The Archaeological Conservancy's
2021 Virtual Lecture Series
Archaeology at the Haynie Site:
Investigating a Chacoan Outlier on the Colorado Plateau
Presented by | Southwestern Regional Director Jim Walker and
Haynie Site Field Director Kellam Throgmorton from Crow Canyon Archaeological Center
Thurs, December 16 at 5 pm MST on Zoom Webinars and Facebook Live.
✨Click to register on Zoom Webinars.
About the Lecture:
The Archaeological Conservancy and our partners at Crow Canyon Archaeological Center were recently notified that the Haynie Pueblo Archaeological Preserve will be awarded the Stephen H. Hart Award for Historic Preservation at a ceremony on February 7,2022. History Colorado presents this award annually recognizing and celebrating exemplary archaeology and historic preservation projects across Colorado.
This project received more than 48 percent of the vote with over 1,600 votes cast! To thank our voters, the Conservancy and Crow Canyon are co-hosting a virtual event to celebrate this achievement! The presentation will feature Jim Walker of the Archaeological Conservancy and Kellam Throgmorton of Crow Canyon Archaeological Center who will share more about the how the site was acquired, what is necessary to preserve the site, and what ongoing research tells us about its connection to Chaco culture.
Haynie Pueblo is a located in the picturesque Mesa Verde archaeological region of southwest Colorado. The Pueblo was a Chacoan outlier occupied from around 500 to 1280 A.D. The five-acre site contains two massive, multi-storied Chacoan Great Houses as well as other masonry architecture, kivas, pithouses, and dense trash middens. The Archaeological Conservancy acquired the Haynie Site in 2019 with the generous support of our members and the assistance of a Colorado Historical Fund grant. Research conducted by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center continues to contribute to our knowledge of the site and the people who lived there centuries ago.
About Our Presenters:
Kellam Throgmorton
Kellam Throgmorton is the Field Director for the Northern Chaco Outliers Project. He received his Ph.D. from Binghamton University in 2019. His research interests include early villages, sociopolitical organization, landscape archaeology, and architecture. Kellam’s dissertation considered Chaco landscapes as a form of political action, and he conducted fieldwork at two Chaco outlier communities: Morris 40 near Farmington, New Mexico, and Padilla Wash in Chaco Culture National Historical Park. He assisted in research at numerous outliers, including Chimney Rock, Las Ventanas, and Aztec North. Kellam is excited to be working at the Haynie site and enjoys sharing his enthusiasm with students and the public.
Jim Walker
Jim Walker, a New Mexico native, has been with Archaeological Conservancy for the past 40 years, currently serving as the Conservancy’s Vice President and Southwest Regional Director. He holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of New Mexico in Anthropology (BA) and Business Administration (MBA). He has extensive archaeological knowledge as well as experience and expertise in real estate and cultural resource management. Jim is instrumental to the Conservancy’s ongoing success in the Southwestern Region.
This lecture series is sponsored by The Archaeological Conservancy and is free our Members and the General Public. Recorded lectures will also be available on YouTube or on this page after the event.
For questions about the event or how to register, please contact April Brown ([email protected]) or Sarah Webber ([email protected]).