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Norton Allen - Wikipedia

Norton Allen

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Norton Allen (1909–1997) was an American artist and avocational archaeologist who worked in the American Southwest, primarily in California and Arizona.

For nearly half a century before his death, Allen was the anonymous but widely respected draftsman for the outstanding maps that appeared in almost every issue of Desert Magazine. As an archaeologist he was an expert on Hohokam culture and the archaeology of the Gila Bend area in Arizon.

For more than 40 winter seasons, Norton Allen, along with his father Ernest and wife Ethel, salvaged archaeological materials that were in danger of being destroyed by expanding agricultural projects fed by water from the Colorado River. He also conducted excavations in the San Pedro Valley and the Great Basin. It was Allen's work and discoveries, particularly at the Gatlin Site, one of the few documented Hohokam platform mounds, that was the impetus for the excavations in the Painted Rocks Reservoir conducted by Arizona State Museum archaeologists William Wasley and Alfred Johnson from 1959 to 1964.[1]

In 1996 the Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society awarded the Victor R. Stoner Award to Norton and Ethel in recognition of their lifelong contributions to archaeological preservation and helping bring knowledge of the Hohokam in the Gila Bend area to the public's attention.

  1. '^ Journal of the Southwest, Summer/Autumn 2010 issue