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folderAuthorTitleSourceDateFormat
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2Russell, FrankPima animalsAA1903jstor
3Bol, MarshaStars above, earth below: American Indians and naturebook1998Leyburn
4Winter, Joseph C.Cultural modifications of the Gila Pima, 1697-1846Ethnohistory1973jstor
4Parsons, ElsieNotes on the PimaAA1928jstor
4Hill, WWNotes on Pima Land Law and TenureAA1936jstor
5NIHThe Pima Indians: Pathfinders for healthNIH Diabetesndweb
6Curtis, EdwardThe Pimafrom Northwestern Webndweb
6Acuff, GuyAkimult aw a tham: the river people: a short history of the Pima Indiansxerox1979book
6Parsons, Elsie ClewsNotes on the Pima, 1926AA1928jstor
6Innis, Gilbert C.PimaNative America in the 20th century1994book
6Pablo, Sally GiffContemporary PimaSmithsonian vol 101983book
6GRICAkimel O'odham/Pee PoshEcon Dev Deptndweb
6Hrdlicka, AlesNotes on the Pima of ArizonaAA1906jstor
7EWGUSDA subsidy information for Ak-chin farmsFarm Subsidy Databasendweb
7EWGGila River farms payments 95-03Farm Subsidy Databasendweb
8Webb, GeorgeA Pima remembersUA Pressndxerox
8Ortiz, AlfonsoThe Gila River Piman water problem: an ethnohistorical accountThe changing ways of Southwestern Indians: a historic perspective:Rio Grande Press1973xerox
8Russell, FrankA Pima constitutionJournal of American Folklore1903jstor
8Swan, William H.The Salt River Pima-Maricopa settlement: an overviewIndian Water in the West1993xerox
8Allen, NathanIrrigation on the Gila Riverwww.gilariver.comndweb
9GMICPima-Maricopa Irrigation Projectwww.gilariver.comndweb
10Phillips, Steven J and Patricia W. ComusA natural history of the Sonoran desertA-S Desert Museum Pressndxerox
11ill requests
12Hayden, JulianHistory of the Puerto Penaso area?ndxerox
12Hayden, JulianA summary prehistory and history of the Sierra Pinacate, SonoraAmerican Antiquity1967jstor
12Nabhan, Gary PaulSandfood and Sand Papago: a wild kind of mutualismGathering in the DesertndLeyburn
12Webb, GeorgeA Pima remembersUA Pressndxerox
12Nabhan, Gary Paul et al.A meager living on lava and sand? Hia Ced O'Odham food resources and habitat diversity in oral and documantary historiesJournal of the Southwest1989xerox
12Childs, ThomasSketch of the “Sand Indians”Kiva1954xerox
12Thomas, Robert K.Papago land use west of the Papago Indian Reservation, south of the Gila River and the problem of Sand Papago identity1953xerox
12Van Valkenburgh, RichardTom Childs of Ten-mile WashAjo Copper News cunews.infondweb
12Anderson, Keith M. et al.Quitobaquito: a Sand Papago cemeteryKiva1982xerox
12Norell, BrendaO'odham keeping alive the 'Himdag'Indian Country fourdirectionsmedia.com2001web
12na'People with No Home' want oneTcson Citize1999web
13Thomas, David HurstAgricultural imperatives in the American SouthwestExploring Ancient Native America: an archaeological guidendLeyburn
13Thomas, David HurstPueblo GrandeExploring Native North America2000Leyburn
13Morgan, William N.Ancient architecture of the SouthwestndLeyburn
13Ezell, Paul A.Is there a Hohokam-Pima culture continuum?American Antiquity1963jstor
13Bahr, Donald M. Who were the Hohokam? the evidence from Pima-Papago mythEthnohistory1971jstor
13Gregonis, Linda M. and Karl J. ReinhardHohokam Indians of the Tucson Basin (3 chapters)ndweb
13Cordell, Linda S.Prehistory of the SouthwestAcademic Press1984Leyburn
13Waters, Michael R. and John C RaveslootLandscape change and the cultural evolution of the Hohokam along the middl Gila River and other river valleys in south-central ArizonaAmerican Antiquity2001EAI
13Bohrer, VorsilEthnobotanical aspects of Snaketown, a Hohokam village in southern ArizonaAmerican Antiquity1970jstor
13naHohokam irrigationcarbon.cudenver.edundweb
13City of PhoenixMain Exhibit Gallery:The Hohokam: the land and the peoplewww.ci.phoenix.az.usndweb
13naThe Hohokam 200 BC-1450ADdesertusa.comndweb
13naNative American Indians and the Black Mountain/Foothills areablkmtnconservancy.orgndweb
13Andrews, John P and Todd BostwickThe disappearance of the Hohokam?copwww.ci.phoenix.az.usndweb
13Bostwick, Todd W and Stan PlumThe Shaw Butte prehistoric observatory in Phoenix, Arizonawww.amug.orgndweb
13Howard, Jerry B.Hohkam legacy: desert canalsPueblo Grande Museum Profiles #12 www.waterhistory.orgndweb
13naPapago Park factphoenix.govndweb
13Hayden, Julian D.Hohokam petroglyphs of the Sierra PinacateKiva1972xerox
13naHohokam culturewww.mc.maricopa.edundweb
13Gregonis, LindaThe Hohokamsonorensis desertmuseum.org1996web
13Fish, Suzanne K. et al.Early sedentism and agriculture in the northern Tucson Basinuapress.arizona.edundonline book
14Webb, GeorgeA Pima remembers
15naO'odham coiled basketrystatemuseum.arizona.edundweb
16bibliographies
17naArizona casino cash helps reduce reservations' povertycasinocitytimes.com2004web
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19Wright, Harold BellLong ago told: legends of the Papago Indians1929xerox
19valentine, FernandoHistory of the Puerto Penasco region: Schuk ToakNoticias del CEDOndxerox
19Saxton, Dean and LucilleO'othham Hoho'ok A'agitha: legends and lore of the Papago and Pima Indiansndxerox
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19Teague, Lynn S.Prehistory and the traditions of the O'odham and HopiKiva1993xerox
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19Neff, Mary L. Pima and Papago legendsJournal of American Folklore1912jstor
20Hackenberg, Robert APimas and Papago Ecological Adaptationsvol 10 Southwest1983book
20Nabhan, Gary PCultural adaptations to the desert's bountysonorensis1997web
20Crosswhite, Frank SDesert plants, habitat and agriculture in relation to the major pattern of ciltural differentiation in the O'odham people of the Sonoran DesertDesert PLants1981xerox
20naTraditional food plantsTraditional O'odham Foods Information Projectndweb
20Brody, Jane ETo preserve their health and heritage, Arizona Indians reclaim ancient foodsNYT Science Times (San Pedro Mesquite Co. reprintndweb
20naDesert people and the saguaroTeacher Information Desert Discovery Class2000xerox
20Nabhan, Gary PaulPlant domestication and folk-biological change: the Upper Piman/Devil's Claw exampleAA1987stor
20Bahre, Conrad J and Daveid E BradburyVegetation change along the Arizona-Sonora boundaryAAAG1978jstor
20Castetter, Edward FUncultivated native plants used as sources of foodUNM Bulletin1935xerox
21Hammond, George PPimiera Alta after Kino's timeNM Historical Review1929xerox
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22naDragoon Washndxerox
22naA look at the Sonoran Desert: background informationDesert Museum Teacher Information1999xerox
22naWestern Pima CountySonoran Desert Conservation Plan www.co.pima.azndweb
22naMiracle in the desertSan Pedro River www.lastgreatplaces.orgndweb
22Hinton, Richard JThe deserts of AmericaFrank Leslie's Popular Monthly1892xerox
22Dice, Lee RThe Sonoran biotic provinceEcology1939jstor
22Hayden, Julian DA summary prehistory and history of the Sierra Pinacate, SonoraAmerican Antiquity1967jstor
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22Broyles, BillSurface water resources for prehistoric peoples in western Papagueria of the North American south-westJournal of Arid Environments1996xerox
22Kelly, Allan oMysterious crater EleganteScientific Monthly1952jstor
22Ives, Ronald LThe origin of the Sonoyta townsite, Sonora, MexicoAmerican Antiquity1941jstor
22Ives, Ronald LThe discovery of Pinacate volcanoScientific Monthly1942jstor
22Nabhan, Gary PauNative American management and conservation of biodiversity in the Sonoran Desert regionBiodiversity and Native America2000Leyburn
22Felger, Richard SVegetation and flora of the Gran Desierto, Sonora, MexicoDesert pLants1980xerox
22naWestern Pima County subareaSonoran Desert Conservation Plan www.co.pima.az.usndweb
22Ives, Ronald LThe Pinacate region, Sonora, MexicoOccasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences1964xerox
22Felger, Richard SVegetation and flora of the Gran Desierto, Sonora, Mexicondxerox
23Hartmann, William KVolcanoes and IndiansDesert Heart: Chronicles of the Sonoran desertndLeyburn
23Weisman, AlanDesert and deltaLa Frontera:the United States border with MexicondLeyburn
23Faragher, John MackNorth, South, and West: sectional controversies and the US-Mexico boundary surveyDrawing the BorderlinendLeyburn
23Broyles, BillAdventure in the PinacateJournal of Arizona History1987xerox
23Broyles, BillWJ McGee's “Desert thirst as disease”Journal of the Southwest1988xerox
23McKenney, WilsonSacred cave of the PapagosWestways1951xerox
23Broyles, BillDesert Thirst: the ordeal of Pablo ValenciaJournal of Arizona History1982xerox
23naPinacate Mexicovolcano.und.nodak.edundweb
23naPinacate Biosphere Reservewww.puerto-penasco.comndweb
23naA Pinacate notebookwww.biopark.orgndweb
23Mader, RonExploring the Pinacate Biosphere Reservewww.planeta.comndweb
23nnPuerto Penaso “Rocky Point”www.bajaquest.comndweb
23Fleming, John and MargaretPinacatewww.penasco.comndweb
23naCabeza Prieta NWRsouthwest.fws.govndweb
23Franklin, KevinUnder siege: the history of Cabeza Prieta WR is a natural historywww.tucsonweekly.com1997web
23Franklin, KevinMotor crosswww.tucsonweekly.com1996web
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24Flores, Mike et al.Managing cultural resources in Sonoran Desert biosphere provincesCultural Survival1990web
24Luke, Timothy WSouthwestern environments as hyperreality: the Arizona-Sonora Desert MuseumMuseum politics: power plays at the Exhibition2002xerox
24naA food web in the desert biomecurriculum.calstatela.edundweb
24White, CarrieRanger sees the Sonoran as a food, medicine gardenEast Valley Tribune2005web
25Nabhan, Gary Paul and Sara St. AntoineThe loss of floral and faunal story: the extinction of experienceThe Biophilia Hypothesis1993Leyburn
26Brown-Kampen, CatherineThe maze of life design of the Pima-PapagoThe Masterkey1971xerox
27naMaps of the Pimeria: early cartography of the southwestdizzy.library.arizona.edundweb
27Kelly, William HThe Papago Indians of Arizona: a population and economic study (map)1963xerox
28Underhill, RuthIntercultural relations in the greater SouthwestAA1954jstor
28Gifford, EWCultural relations of the Gila River and Lower Colorado tribesAA1936jstor
29naWaila:traditionPulse of the PLanet www.pulseplanet.com2000web
29Means, AndrewChicken scratch: the waila music of the O'odham peopls of ArizonaNative Peoples1995xerox
29Sherrill, Barbara E and Susan GageTohono O'odham fiddle musicUA Music of the Southwest www.elearn.arizona2002web
30Griffin-Pierce, TrudyThe O'odhamNative Peoples of the Southwest2000Leyburn
30Sheridan, Thomas EThe O'odham (Pimas and Papagos): the world would burn without rainPaths of Life1996Leyburn
30naThe O'odhamwww.ic.arizona.edundweb
30Fontana, Bernard LPima and Papago: introductionSouthwest1983Leyburn
30naGila River communityIntertribal Council of Arizona www.itcaonline.comndweb
30naSalt River Pima-Maricopa Indian communitywww.itcaonline.comndweb
30naTohono O'odham Nationwww.itcaonline.comndweb
30Zepeda, OfeliaO'odham ha-Cegitodag/Pima and Papago thoughtsIJAL1982jstor
30Hrdlicka, AlesNotes on the Indians of Sonora, MexicoAA1904jstor
31Ives, Ronald LPopulation of the Pinacate region, 1698-1706The Kiva1965xerox
31Jackson, Robert HCauses of Indian population decline in the Pimiera Alta missions of northern SonoraJournal of Arizona Historyndxerox
32Bahr,Donald M and J Richard HaeferSong in Piman curingEthnomusicology1978jstor
32Bahr, Donald m, Joseph Giff, Manuel HavierPiman songs on huntingEthnomusicology1979jstor
32Drucker, PhilipAddenda on the Southwestern ceremonial houseAA1939jstor
33Neff, MaryPima and Papago legendsJournal of American Folklore1912jstor
34Bahr, Donald MPima and Papago social organizationin Ortiz Southwest1983Leyburn
35Morrisey, Richard JEarly agriculture in Pimeria AltaMid-America1949xerox
35Hackenberg, Robert AEconomic alternatives in arid lands: a case study of the Pima and Papago IndiansEthnology1962xerox
35Nabhan, Gary PaulThe ecology of floodwater farming in arid south-western North AmericaAgro-Ecosystems 1979xerox
35Fish, Suzanne and Paul FishPrehistoric desert farmers of the southwestAnnual Review of Anthropology1994jstor
35n.a.USDA subsidy information for Gila River Farmswww.ewg.org2004web
35Hackenberg, RobertChanging diet of Arizona IndiansJournal of American Indian Education jaie.asu.edu1964web
35n.a.Total USDA subsidies in Pinal County, 2003www.ewg.org2004web
36n.a.Border Environment Cooperation Commission: general informationwww.cocef.org2004web
37n.a.Exploring and protecting the desert seaIntercultural Center for the Study of Deserts and Oceansn.d.pamphlet
37n.a.Profile: the international Sonoran Desert Alliance Bridging Borders Across the Americas www.planeta.com1995web
38Dempsey, MattNative seeds hold cluesArizona Republic www.azcentral.com2004web
38n.a.Conservation farmwww.nativeseeds. org2004web
39n.a.Sonoran Desert Conservation PlanSDCP www.co.pima.az.us2004web
40Broyles, BillSurface water resources for prehistoric peoples in western Papagueria of the North American south-westJournal of Arid Environments1996reprint
40n.a.Tribal water bill signed into lawArizona Republic www.azcentral.com2004web
40Davenport, PaulBush signs water settlement billCasa Grande Valley Newspapers www.zwire.com2004web
40Broyles, BillDesert wildlife water developments: questioning use in the SouthwestWildlife Society Bulletin1995xerox
40n.a.Tribal water systems programInterTribal Council of Arizona www.itcaonline.com2003web
40n.a.Indian water rights summaryArizona Dept of Water Resourcesn.d.xerox
41n.a.The Tohono O'odham TodayDry Spell www.heard.orgn.d.web
42Ravesloot, John COn the treatment and reburial of human remains: the San Xavier Bridge Project, Tucson, ArizonaAmerican Indian Quarterly1990jstor
43Brittain, Richard G and Matts MyhrmanToward a responsive Tohono O'odham dwellingAridlands pre-web archives ag.arizona.edu1989web
44Kilcrease, A.T.Ninety five years of history of the Papago IndiansSouthwestern Monuments supplement1939xerox
44Fontana, Bernard LThe Papago Indians appendix B: calendar sticksE99 P25 F66 part 31935?xerox
44Underhill, RuthA Papago calendar recordUNM Bulletin1988xerox
45Underhill, RuthAcculturation at the Papago village of Santa RosaPapago Indians 11974xerox
45Joseph, Alice, Rosamond Spicer and Jane CheskyDiverse creedsThe Desert People: chapter 6n.d.xerox
45Griffith, James SThe Folk-Catholic chapels of the PapagueriaPioneer Amewrica1975xerox
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45Griffith, James SThe Magdalena holy picture: religious folk art in two culturesNew York Folklore1982xerox
45Griffiths, James SMagdalena revisited: the growth of a fiestaKiva1967xerox
45Tooker, ElizabethThe fiesta of St Francis Xavier, Magdalena, Sonora, MexicoKiva1950xerox
45Bahr, DonaldPima-Papago ChristianityJournal of the Southwest1988xerox
45Dobyns, Henry FPapago pilgrims on the townKiva1950xerox
45Laguna, AngelMy p[ilgrimage to MagdalenaKiva1950xerox
45n.a.Mission churches of the Sonoran Desert: the Tohono O'odhamdizzy.library.arizona.edun.d.web
45Willoughby, KarenDrve across the desert raises more than dustBP News www.bpnews.net2005web
46Fontana, Bernard LThe flight of the yellow buzzardThe Papago Indians chapter 3n.d.xerox
46McNamee, GregoryThe Tohono O'odham creation storywww.hanksville.org1993web
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46Underhill, Ruth MPapago Indian Religion: BackgroundPapago Indian Religion1946xerox
46Wright, Harold BellThe beginning of all thingsLong ago told (Huh-kew ah-kah)1929xerox
47Castetter, Edward F and Ruth UnderhillThe ethnobiology of the Papago IndiansUNM Bulletin1935xerox
47Crosswhite, FrankThe annual saguaro harvest and crop cycle of the PapagoDesert Plants1980xerox
47Flores, Mike, Fernando Valentine, and Gary Paul NabhanManaging cultural resources in Sonoran Desert Biosphere ReservesCultural Survival Quarterly1990xerox
47Eilers, MichaelTohono O'odham lecturer addresses traditionArizona Daily Wildcat wildcat.arizona.edu1995web
48Hoskinson, TomSaguaro wine, ground figures, and power mountains: investigations at Sears Point, ArizonaEarth and Sky: visions of the cosmos in Native American folklore1992leyburn
49Enos, Susie IgnacioPapago legend of the sahuaroArizona Quarterly1945xerox
49Nabhan, Gary PaulPlants which Coyote steals, spoils, and shits onThe Desert Smells Like Rain, chapter 6n.d.xerox
49n.a.Tohono O'odham ecosystem: schematic representation (diagram)www.hrc.wsu.edun.d.web
49Castetter, Edward F and Willis H BellCultivation and utilization of tobacco: a ceremonial cropPima and Papago Indian agriculture1942xerox
49Nabhan, Gary Paul, Charles Weber, and James BerryLegumes in the Papago-Pima Indian diet and ecological nicheKiva1979xerox
49n.a.(on saguaro fuit harvest)Tucson Weekly www.tucsonweekly.com1995web
49Moreillon, JudySaguaro blossoms and fruitsSaguaro Page (?url?)2002web
50Underhill, RuthThe autobiography of Chona, a Papago womanPapago Woman1985xerox
50Underhill, RuthGames and bettingSocial Organization of the Papago Indians1939xerox
50The old intervillage games of the PapagosIndians at Work 1936xerox
50Blaine, Petergames and gamblingPapagos and Politics1981xerox
50Vitu, TeyaCasinos give Arizona $9.9M for last quarterTucson Citizen www.tucsoncitizen.comn2005web
51Raver, AnneIn desert, finding blooms that healNew York Times Living2000xerox
51Woods, Teri K, Karen Blaine, and Lauri FranciscoO'odham Himdag as a source of strength and wellness among the Tohono O'odham of southern Arizona and northern Sonora, MexicoJournal of Sociology & Social Welfare2002infotrac
51Tessandori, A.S.supporting documentTraditional O'odham Foods Information Project home.comcast.net/~atessandorin.d.web
51Mansfield, HowardDesert walkDoubletake Magazinen.d.xerox
51Norrell, BrendaNopalitos, green corn tamales and good healthCanku Ota www.turtletrack.org2004web
51n.a.Fat and happy? The desert's perfect foodScientific American Frontiers www.pbs.orgn.d.web
51Zestaury, JaneFood for thought: that old time nutritionSierra Club Magazine www.sierraclub.org1996web
51Mabrey, VickiWhy is America so fat?CBS News 60 Minutes www.cbsnews.com2004web
51n.a.Fighting diabetes: American Indians visit campus, tailor program to tribal needsrecord.wustl.edu1998web
51Arrillaga, PaulineTohono O'odham: tribe returns to traditional gardening as way to get by, and to fight diabetesSeattle Times1999xerox
51Denogean, AnneO'odham get diabetes sermonTucson Citizen www.tucsoncitizen.com2004web
51n.a.Desert foods: a medical breakthroughwww.dolfzine.comn.dweb
51Reader, TristanReviving native foods, health, and culture: the Tohono O'odham community food systemOxfam America2004web
51n.a.Tribe looks to traditional foods to combat diabetes crisisKellogg Foundation Newsletter www.wkkfweb.org2004web
51Sierra, CristianRoom to grow: O'odham organization plants the seedsd to cure diabetes...Tucson Weekly www.tucsonweekly.com2002web
51Norrell, BrendaIndigenous in Sonora without medicine or doctorswww.americaspolicy.org1998web
51n.a.How experts know that lifestyle changes can help control Type 2 diabetes: lessons learned from the Pima Indianswww.glucerna-precision.com2003web
51May, AlisonPrimary care: notes from the RezHarvard Medical School Web Weekly webweekly.hms.harvard.edu2004web
51Blackmer, HughPubMed Search: Papago/O'odhamhttp://home.wlu.edu/~blackmerh/oodham/oodhampubmed.html2004web
52Murray, LauraSan Xavier's house in orderIndians At Work1936xerox
52Haas, Theodore HIndian uprising -- new styleThe Survey1949xerox
53n.aKitt Peak National Observatory: Tohono O'odhamwww.noao.edun.d.web
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54Macdougal, D.T.Across PapagueriaBulletin of the American Geographical Society of New York1908xerox
55Wright, Harold BellRun lightly (Muh-leen sowah-kahm)Long ago told: legends of the Papago Indians1929xerox
56Lumholtz, CarlNew trails in Mexico: an account of one year's exploration in north-western Sonora and south-western Arizonachapters 2-81912xerox
57Densmore, FrancesPapago musicBureau of American Ethnology Bulletin1929xerox
57n.a.dance and women's gamesIndians At Work1936xerox
58Dobyns, HenryA Papago victory in 1854Kiva1957xerox
59Kelly, William HThe Papago Indians of Arizona: a population and economic studyBIA1963xerox
59Curtis, Edward SThe PapagoThe North American Indian vol 2 digital.library.northwestern.edun.d.web
59Fontana, BernardHistory of the PapagoSouthwest1983xerox
59Fontana, BernardReport before the Indian Claims Commissionn.d.xerox
59Tatum(?), WilliamThe Papago Indian Reservation and the Papago PeopleBIA1975xerox
59zitzmann, Tara RosePapagowww.mnsu.edun.d.web
59Juan, VivianTohono O'odhamNative America in the Twentieth Century1994xerox
59Castetter, Edward F and Ruth UnderhillThe ethnobiology of the Papago IndiansUNM Bulletin1935xerox
59Gaillard, D.D.The Papago of Arizona and SonoraAA1894jstor
59n.a.The O'odham todayDry Spell www.heard.orgn.d.web
59n.aRain in the Southwestwww.heard.org (in Google cache)n.d.web
59n.a.The flag of the Tohono O'odham nationusers.aol.com/donh523n.d.web
60Blaine, PeterPapagos and PoliticsArizona Historical Society1981xerox
60Blaine, PeterPete Blane goes to WashingtonJournal of Arizona History1980xerox
60Wilson, Ida N.Papago has leadershipIndians at Work1939xerox
60Holst, John H.the organization of the PapagosIndians at Work1937xerox
60Scully, MichaelOur most important Indian chiefEmpire1952xerox
60Stocker, JosephTom Segundo, Chief of the PapagosArizona Highways1951xerox
60n.a.Papago Indian leaderhere -- will learn law to aid tribeHyde Park Herald1953xerox
61US CensusProfile of general demographic characteristics 2000: Tohono O'odham Reservation and Off-Reservation Trust landCensus 20002000xerox
61hackenberg, Robert A. and C. Roderick WilsonReluctant emigrants: the role of migration in Papago Indian adaptationHuman Organization1972xerox
61Jones, DelmosA description of settlement pattern and population movement on the Papago ReservationKiva1962xerox
61Nichols, JudyNative Americans' income increasingArizona Republic www.azentral.com2005web
62Duarte, CarmenO'odham plan to hit airwaves on new stationCanku Ota www.turtletrack.org2001web
63n.a.Sacred houses and shrinesThe Tohono O'odham People http://dizzy.library.arizona.edu/images/eng102/toodham/main_page.html 2000web
63Cooter, Robert D. and Robert K. ThomasThe people and the strangers: narratives and a theory of American Indian lifeCollected Works of Robert Cooter1991xerox
64Haefer, J. RichardO'odham Celkona: the Papago skipping danceSouthwestern Indian Ritual Drama1980xerox
65O'Connor, Mary I.The pilgrimage to MagdalenaAnthropology of Religion: a handbookn.d.leyburn
66Densmore, FrancesPapago MusicBull of American Ethnology 901929xerox
66Underhill, RuthThe rainmaking ceremonyPapago Indian Religion chapter 31946xerox
66Underhill, RuthPapago rain festivalQuarterly of the Southwestern Association on Indian Affairs1966xerox
66Joseph, Alice, Rosamond Spicer and Jane CheskyDiverse creedsThe Desert People: chapter 6n.d.xerox
66Bruder, J. SimonChanging patterns in Papago subsistence strategies: archaeology and ethnohistory comparedKiva1977xerox
66Bowen, RuthSaguaro harvest in PapagolandDesert Magazine1939xerox
66Gunst, Marie LouiseGo-him-mo-li or rain ceremonyCeremonials of the Papago and Pima Indians1930xerox
66Wright, Harold BellThe giant cactus (Hah-shahn)Long Ago Told1929xerox
66Dahl, KevinDesert harvestTucson Weekly www.tucsonweekly.com/1995web
66Fisher, KarenPapago harvestArizona Highways1977xerox
66n.a.Rain in lifeDry Spelln.d.web
66Kelly, William H.Average annual precipitation (map)The Papago Indians of Arizona: a population and economic study1963xerox
66Nabhan, Gary PaulThrowing up the clouds: cactus wine, vomit, and rainThe Desert Smells Like Rain, chapter2n.d.xerox
66chiago, MikeRain house and saguaro wine festival: paintingwww.hanksville.org1993web
66Weil, AndrewThrowing up in MexicoThe Marriage of the Sun and Moon: a quest for unity in consciousness, chapter 2n.d.xerox
67Joaquin, Joeinterview: salt pilgrimage to Gulf coat outlawedOur peoples: Tohono O'odham tribal history2000xerox
67Densmore, FrancesSongs connected with expeditions to obtain saltPapago Music Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 901929xerox
67Underhill, RuthThe salt pilgrimagePapago Indian Religion, chapter 91946xerox
67Stewart, Kenneth M.Southern Papago salt pilgrimagesThe Masterkey1965xerox
68Galiner, JacquesFrom Montezuma to San Francisco: the Wi:gita ritual in Papago religionJournal of the Southwest1991xerox
68Hayden, JulianThe vikita ceremony of the Papago, 1936-1945Journal of the Southwest1987xerox
68Mason, J. AldenThe Papago harvest festivalAA1920jstor
68Bahr, Donald M.Papago ocean songs and the Wi:gitaJournal of the Southwestn.d.xerox
69Wright, Harold BellThe contest (Uh-chee-choo-ve)Long Ago Told1929xerox
69Underhill, RuthThe shrine of living children?n.d.xerox
69Childs, CraigThe sacrifice of childrenThe Secret Knowledge of Water, chapter 6n.d.xerox
70Ives, Ronald L.Geologic verification of a Papago legendThe Masterkey1935xerox
70Lebec, RalphProfile of a mountain (Baboquivari)Desert1965xerox
70Douglas, William O.Baboquivari?n.d.xerox
71Kozak, David and Camillus LopezThe Tohono O'odham shrine complex: memorializing the locations of violent deathNew York Folklore1991xerox
72Kelly, William H.Reservation districts (map)The Papago Indians of Arizona1963xerox
72Hoover, J. W.Generic descent of the Papago villagesAA1935jstor
72Cooter, Robert D. and Robert K. ThomasThe people and the strangers: narratives and a theory of American Indian lifeCollected Works of Robert Cooter1991xerox
73Kelly, William H.Location and size of cultivated fields, 1914 (map)The Papago Indians of Arizona1963xerox
73Kelly, William H.Distribution of livestock on main Reservation 1914 & 1962 (map)The Papago Indians of Arizona1963xerox
73Meeks, Eric V.The Tohono O'odham, wage labor, and resistant adaptation, 1900-1930Western Historical Quarterly www.historycooperative.orgn.d.web
73Lewis, David RichTohono O'odham, the desert peopleNeither Wolf nor Dog: American Indians, environment, and agrarian changen.dxerox
73Waddell, Jack O.Papago Indians at workWork in Non-Mrket and Transitional Societies1984xerox
73n.a.Diversity key word for Tohono O'odhamArizona Land and People cals.arizona.edun.d.web
73Erickson, Winston P.Workin' on the railroad and elsewhereSharing the Desert: the Tohono O'odham in history1994leyburn
73Allen, Paul L.Tohono O'odham farming: modernizing a traditionTucson Citizen www.tucsoncitizen.com2003web
73Wagoner, J.J.History of the cattle industry in southern Arizona, 1540-1940U Arizona Bulletin1952xerox
74n.a.Tohono O'odham Community Associationwww.tocaonline.org2003web
75n.a.Tohono O'odham Community Collegewww.tocc.cc.az.us2004web
76manyborder issuesnews reportsweb and xerox
77Kelly, William H.Location of ground water (map)The Papago Indians of Arizona1963xerox
77Pisani, Donald J.Uneasy allies: the Reclamation Service and the BIAWater and American Government: the Reclamation Bureau, national water policy, and the West, 1902-1935, chapter 6n.d.xerox
77n.a.Tohono O'odham Nation, Sil Nakya communit wastewater facility, ArizonaClean Water Act Indian Set-Aside Grant Programn.d.xerox
78Brown, F. Lee and Helen M. IngramWater and Poverty in the Southwestn.d.xerox