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  1. Sinagua - Wikipedia

    • Several contemporary Hopi clans trace their ancestry to immigrants from the Sinagua culture, who they believe left the Verde Valley for religious reasons. Pima, Tohono O'odham, Yavapai, and Zuni also potentially have cultural, linguistic, and historical connections to the Sinagua people. Melanie O'Brien, acting manager of the National NAGPRA Progra… See more

    Overview

    The Sinagua were a pre-Columbian culture that occupied a large area in central Arizona from the Little Colorado River, n… See more

    Name

    The name Sinagua was coined in 1939 by archaeologist Harold S. Colton, founder of the Museum of Northern Arizona, from the Spanish words sin meaning "without" and agua meaning "water", referring to the name origi… See more

    Cultural phases

    Colton also distinguished between two different Sinagua cultures. The Northern Sinagua were loosely centered in the highlands around Flagstaff, with Walnut Canyon National Monument, Wupatki National M… See more

     
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  1. The Ancient Ones Of Northern Arizona: Sinagua, Anasazi, …

  2. Sinagua - Montezuma Castle National Monument (U.S. National …

  3. Sinagua | American Southwest Virtual Museum

    WEBThe Sinagua were a resilient, resourceful, and culturally diverse people who inhabited the forests, canyons, grasslands, and deserts of central and northern Arizona from about A.D. 600 through A.D. 1450.

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  4. The Sinagua - Prehistoric People of the Desert …

    WEBAs they established new pithouse and pueblo villages, the Sinagua – more than either the River and Delta or the Upland Yuman groups – expanded their sphere of interaction with both near and distant peoples, especially …

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  5. The Sinagua —The People Without Water | National Parks Traveler

  6. Who Were the Sinagua and Where Did They Go? - Moon Guides

  7. Sinagua - Science of the American Southwest (U.S. National …

  8. Arizona: Walnut Canyon National Monument - U.S.

    WEBAug 7, 2017 · When the Ancestral Puebloans first settled the region in about 600 AD, the Sinagua people around Flagstaff lived in pithouses and freestanding pueblos scattered along the canyon rims. Eventually, as …

  9. Salado and Sinagua: The Prehistories of Two Unique …

    WEBNov 22, 2015 · While the Salado were reknowned for their Tonto Polychrome pottery which incompassed red, white, and black designs both inside and outside of their vessels, the Sinagua practiced the …

  10. Prehistoric Apartments - National Geographic Society

  11. The Sinagua - Northern Arizona University

  12. Ancient Cultures of Northern Arizona: The Sinagua, Anasazi, …

  13. Land of the Sinagua: People ""without water"" - Deseret News

  14. The Sinagua Culture | Native American Pottery

  15. The Sinagua People of the Verde Valley and Hopi Lineage

  16. Early Inhabitants | VVAC

  17. NPS Historical Handbook: Montezuma Castle

  18. Park Archives: Walnut Canyon National Monument

  19. Montezuma Castle National Monument Arizona

  20. Sinagua Trades, Arts, and Crafts - U.S. National Park Service

  21. Wupatki Ruins And Sacred Sunset Crater Of Ancestral …

  22. Frequently Asked Questions - U.S. National Park Service

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