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LIST OF FIGURES
| Figure A.1.*
Figure A.2.*
Figure A.3.
Figure A.4.
Figure A.5.
Figure A.6.
Figure A.7.
Figure A.8.*
Figure A.9.
Figure A.10.*
Figure A.11.
Figure A.12.
Figure A.13.
Figure A.14.
Figure A.15.
Figure A.16.
Figure A.17.
Figure A.18.
Figure A.19.
Figure A.20.
Figure A.21.
Figure A.22.
Figure A.23.
Figure A.24.
Figure A.25.
Figure A.26.
Figure A.27.
Figure A.28.
Figure A.29.
Figure A.30.
Figure A.31.
Figure A.32.
Figure A.33.
Figure A.34.
Figure A.35.
Figure A.36.
Figure A.37.
Figure A.38.
Figure A.39.
Figure A.40.
Figure A.41.
Figure A.42. |
Location of
the Naco Port of Entry expansion survey, 7.5' NACO, ARIZONA (76.7KB)*.
The Naco, Arizona, Port of Entry expansion project
area (125KB)*.
A portion of the 1904 Sanborn Insurance map of
the project area.
Photograph of soldiers protecting Naco during
the 1910-1916 Mexican Revolution.
Naco listings in the 1924 Bisbee City Directory.
Photograph of view looking from Naco, Arizona,
into Naco, Sonora, during Prohibition.
A portion of the 1931 Sanborn Insurance map.
Archaeological sites in the Naco vicinity (86.5KB)*.
Property boundaries in the project area.
A portion of the 1907 street and lot map of Naco,
Arizona (145KB)*.
Photograph of the Copper Queen Store, ca. 1916.
Photograph of D Street in Naco, Arizona, ca.
1910 to 1915.
Photograph of D Street in Naco, Arizona, ca.
1910 to 1915.
Photograph of the west facade of the buildings
facing D Street, north of the Port of Entry property.
Photograph of the south facade of the bank/store
building, located north of the Port of Entry property.
Photograph of a detail of the bank/store south
facade, located north of the Port of Entry property.
Photograph of the south side of the office building,
located north of the Port of Entry property.
Photograph of the U.S. Immigration Office, about
1915.
Archaeological Features 1 through 6 in the Naco,
Arizona, Port of Entry expansion area.
Buildings and archaeological features in the
Naco, Arizona Port of Entry expansion area.
Archaeological features located during the testing
program (Clickable image).
Overview of the expansion property to the east.
Overview of the expansion property to the west.
A photograph of the exterior of Feature 1, the
Copper Queen Store.
A profile of the west wall of the north ell of
the Copper Queen Store.
A view of the interior of the Copper Queen Store.
A cross section of the Copper Queen Store foundation.
The northeast corner of the adobe-walled compound,
Feature 3.
A profile of a portion of the Feature 3 wall.
Photograph of Feature 5, artifacts present in
the historic trash area.
Feature 6, the buzz saw mount, was well preserved.
A photograph of the concrete slab in the outhouse,
Feature 8. The adobe compound wall, Feature 3, is in the background.
The east profile of Feature 8.
Stakes and flagging tape have been used to indicate
the position of Feature 11, a circa 1916 army tent.
Two bullets were recovered from a gully below
a drain spout, Feature 20.
Two pits (Features 21 and 22) were present to
the north of the Copper Queen Store ell. A pipe, Feature 43, cuts
across Feature 21, to the left. Pipe trench, Feature 26, is visible to
the right of Feature 22.
The outline of Feature 28, the middle army tent,
was also traceable.
Feature 31, a ditch, was partially lined with
brick. Feature 3, the adobe compund wall, is to the right.
Wheel ruts to the east of the Copper Queen Store,
Feature 37, predate the construction of the store. The foundation (Feature
1) cuts through two of the ruts.
A reconstructible hard paste earthenware pitcher
was found in Feature 39, a water main trench.
A metal detector was used to uncover Mexican
Revolution period ammunition. A fired bullet
lies on the original ground surface. |
*Indicates a relatively large image file that may take slightly longer
to download
LIST OF TABLES
Chapter
2: Historical and Archaeological Background
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