Resource Inventory

Resource Inventory
Author: United States. Soil Conservation Service
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1975
Genre: Land use
ISBN:

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Santa Cruz - San Pedro River Basin, Arizona

Santa Cruz - San Pedro River Basin, Arizona
Author: United States. Soil Conservation Service
Publisher:
Total Pages: 261
Release: 1977
Genre: Water resources development
ISBN:

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Santa Cruz - San Pedro River Basin, Arizona

Santa Cruz - San Pedro River Basin, Arizona
Author: United States. Department of Agriculture
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1977
Genre: San Pedro River (Ariz.)
ISBN:

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Santa Cruz-San Pedro River Basin, Arizona

Santa Cruz-San Pedro River Basin, Arizona
Author: United States. Soil Conservation Service
Publisher:
Total Pages: 720
Release: 1977
Genre: Natural resources
ISBN:

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Excavations at Punta de Agua in the Santa Cruz River Basin, Southeastern Arizona

Excavations at Punta de Agua in the Santa Cruz River Basin, Southeastern Arizona
Author: J. Cameron Greenleaf
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 123
Release: 1975
Genre: History
ISBN: 0816504970

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The Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona No. 26. Salvage archaeology explores Indian cultural development during Rillito, Rincon, and Tanque Verde phases.

The Lessening Stream

The Lessening Stream
Author: Michael F. Logan
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2006-09-01
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780816526055

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Newcomers to Tucson know the Santa Cruz River as a dry bed that can become a rampaging flood after heavy rains. Yet until the late nineteenth century, the Santa Cruz was an active watercourse that served the region’s agricultural needs—until a burgeoning industrial society began to tap the river’s underground flow. The Lessening Stream reviews the changing human use of the Santa Cruz River and its aquifer from the earliest human presence in the valley to today. Michael Logan examines the social, cultural, and political history of the Santa Cruz Valley while interpreting the implications of various cultures' impacts on the river and speculating about the future of water in the region. Logan traces river history through three eras—archaic, modern, and postmodern—to capture the human history of the river from early Native American farmers through Spanish missionaries to Anglo settlers. He shows how humans first diverted its surface flow, then learned to pump its aquifer, and today fail to fully understand the river's place in the urban environment. By telling the story of the meandering river—from its origin in southern Arizona through Mexico and the Tucson Basin to its terminus in farmland near Phoenix—Logan links developments throughout the river valley so that a more complete picture of the river's history emerges. He also contemplates the future of the Santa Cruz by confronting the serious problems posed by groundwater pumping in Tucson and addressing the effects of the Central Arizona Project on the river valley. Skillfully interweaving history with hydrology, geology, archaeology, and anthropology, The Lessening Stream makes an important contribution to the environmental history of southern Arizona. It reminds us that, because water will always be the focus for human activity in the desert, we desperately need a more complete understanding of its place in our lives.

Requiem for the Santa Cruz

Requiem for the Santa Cruz
Author: Robert H. Webb
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2014-06-12
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 0816530726

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"Over the millennia, the drainageway we now call the Santa Cruz River has seen many ebbs, flows, and floods. Throughout its long history, the river has meandered. It has flowed on the surface. It has carved deep fissures, and it has widened and narrowed.As readers of Requiem for the Santa Cruz learn, these are events that also have taken place in historic times. Authored by an esteemed group of scientists, Requiem for the Santa Cruz thoroughly documents this river, which flows through Tucson, Arizona, as a prime example of arroyo cutting, a process where heavy rains cut down through rock to create deep channeling. Each chapter provides a unique opportunity to chronicle the arroyo legacy, evaluate its causes, and consider its aftermath. Using more than a century of observations and collections, the authors reconstruct the physical, biological, and cultural circumstances of the river's entrenchment, widening, and subsequent partial filling. Today, communities everywhere face this conundrum: do we manageephemeral rivers through urban areas for flood control, or do we attempt to restore them to some previous state of naturalness? Requiem for the Santa Cruz carefully explores the channel-change legacy, the efficacy of attempts to stabilize it, and the nascent attempts at river restoration to give a long-term perspective on management of rivers in arid lands. Tied together by authors who have committed their life's work to the study of arid-land rivers, this book offers a touching and scientifically grounded requiem for the Santa Cruz and every southwestern river"--