SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
NOVEMBER VOICES 2025
MONDAY NIGHTS AT 6 PM AT HOTEL SANTA FE
LECTURES – 50 MONDAYS A YEAR
A PUBLIC PROGRAM GRACIOUSLY ASSISTED BY HOTEL SANTA FE, A PICURIS PUEBLO ENTERPRISE
November 3 Dr. E. C. ‘Chuck’ Adams
Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of Arizona; Curator Emeritus, Archaeology, and Director, Homol’ovi Research Program, Arizona State Museum; Developed U. of Az. Pueblo Archaeology course, 1987 taught to 2016. Taught in Southwest Land, Culture & Society graduate minor program. Led School of Anthropology Field School 2011-2016. Author, The Origin and Development of the Pueblo Katsina Cult; Homol’ovi: An Ancient Hopi Settlement Cluster; Editor, Chevelon: Pueblo at Blue Running Water; Homol’ovi: A Pueblo Hamlet in the Middle Little Colorado Valley, Northeastern Arizona; Co-Editor: The Protohistoric Pueblo World: A.D. 1275 to 1600; Chapter Author, ‘New Perspectives on an Ancient Religion: Katsina Ritual and the Archaeological Record’, in Religion in the Pre-Hispanic Southwest, (eds. C.&T. Van Pool; ‘Hopi History Prior to 1600’, in The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the American Southwest, (eds. B.J. Mills/S. Fowles).
Time & Space: Recovering History at Homol’ovi I: a 14th C. Hopi Village in Northeastern Arizona
November 10 Dr. Sean Dolan, R.P.A.
Archaeologist, American Southwest/Mexican Northwest; Cultural Resources Manager, Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL); Author: “ Insularity as Cultural Strategy: Mimbres Social Organization in Southwest New Mexico, CE 1000-1130” (In Press), American Antiquity; ‘Birds of the Earth and the Dead: An Archaeological Review of Turkeys from the United States Southwest & Mexican Northwest’ (In Press), Kiva, Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History; Co-Author: Understanding Turkey Management in the Mimbres Valley of Southwestern New Mexico using Ancient Mitochondrial DNA and Stable Isotopes (w/A.Oxga, K.Laumbach, J. Krigbaum, A.Manin, C.Schwartz, A.Stone, K.Knudson) and ‘Pachuca Obsidian Blades from the United States Southwest: Implications for Mesoamerican Connections & Coronado’s Mexican Indian Allies’, (w/M.S. Shackley) both American Antiquity; ‘Long-Distance Conveyance of California Obsidian at Hayhurst Lithic Cache Site in Oklahoma’, (w/M.S. Shackley, D. Wyckoff, C. Skinner), Plains Anthropologist.
Ashes Across the Desert: Mimbres & Hohokam Cremations, 750-1450 CE
November 17 Brian Vallo (Pueblo of Acoma)
Private consultant; Former Governor, Pueblo of Acoma; Former Director, Indian Arts Research Center, School for Advanced Research where he led development & publication of Guidelines for Collaboration between tribes & museums to create relevant and culturally appropriate programming, provide collections access, stewardship, and improve documentation. Former Director, Acoma Historic Preservation & Founding Director, Acoma Haak’u Museum; Trustee, Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, Conservation Lands Foundation, and Native Ars and Cultures Foundation. A self-taught artist, his multi-media paintings are inspired by the landscape and pottery of the Pueblo of Acoma. An advocate for sacred site protection, repatriation of ancestors, items of cultural patrimony held in museum.
Pathways and Intersections: A Journey of Leadership and Opportunity
November 24 Dr. Kirt Kempter
Fulbright Fellow and Ph.D. graduate from the University of Texas at Austin. A volcanologist and field geologist, Kirt has conducted extensivefield research in Costa Rica, Mexico, and New Mexico, and has worked with theNASA astronaut training program, providing field geologic training to astronaut candidates. His interest in global geologic processes has allowed him to lead field-oriented expeditions to destinations such as Iceland, Australia, New Zealand, South America, Africa, Antarctica and the American Southwest. Kirt has led educational tours for Smithsonian Journeys and National Geographic Expeditions and Southwest Seminars.
From Seas to Volcanoes: Geology of the Galisteo Basin
THE DOOR – OR – $75 FOR THE SERIES OF 4 LECTURES
Comments are closed.