Live Breaking News & Updates on Salt River People

Stay updated with breaking news from Salt river people. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Mesa, Tempe sites reveal new details about history of O'odham peoples


Shane Anton stood at the mouth of a hand-hewn irrigation canal that dates back centuries before the arrival of the first European explorers. The ancient waterway, 10 feet wide and about 5 feet deep, sits in a small desert park surrounded by tract homes in Lehi, a neighborhood in north Mesa.
Our belief is we ve been here since time immemorial, said Anton, an Onk Akimel O odham and a member of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, and the need to farm was always there.
The 4,500-foot-long-canal at Mesa s Park of the Canals is a tiny fragment of a system that once spanned more than 700 miles along the Salt and Gila rivers, bringing life-giving water to Anton s ancestors, the Hohokam, or as the contemporary O odham peoples call them, the Huhugam. ....

Salt River Valley , United States , Pueblo Grande , Salt River , River Valley , Pueblo Grande Museum , Gila River , The Wash , Fort Mcdowell , Hassayampa River , Jack Swilling , Shane Anton , Tempe Councilmember Doreen , Chin Oodham , Tohono Oodham , Onk Akimel Oodham , Akimel Oodham , Daniel Garcia , Laurene Montero , Debra Krol , John Southard , Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community , Maricopa Phoenix Railroad , Onk Akimelo Odham , Northern Mexico , Pee Posh ,