Introduction

Picture shows the San Xavier del Bac

Source - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:San_Xavier_del_Bac.jpg

 

San Xavier del Bac, Mission established by Father Kino in southern Nevada. Located on what is today the Tohono O'odham Reservation outside of Tucson, Arizona, the mission is still used for church services

Prior to contact, the O'odham (also known as the Pima and Papago) lived in scattered farmsteads spread across the Sonoran desert of southern Arizona and northern Mexico. Their first sustained interaction with the Spaniards began in 1687 when Father Eusebio Kino, a Jesuit priest, established a series of missions in the general region. Written accounts from that time indicate that the O'odham subsisted off both wild resources and agricultural products, with the relative contributions of these foods varying from year to year and across the landscape. The arrival of the Europeans brought substantial changes to this lifestyle, however, and today O'odham lands are confined to six reservations in southern Arizona.

 

Required Readings and Resources

 

Learning Objectives

 

Major Concepts and Terms

 

Additional Resources

Additional information (optional) about calendar sticks

 

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