19,525.95

600 SCHOLARSHIP ACCOUNT 30,563.82

610 INCOME 650 EXPENSE

611 SCHLR principal gifts 23,201.68 188.74 651 GENERAL

612 SCHLR operating gifts 6,399.24 3,750.00 1,655.66 652 SCHOLARSHIPS 1,628.00

613 SCHLR Interest 962.90 95.40 0.00

SUBTOTAL 30,563.82 4,034.14 1,655.66 SUBTOTAL 1,628.00 0.00 34,625.62

PRINCIPAL 23,390.42

OPERATING 10,176.90

INTEREST 1,058.30

SUBTOTAL 34,625.62

700 VIDAL ACCOUNT 31,658.87

710 INCOME 750 EXPENSE

711 Interest 98.86 751 GENERAL 3,900.00

712 OTHER

SUBTOTAL 31,658.87 98.86 0.00 SUBTOTAL 3,900.00 0.00 27,857.73

800 SPECIAL PUB ACCOUNT 12,935.71

810 INCOME 850 EXPENSE

811 SALES 270.56 851 GENERAL 413.89

812 OTHER/INTEREST 0.00 852 OTHER

SUBTOTAL 12,935.71 270.56 0.00 SUBTOTAL 413.89 0.00 12,792.38

900 ROCK ART 3,603.73 950 EXPENSE

910 INCOME 0.00 951 GENERAL 0.00 911 ROCK ART INTEREST 952 OTHER 0.00

SUBTOTAL 3,603.73 0.00 SUBTOTAL 0.00 3,603.73

TOTAL 101,607.18 13,524.02 6,491.66 0.00 14,109.59 6,491.66 101,021.61

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF NEW MEXICO

PROPOSED BUDGET

CALENDAR YEAR, Jan. 1 - Dec. 31, 2014

ITEMCARRY-

OVER

2014

INCOME

TRANS-

FER

2013

INCOMEITEM

2014

EXPENSE

TRANS-

FER

CARRY

FORWARD

2013

EXPENSE

200 OPERATING 0.00 0.00

210 INCOME 250 EXPENSE

211 DUES 6,895.00 6,895.00 251 OPERATIONS 1,753.00 1,749.72

212 OTHER 1,545.00 1,580.00 252 NEWSLETTER 234.00 233.62

253 248 DUES 4,836.00

254 OTHER 1,655.66

SUBTOTAL 0.00 8,440.00 0.00 8,475.00 SUBTOTAL 1,987.00 6,491.66 0.00 1,983.34

300 ANNUAL VOLUME 2,566.56 1,942.63

310 INCOME 350 EXPENSE

311 TRF DUES 254 4,836.00 351 ANNUAL VOL 5,425.00 5,424.46

312 INTEREST 352 POSTAGE 553.00 519.15

313 SALES/GRANT 484.00 483.68

314 TRANSFER

SUBTOTAL 484.00 4,836.00 483.68 SUBTOTAL 5,978.00 0.00 1,942.63 5,943.61

400 CERTIFICATION 914.32 673.57

410 INCOME 450 EXPENSE

411 REGISTRATION 0.00 0.00 451 GENERAL 0.00 240.75

412 OTHER 0.00 0.00 452 OTHER 0.00 0

SUBTOTAL 0.00 0.00 0.00 SUBTOTAL 0.00 673.57 240.75

500 ENDOWMENT 19,364.17 19,525.95

510 INCOME 550 EXPENSE

511 PRINCIPAL 16,560.00 551 GENERAL 0.00 16,560.00 0.00

512 OPERATING 2,438.63 552 OTHER 0.00 2,438.63 0.00

513 INTEREST 365.54 162.00 161.78 527.32

SUBTOTAL 19,364.17 162.00 0.00 161.78 SUBTOTAL 0.00 0.00 19,525.95 0.00

600 SCHOLARSHIP 30,563.82 34,625.62

610 INCOME 650 EXPENSE

611 PRINCIPAL 23,201.68 189.00 188.74 651 GENERAL 23,390.42

612 OPERATING 6,399.24 3,750.00 1,655.66 3,750.00 652 SCHOLARSHIPS 1,628.00 10,176.90 1,628.00

613 BANK INTEREST 962.90 95.00 0.00 95.40 1,058.30

SUBTOTAL 30,563.82 4,034.00 1,655.66 4,034.14 SUBTOTAL 1,628.00 0.00 34,625.62 1,628.00

700 VIDAL FIELD SCH. 31,658.87 27,857.73

710 INCOME 750 EXPENSE

711 INTEREST 99.00 98.86 751 GENERAL 200.00 3,900.00

712 OTHER 752 CONTRACTS 3,800.00 0.00

753 PUBLICATION 0

SUBTOTAL 31,658.87 99.00 0.00 98.86 SUBTOTAL 4,000.00 0.00 27,857.73 3,900.00

800 SPECIAL PUBS. 12,935.71 12,792.38

810 INCOME 850 EXPENSE

811 SALES 271.00 270.56 851 GENERAL 414.00 413.89

812 OTHER 852 PUBLICATION 0.00

SUBTOTAL 12,935.71 271.00 0.00 270.56 SUBTOTAL 414.00 0.00 12,792.38 413.89

900 ROCK ART 3,603.73 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 3,603.73 0

TOTAL 101,607.18 13,490.00 6,491.66 13,524.02 14,007.00 6,491.66 101,021.61 14,109.59

BALLOT FOR MEMBER #1

Vote for Five

� Matthew Barbour � John Guth � Carolyn (CJ) Johnson

� Janet MacKenzie � Sally McLaughlin � Patricia Wing

Bring ballot to Annual Meeting or mail by April 7 to ASNM Secretary, PO Box 3485, Albuquerque NM 87190

BALLOT FOR MEMBER #2

Vote for Five

� Matthew Barbour � John Guth � Carolyn (CJ) Johnson

� Janet MacKenzie � Sally McLaughlin � Patricia Wing

Bring ballot to Annual Meeting or mail by April 7 to ASNM Secretary, PO Box 3485, Albuquerque NM 87190

ASNM MEMBERSHIP/RENEWAL APPLICATION

Name (s): __________________________________________________________________________________________ Address: __________________________________________________________________________________________ City: _________________________________ State: _____ Zip:___________ Phone (Opt): ________________

Email Address *: _________________________________________________________________________ __

**If you cannot or do not wish to receive your newsletter electronically, please pay the $5.00 printing and postage surcharge for a print copy of the newsletter via first class mail.**

For membership year 2014 Renewal � New �

Individual, Institution, or Family ($25) $________

Contributor ($35 & up) $________

Affiliated Society ($25) $________

**Print Newsletter Surcharge ($5) $________

Extra Scholarship Fund Contribution $________

Total Enclosed $________

Please be sure your email address is legible. If more space is needed, write it again in the space below.

If your email addresses changes, please contact list manager Gary Hein <[email protected]>.

Make check payable to ASNM and send payment to: The Archaeological Society of New Mexico, PO Box 3485 Albuquerque, NM 87190-3485. Contact Dolores Sundt <[email protected]> for questions about membership

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF NEW MEXICO

P.O. Box 3485 Albuquerque, New Mexico 87190-3485 www.newmexico-archaeology.org

As a New Mexico non-profit corporation, ASNM is one of the oldest of its kind in the United States. The Society has a number of affiliated local societies listed below. ASNM encourages and assists others to preserve, study, protect, and promote appreciation of the prehistoric and historic cultural resources of New Mexico.

Membership: Individual, Family, Institution $25 (emailed newletters; print newsletters, $5 surcharge); Contributing $35 or more.

Privileges: Enrolling in ASNM Incremental Certification Program and Seminars, ASNM newsletter, and annual volume of Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico.

ASNM Newsletter: Helen Crotty, Editor

Papers of the ASNM (Honoree volumes): Emily Brown, editor, Carol Condie, and Helen Crotty

Special Publications: David Kirkpatrick, Chair

Officers and Elected Trustees

Carolyn (CJ) Johnson, President Charlie Barnes, Vice-President Anna Walters, Treasurer Karen Armstrong Carol Condie Hayward Franklin Gary Hein Doris Morgan Greg Sagemiller Richard (Bill) Simms George Ruebelmann Patricia Wing

Ex Officio Trustees

Jan Biella, NM State Archaeologist

Norman Nelson, NM State SiteWatch Coordinator

Amalia Kenward, New Mexico Archeological Council President

Executive Secretary

Dolores Sundt

Advisors

Helen Crotty Ted Frisbie John Hayden Dave Kirkpatrick Joan Mathien Roger Moore Nancy Woodworth

AFFILIATE SOCIETIES

Albuquerque Archaeological Society PO Box 4029 Albuquerque, NM 87196 President: Marc Thompson [email protected] www.abqarchaeology.org

Doña Ana Archaeological Society PO Box 15132 Las Cruces, NM 88004 President: William Little [email protected]

El Paso Archaeological Society PO Box 4345 El Paso, TX 79914-4345 President: Lora Jackson-Legare [email protected] www.epas.com

Friends of Tijeras Pueblo PO Box 1916 Tijeras, NM 87509 President: Judy Vredenburg [email protected] www.friendsoftijeraspueblo.org

Grant County Archaeological Society PO Box 1713 Silver City, NM 88062 President: Marilyn Markel [email protected]

Midland Archaeological Society PO Box 4224 Midland, TX 79704 President: Sammy Hunnicutt www.midarcsoc.org

Plateau Sciences Society PO Box 2433 Gallup, NM 87305 President: Jackie Weeks Contact: Sheila Brewer [email protected]

San Juan Archaeological Society PO Box 118 Flora Vista, NM 87415 Contact: Roger Moore [email protected]

Santa Fe Archaeological Society PO Box 31603 Santa Fe, NM 87594 President: Ava Fullerton [email protected]

Site Steward Foundation President Gary Newgent gnewgent@ sitestewardfoundation.org

Southeastern New Mexico Archaeological Society President: Bob Southworth 1535 Bradley Court Hobbs, NM 88240 [email protected]

Taos Archaeological Society PO Box 143 Taos, NM 87571 President: Christiane Riveles [email protected]

Torrance County Archaeological Society President: Ladd Hagmaier [email protected] www.tcasnm.org