Tumamoc Hill

Tumamoc Hill (O'odham: Cemamagĭ Doʼag) is a butte[1] located immediately west of "A" Mountain and downtown Tucson, Arizona. It is home to many radio, television, and public safety transmitters. The 860-acre ecological reserve and U.S. National Historic Landmark was established by the Carnegie Institution in 1903.[2] The University of Arizona (UA) owns a 340-acre (1.4 km2) preserve and leases another 509 acres (2.06 km2) as a research and education facility. The Steward Observatory maintains a small astronomical observatory with a 20-inch (510 mm) telescope on the hill. Besides being a prominent landmark, Tumamoc Hill has a long and varied history, and is currently an important site for ecological and anthropological research as well as a refuge and a recreational option for the people of Tucson. The Desert Laboratory located on Tumamoc welcomed a new director, Ben Wilder, as of 2018.[3]

Tumamoc Hill
View across the Tucson Basin towards Tumamoc Hill (left) and "A" Mountain (center)
Highest point
Prominence3,108 ft (947 m)
Coordinates32°12′46″N 111°00′22″W
Geography
Parent rangeTucson Mountains

Official Designations and Management

Human history

Tumamoc, which is an O'odham word for "regal horned lizard",[4] was a home to the ancient Hohokam people. It is the site of the earliest known trincheras village, consisting of 160 foundations of round stone structures, as well as large stone perimeter walls.[5] Over 460 petroglyphs and a prehistoric garden beside the hill provide further evidence of Tumamoc’s importance to these people.[5] For long after that time, 1,300 years ago, the site continued to provide resources to the Tohono O'odham, Akimel O'odham, and the Hopi. It has also been reported to be a burial site for the Apache and the O'odham.[5]

Captain Juan Mateo Manje, a Spanish military commander, wrote the following about Tumamoc Hill after seeing it on one of his expeditions with Father Kino between 1693 and 1701:[6]

We passed in sight of, and around, a mountain where there are 100 terraces of stone wall in the form of a snail, spiraling to the top. They say it forms an armory, where in former wars those who gained the heights first were usually victors. Those who reached the first ring went around to the second, and as far as was necessary to exhaust the supply of arrows of those below. Then they came down from the mountain and fell upon their enemies and killed them.[6]

Note that Manje refers to "former" wars, indicating that the fighting took place in prehistoric times (before the arrival of Europeans). Being that the O'odham are probably descendants of the Hohokam, it does not seem unreasonable to conclude that the Hohokam, who lived only a few centuries before Manje's expedition, did as their later relatives apparently did and used their trincheras to fall upon their enemies and kill them.[6]

European settlers prized the rock and clay found on the hill for building in the late 19th century, and early ecologists just after the turn of the 20th century selected it for the site of the Carnegie Institute's Desert Laboratory.[5][7] The hill continues to be a landmark and a sanctuary for the people of Tucson today. The road up Tumamoc Hill is a popular destination for walking and running. The entrance to the road up the hill is located across from St. Mary's Hospital on the south side of Anklam Road. It is open to pedestrians in the early mornings and evenings. The steep hill provides a strenuous workout, as well as citywide vistas. Lectures on the unique history and ecology are presented for the public at the site.

History of ecological research

The Desert Laboratory in 1981. Built in 1903, today the lab is a National Historic Landmark.

Frederick V. Colville, chief botanist of the Department of Agriculture, in 1903 convinced the Carnegie Institute of Washington to fund the creation of a Desert Laboratory near the small mining and ranching town of Tucson.[7] The goal was to study desert adaptations of plants in hopes of increasing agricultural output of the desert. Among the pioneering researchers, who helped to shape the then-developing field of ecology in the United States, were William Cannon, Volney M. Spalding, Daniel T. MacDougal, Burton Livingston, Godfrey Sykes, and Forrest Shreve.[8] This research continued until the 1940s, during which time the scientists there were instrumental in the development of the field of ecology in the United States. They began publishing a journal, Plant World, which later became the major journal Ecology.[7]

Due to financial difficulties from the Great Depression, as well as a disconnect between the Carnegie Institute’s mission of making use of the desert and the researchers’ admiration of it, the Carnegie Institute turned the Desert Laboratory over to the Forest Service in 1940.[8] They initially offered it to the University of Arizona for $1, but were turned down.[8] Twenty years later, on July 20, 1960, after several easements and loss of research and records, the University purchased the reserve for considerably more.[8]

The long term observations and experiments on Tumamoc Hill’s vegetation have provided insights on saguaro boom and bust population dynamics, blue palo verde’s dependence on riparian areas, disease and other threats to desert tortoises, and the interactions of a community of small winter annuals and the insects and rodents that prey on their seeds.[5][7]

See also

References

  1. "Ongoing Field Research at Tumamoc Hill" (PDF). UofA Desert Laboratory. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  2. Mace, Mikayla. "New director of Tumamoc Hill lab has big plans for research center, community landmark". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved 2018-10-03.
  3. Mace, Mikayla. "New director of Tumamoc Hill lab has big plans for research center, community landmark". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved 2018-10-03.
  4. "Our Name: Tumamoc Hill". Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  5. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-30. Retrieved 2010-08-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link), University of Arizona Cultural Resources Policy and Management Plan, September 2008.
  6. "Hohokam ruins on Tumamoc Hill, Arizona". Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  7. , United States Geological Survey and University of Arizona Desert Laboratory. “Ongoing research on Tumamoc Hill".
  8. , Wall, Nancy. 1994. “From the hill of the horned toad.” Tucson Guide Quarterly: Fall, pp 88-93.
  • Tumamoc - public events and information
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.