Glyphs Past Issues
Glyphs Volume 75 (2024-2025)
- July 2024 – History and Landscape at Two Chacoan Communities in New Mexico, Kellam J. Throgmorton
- August 2024 – Pecos Conference
- September 2024 – Community Landscapes, Community Identity: Ancestral Pueblos of the Lion Mountain Area – Suzanne Eckert
- October 2024 – Ladders, Axes, and a Tale of Two Pueblo Technologies, Richard Ahlstrom
- November 2024 – Preserving Place & Empowering Community: The Past, Present, and Future of Camp Naco, R. Brooks Jeffery and Rebecca Orozco
- December 2024 – Deposits and the Stories They Tell: Social Practice, Social Identity, and Social Power at Homol’ovi I, a 14th-century Ancestral Hopi Pueblo in Northeastern Arizona, E. Charles Adams
Glyphs Volume 74 (2023-2024)
- July 2023 – The Fremont Cultural Tradition at the Northern Edge of the Greater Southwest, Michael T. Searcy
- August 2023 – Pecos Conference
- September 2023 – The Contributions of Marjorie F. Lambert to Southwest Archaeology, Shelby Tisdale
- October 2023 – Tree-Ring Dating Techniques for the Desert Basins of Southern and Central Arizona, Nicholas Kessler
- November 2023 – Bell Rocks and Megaphones: Discoveries of Sounds Coupled with Petroglyphs in Ancestral O’odham (Hohokam) Ritual Landscapes – Janine Hernbrode
- December 2023 – The Risk and Rewards of Social Networks in the Ancient Southwest, Matthew Peeples
- January 2024 –Winter Party
- February 2024 – Road Signs and Walking Shoes: Sandal Imagery as Part and Parcel of the Chaco Road System, Benjamin A. Bellorado
- March 2024 – Learning from the Grandmothers: The 2023 Traditional Technologies Navajo Weaving Seminar to Washington, D.C., B. Teller et al
- April 2024 – What’s in a Symbol? A Look at Hohokam Art Imagery, Linda Gregonis
- May 2024 –Los Barros de Juan Quezada: Land Use and Composition, Maren P. Hopkins and Kelsey E. Hanson
- June 2024 – What’s in a Symbol? A Look at Hohokam Art and Imagery, Linda Gregonis
Glyphs Volume 73 (2022-2023)
- No 1 – July 2022 – Lived Lives: Individuals in Mimbres Pithouse and Pueblo Communities, Barbara Roth
- No 2 – August 2022 – Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2022 – Re-viewing the Dishes: Considering the Place of Salado Polychrome Ceramics in the Phoenix Basin, Caitlin A. Wichlacz
- No 4 – October 2022 – Chacoan Perishable Technologies in Regional Perspective, Edward A. Jolie
- No 5 – November 2022 – Arizona’s and New Mexico’s Hidden Scholars: Husband and Wife Archaeological Teams, Nancy Parezo
- No 6 – December 2022 – High Places in the Painted Desert: Exploring Salient Spaces at Petrified Forest National Park, Maxwell Forton
- No 7 – January 2023 – Winter Party
- No 8 – February 2023 – The Leupp Isolation Center Historical Site: Interconnections of Navajo and Japanese American History during World War II, Davina Two Bears
- No 9 – March 2023 – Rain and Fertility Symbolism in the Rock Art and Cultural Landscape of the Trincheras Sites of Northwestern Sonora, Julio Amador Bech
- No 10 – April 2023 – Drinking Rituals and Politics in Chaco Canyon – Patricia L. Crown
- No 11 – May 2023 – The Legacy of New Deal Programs to Northern Arizona and Southwest Archaeology, Peter J. Pilles, Jr.
- No 12 – June 2023 – Between Casas Grandes and Salado: The Establishment of an Indigenous Borderland in the Late Prehispanic American Southwest/ Mexican Northwest, Thatcher Seltzer-Rogers
Glyphs Volume 72 (2021-2022)
- No 1 – July 2021 – Five Millennia of Living on the Landscapes of the Jornada Mogollon Region of Southern New Mexico and West Texas, Myles Miller
- N0 2 – August 2021 – Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2021 – Early Formal Ceremonial Complexes and Olmec-Maya Interaction, Takeshi Inomata and Daniela Triadan
- No 4 – October 2021 – Eastern Pueblo Immigrants on the Middle Gila River, Chris Loendorf
- No 5 – November 2021 –Learning and Sharing in Oaxaca, Mexico: Cross-Cultural Exchange among U.S. Puebloan Weavers, Southwestern Textile Scholars, and Oaxacan Weavers for the 2019 AAHS Traditional Technologies Seminar
- No 6 – December 2022 – Monumental Avenues of the Chaco World: New Research at the Crossroads of Infrastructure, Ontology, and Power, Robert Weiner
- No 7 – January 2022 – Annual Research Slam
- No 8 – February 2022 – Looking from the South: A Material Perspective on Prehispanic West- Northwestern Mexico and U.S. Southwest Connections, José Luis Punzo Díaz
- No 9 – March 2022 – Exploring the Rise of Navajo Pastoralism in the (Peri) Colonial U.S. Southwest, Wade Campbell
- No 10 – April 2022 – Exploring the Many Interpretations of Chaco, Stephen Plog
- No 11 – May 2022 – Hechizas: A History of Looting and Ceramic Fakes in Northwest Chihuahua, Fabiola E. Silva
- No 12 – June 2022 – Strong Foundations and Promising Futures: Collaborative Efforts Between the Professional and Avocational Archaeological Communities, Steve A. Tomka
Glyphs Volume 71 (2020-2021)
- No 1 – July 2020 – July 2020 – No Lecture
- No 2 – August 2020 – August Glyphs
- No 3 – September 2020 – Food for Thought: The Deep History of Your Dinner, Karen R. Adams
- No 4 – October 2020 – Technologies of Capturing Color: Paint Practice and Its Analysis in the U.S. Southwest, Kelsey Hanson
- No 5 – November 2020- Using the Past as a Bridge to the Future, Jeffrey H. Altschul
- No 6 – December 2020 – Holiday Party and Research Slam
- No 7 – January 2021 – The Beginnings of Plains-Pueblo Interaction—The View from Southeastern New Mexico, John D. Speth
- No 8 – February 2021 – Zooarchaeology at Pueblo Grande and the Origin of Chickens in the American Southwest (Or Why Did the Chickens Cross the Desert?), Steven R. James
- No 9 – March 2021 – Early Agriculture and Collective Action in the Southern Southwest, John R. Roney and Robert J. Hards
- No 10 – April 2021 – Sharing an Ear of Corn: An Archaeologist’s Perspective on the Role of Food in Community Collaborations, Lisa C. Young
- No 11 – May 2021 – Eastern and Western Pueblo Divergence: A Study of network Structure and Social Transformations, Evan Giomi
- No 12 – June 2021 – Cotton Weaving in Mesoamerica and the Northern U.S. Southwest: A Study of Loom Parts and Weaving Tools Across 1,000 Years and Two Continents, Ben Bellorado and Chuck LaRue
Glyphs Volume 70 (2019-2020)
- No 1 – July 2019 – A Renewed Study of a Patayan Walk-in Well on the Ranegras Plain in Far Western Arizona, Aaron Wright
- No 2 – August 2019 – 2019 Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society Awards Announced
- No 3 – September 2019 – Profound and Persistent Beauty: Results of the Petroglyph and Pictograph Recording Project in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming, Kirk Astroth
- No 4 – October 2019 – The Davis Ranch Site: A Kayenta Immigrant Enclave in Southeastern Arizona, Patrick D. Lyons
- No 5 – November 2019 – Seasons of the Sun: Experimental Timelapse Photographic Documentation of Archaeoastronomical Sites in Wupatki National Monument, David E. Purcell
- No 6 – December 2019 – Research Slam and Holiday Party
- No 7 – January 2020 – Chasing Centuries: The Search for Ancient Agave Cultivars across the Desert Southwest, Ron Parker
- No 8 – February 2020 – Studying Southwestern Archaeology, Stephen H. Lekson
- No 9 – March 2020 – Technologies of Capturing Color: Paint Practice and Its Analysis in the U.S. Southwest, Kelsey Hanson (lecture cancelled due to COVID-19)
- No 10 – April 202 Agricultural Adaptations with Socioeconomic Change in the Rio Grande, Kaitlyn Elizabeth Davis (lecture cancelled due to COVID-19)
- No 11 – May 2020 May Glyphs
- No 12 – June 2020 June Glyphs
Glyphs Volume 69 (2018-2019)
- No 1 – July 2018 – Perforated Plates, Fish Bones, and the Archaeology of the Upper Gila River in the Fourteenth Century, Karen Gust Schollmeyer
- No 2 – August 2018 – Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2018 – The Forests and the Trees: Sourcing Construction Timbers at Aztec Ruins, New Mexico, Ronald H. Towner
- No 4 – October 2018 – A Drear, Bleak, Desolate Place: Tucson’s Abandoned Court Street Cemetery, J. Homer Thiel
- No 5 – November 2018 – Our Human Heritage: A Conservator’s Participation with Kennewick, Poisons, and Repatriation, Nancy Odegaard
- No 6 – December 2018 – Research Slam and Holiday Party
- No 7 – January 2019 – Tierra Perdida: New Mexico’s Piro and Tiwa Provinces, circa 1650–1700, Michael P. Bletzer
- No 8 – February 2019 – The Archaeology of Coastal Shell Middens along the Northern Gulf of California, Jonathan B. Mabry
- No 9 – March 2019 – Historical Period Ranching on the Barry M. Goldwater Range, Arizona, Scott Thompson
- No 10 – April 2019 – Living with the Canals: Water, Ecology, and Cultural Memory in the Sierra Madra Foothills, Elizabeth Eklund
- No 11 – May 2019 – Mendoza’s Aim: To Complete the Columbia Project, Richard Flint and Shirley Cushing Flint
- No 12 – June 2019 – Archaeological Fakes and Frauds in Arizona and Beyond, Matt Peeples
Glyphs Volume 68 (2017-2018)
- No 1 – July 2017 – New Discoveries and Native American Traditional Knowledge at Montezuma Castle, Matthew Guebard
- No 2 – August 2017 – Cummings, Stoner and Lindsay Awards
- No 3 – September 2017 – Zuni Heritage and Cultural Landscape Documentation through Film: Zuni and the Grand Canyon, Kurt E. Dongoske
- No 4 – October 2017 – The Myth of Tucson, Robert W. Vint
- No 5 – November 2017 – Persistence: A Comanche History of Eighteenth Century New Mexico, Lindsay M. Montgomery
- No 6 – December 2017 – Holiday Party and Research Slam
- No 7 – January 2018 – Preserving the Mimbres Pueblo Legacy: The Elk Ridge Story, Karl W. Laumbach
- No 8 – February 2018 – Protecting the Greater Chaco Landscape: The Role of Current Research and Technology, Paul F. Reed
- No 9 – March 2018 – Sights and Sounds of the Cocoraque Butte Rock Art Site, Janine Hernbrode and Peter Boyle
- No. 10 – April 2018 – Dressing Up in the Ancient Southwest: The Fashions of Fancy Footwear in the Chaco and Post-Chaco Eras, Benjamin A. Bellorado
- No. 11 – May 2018 – Accumulating Identities at the Homol’ovi Settlement Cluster, Samantha G. Fladd
- No. 12 – June 2018 – Landscapes of Resilience: O’odham Resource Use in the Colonial Pimería Alta, Nicole M. Mathwich
Glyphs Volume 67 (2016-2017)
- No 1 – July 2016 – Digital Archaeology for the Public: An Update on the State of the Field in 2016, Douglas W. Gann
- No 2 – August 2016 – 2016 Cummings and Stoner Awardees
- No 3 – September 2016 – Thirty Years into Yesterday: A History of Grasshopper Archaeology, J. Jefferson Reid
- No 4 – October 2016 – Social Contexts of Mimbres and Chaco Macaws, Patricia A. Gilman
- No 5 – November 2016 – The Southwest Archaeological Obsidian Project and Preclassic Hohokam Social Identity, M. Steven Shackley
- No 6 – December 2016 – Frank Hamilton Cushing as a Professional Archaeologist in the 1880s and Anthropology at the 1893 World’s Fair, David R. Wilcox
- No 7 – January 2017 – Archaeology in the Valleys of the Sierra Madre Occidental, Sonora Mexico, Matthew C. Pailes
- No 8 – February 2017 – O’odham History in Spanish Written Accounts, Dale S. Brenneman, Bernard Siquieros, and Ronald Geronimo
- No 9 – March 2017 – Gambling Dice and Speaking Birds: New Approaches to Ritual Power at Chaco Canyon, Robert Weiner
- No 10 – April 2017 –Raising Time to the Level of Explication: 13,000 Years of Adaptation in the Sonoran Desert at La Playa, SON F:10:3, John Philip Carpenter
- No 11 – May 2017 – Creating Community in Colonial Alta California, John G. Douglass
- No 12 – June 2017 –A Colorful Past: Turquoise and Social Identity in the Late Prehispanic Western Pueblo Region, A.D. 1275– 1400, Saul L. Hedquist
Glyphs Volume 66 (2015-2016)
- No 1 – July 2015 – Irrigation, Social Changes, and Ecological Knowledge in Early Farming Societies in the Sonoran Desert, Jonathan B. Mabry
- No 2 – August 2015 – Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2015 – The Archaeology of the Human Experience, Michelle Hegmon
- No 4 – October 2015 – Ancient Woodworking, Animal Use, and Hunting Practices in Southeastern Utah: New Insights from the Study of Early Perishable Collections, Chuck LaRue and Laurie Webster
- No 5 – November 2015 – The Earliest Apache in Arizona: Evidence and Arguments, Deni J. Seymour
- No 6 – December 2015 – 2nd Annual Research Slam
- No 7 – January 2016 – Can Pueblo Corn Save African Farms? Kyle Bocinsky
- No 8 – February 2016 – It’s All About Scale: Polity and Alliance in Prehistoric Central Arizona, David R. Abbott
- No 9 – March 2016 – Hard Times in Dry Lands: Apocalypse in the Ancient Southwest or Business as Usual? Debra L. Martin
- No 10 – April 2016 – Arch and Hist Ancestors, Raymond H. Thompson
- No 11 – May 2016 – The Luke Solar Project: Middle and Late Archaic Period Subsistence and Settlement in the Western Phoenix Basin, John D. Hall
- No 12 – June 2016 – Pueblo People, Franciscan Missions, and the Arrival of the “Refuse Wind”: The Archaeology of Native American Depopulation, Reforestation, and the Dawn of the Anthropocene, Matthew Liebmann
Glyphs Volume 65 (2014-2015)
- No 2 – August 2014 – Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2014 – What! No Chiles in the Ancient Southwest?, Paul Minnis
- No 4 – October 2014 – Homes of Stone, Place of Dreams: The Ancient People of Flagstaff, Christian E. Downum
- No 5 – November 2014 – Recent Work at the Guevavi Mission Site, Barnet Pavao- Zuckerman and J. Homer Thiel
- No 6 – December 2014 – Research Slam
- No 7 – January 2015 – Searching for Golden Empires: Epic Cultural Collisions in Sixteenth Century America, William K. Hartmann
- No 8 – February 2015 – Women’s Health Demands Protective Cleanliness: Examining Health and Illness in Early Twentieth Century Tucson, Ashley Morton
- No 9 – March 2015 – Life and Death at a Hohokam Ballcourt Village in the Northern Tucson Basin, Todd W. Bostwick
- No 10 – April 2015 – The Great Battle of 1698, on the San Pedro River by Deni J. Semour
- No 11 – May 2015 –The Ritual Practice of Hohokam Rock Art in the Phoenix Basin by Aaron M. Wright
- No 12 – June 2015 – Cochise Culture Re-revisited: 2014–2015 Excavations at Desperation Ranch by Jesse A. M. Ballenger and Jonathan B. Mabry
Glyphs Volume 64 (2013-2014)
- No 1 – July 2013 – Downtown Underground: The Archaeology of a Desert Community, William H. Doelle
- No 2 – August 2013 – Cummings and Stoner Awards
- No 3 – September 2013 – Synergies of Success: Stories of Cooperation between Professional and Avocational Archaeologists in Arizona, David R. Wilcox
- No 4 – October 2013 – New Research with the Earliest Perishable Collections from Southeastern Utah, Laurie D. Webster
- No 5 – November 2013 – Prehistory, Personality, and Place: Emil W. Haury and the Mogollon Controversy, J. Jefferson Reid
- No 6 – December 2013 – Mimbres: Its Causes and Consequences, Stephen H. Lekson
- No 7 – January 2014 –New Perspectives on the Origins of Maya Civilization: Archaeological Excavations at Ceibal, Daniela Triadan
- No 8 – February 2014 – Households, Community, and Social Power at the Harris Site, Mimbres Valley, New Mexico by Barbara J. Roth
- No 9 – March 2014 – Hunting, Farming, and Human Impacts on the Prehistoric Southwestern Environment by Karen Gust Schollmeyer
- No 10 – Apri l 2014 – New Perspectives on the Rock Art of Tumamoc Hill by Gayle Harrison Hartmann and Peter C. Boyle
- No 11 – May 2014 – The Ties that Bind: The Social and Religious Context of Building Murals in the Western Mesa Verde Region by Benjamin A Bellorado
- No 12 – June 2014 – Can’t We All Just Get Along? Domestic Disputes and Warfare in the Prehistoric Sonoran Desert by James T. Watson
Glyphs Volume 63 (2012-2013)
- No 1 – July 2012 –Tne Neglected Stage of Puebloan Culture History by Arthur Rohn
- No 2 – August 2012 – Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society 2012 Awards
- No 3 – September 2012 – What is the Meaning of Mimbres Art by Patricia Gilman
- No 4 – October 2012 – Chacoan Immigration and Influence in the Middle San Juan by Paul Reed
- No 5 – November 2012 – Upward Sun River (Xaasaa Na’) Site: Climate Change, Geoarchaeology, and Human Land Use in Ice Age Alaska, Joshua D. Reuther and Ben A. Potter
- No 6 – December 2012 – It’s Monumental, but It’s Flat: The Stone Architecture of Bison Hunters in Northwestern Montana, Jesse A. M. Ballenger and María N. Zedeño
- No 7 – January 2013 – University Indian Ruin: Changing Views of the Late Classic Period, Suzanne Fish, Paul Fish, and Mark Elson
- No 8 – February 2013 – From Typology to Topology: Social Networks and the Dynamics of the Late Prehispanic Southwest, Barbara J. Mills
- No 9 – March 2013 – The Boring Side of Paquimé, Paul Minnis
- No 10 – April 2013 – Goldie Tracy Richmond: Trapper, Trader, and Quiltmaker, Carolyn O’Bagy Davis
- No 11 – May 2013 – Hohokam Petroglyphs at Sutherland Wash: Flower World and Gender Imagery, Janine Hernbrode and Peter Boyle
- No 12 – June 2013 – Recent Discoveries at the Hardy Site and Fort Lowell, J. Homer Thiel
Glyphs Volume 62 (2011-2012)
- No 1 – July 2011 –Tree-rings, Documents, and Oral Histories in Cebolla Creek, New Mexico by Ronald H. Towner
- No 2 – August 2011 – Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society 2011 Awards
- No 3 – September 2011 – Homol’ovi and Beyond by E. Charles Adams
- No. 4 – October 2011 – What’s in the Bag? by Janet Lever-Wood and Laurie Webster
- No 5 – November 2011 – Relic Hunters: Encounters with Antiquity in Nineteenth Century America by James E. Snead
- No 6 – December 2011 – Upward Sun River (Xaasaa Na’) Site: Climate Change, Geoarchaeology and Human Land Use in Ice Age Alaska by Joshua D. Reuther and Ben A. Potter
- No. 7 – January 2012 – The Opatas: Who They Were and What Became of Them by David Yetman
- No 8 – February 2012 – Sears Point Rock Art and Beyond: Synopsis of the 2008–2012 Recording Project, Evelyn Billo, Robert Mark, and Donald E. Weaver, Jr
- No 9 – March 2012 – Before Lake Powell: Memories of Glen Canyon, William D. Lipe
- No 10 – April 2012 – Power, Distance, and Mesoamerican-U.S. Southwestern Interaction by Ben A. Nelson
- No 11 – May 2012 – Identity and Social Transformation across the Prehispanic Cibola World, Matthew A. Peeples
- No 12 – June 2012 – Hands-on Prehistory by Allen Denoyer
Glyphs Volume 61 (2010-2011)
- No 1 – July 2010 – Preserving the Past for the Benefit of Future Generations: Accomplishments of the Pima County Historic Preservation Bond, by Linda Mayro and Roger Anyon
- No 2 – August 2010 – 2010 Pecos Conference
- No 3 – September 2010 – The Real Dirt on Southwestern Archaeology by Raymond Thompson
- No 4 – October 2010 – Cerros de Trincheras in the Hohokam World: A Case Study of the Cerro Prieto Site by Matthew Pailes
- No 5 – November 2010- New Clues, New Research, and New Photos of the Oldest Art in Western North America: Current Thoughts on the Western Archaic Tradition by Henry Wallace
- No 6 – December 2010 – Two Views on Zuni Migration: Traditional History and Archaeology by T.J. Ferguson
- No 7 – January 2011 – Tree-Rings, Documents, and Oral Histories in Cebolla Creek, New Mexico by Ronald Towner
- No 8 – February 2011 – The Bluff Great House and the Chaco Phenomenon – Catherine Cameron
- No 9 – March 2011 – Chocolate, Ritual and Exchange in the American Southwest – Patricia Crown
- No 10 – April 2011 – Whiptail Ruin: Hunters and Migrants in Thirteeth-Century Tucson by Linda Gregonis
- No 11 – May 2011 – Then and Now: Lessons from the Mimbres by Margaret C Nelson
- No 12 – June 2011 –The Interplay Between Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology in Interpreting Human Skeletal Variation by Bruce E. Anderson
Glyphs Volume 60 (2009-2010)
- No 1 – July 2009 – History, Households, and Power in the Ancient Hohokam World, by William Graves
- No 2 – August 2009 – On the Trail of Tumamoc Graffiti: Georgie Hazel Scott, by Katherine Cerino
- No 3 – September 2009 – Zeckendorfs and Steinfelds: Merchant Princes of the Southwest, by Bettina O’Neil Lyons
- No 4 – October 2009 – Hopi Migration History, by Eric Polingyouma
- No 5 – November 2009 – Cerros de Trinceras and Warfare in Sonora, Mexico, by Randall McGuire
- No 6 – December 2009 – Fast Approaching Zero: Tree-ring Dating at Mesa Verde National Park, by Stephen E. Nash
- No 7 – January 2010 – Fact and Fiction of Ancient Puebloan Cannibalism, by John Kantner
- No 8 – Feburary 2010 – Revisiting Las Capas and its Place in Early Agriculture, by Jim Vint
- No 9 – March – 2010 – Chimney Rock and Chaco, Pinnacle Ruin and Mesa Verde: Regional Interactions in the Ancestral Pueblo World, by Stephen Lekson
- No 10 – April 2010 – Yádilla, Hádiilil: Perspectives from a Practicing Native American Archaeologist, by William B. Tsosie, Jr.
- No 11 – May 2010 – I Rented a Mule and Found Religion, by Todd A. Pitezel
- No 12 – June 2010 –Massacre at Camp Grant: Forgetting and Remembering Apache History by Chip Colwell-Chanthaphonh
Glyphs Volume 59 (2008-2009)
- No 1 – July 2008 – Naco Arizona: Renewed Paleontological and Archaeological Prospecting on the U.S.–Mexico Border, by Jesse Ballenger
- No 2 – August 2008 – Archaeological Excavations along the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, by Allyson Mathis, Lisa Leap, and Kimberly Spurr
- No 3 – September 2008 – Challenges of Historic Preservation along the U.S.–Mexico Boundary: Examples from Southeastern Arizona’s Sky Islands, by David Mehalic
- No 4 – October 2008 – The Coronado Expedition through Arizona and Sonora in 1539–1542: New Research, New Results, by Gayle Harrison Hartmann andWilliam K. Hartmann
- No 5 – November 2008 – The Cleansing Fire: The Quetzalcoatl Myth and Hohokam Rituals, by Stephanie Whittlesey
- No 6 – December 2008 – A Seventeenth Century Instance of Hopi Clowning? The Trial of Juan Suñi, 1659, by Anton Daughters
- No 7 – January 2009 – Drawing from the Past: Interpreting Rock Art of the Lower Pecos, by Carolyn E. Boyd
- No 8 – Feburary 2009 – On a Foundation of Potsherds: Building a New Model of the Phoenix Basin Hohokam, by David R. Abbott
- No 9 – March – 2009 – Paquimê Postscript: New work Around Casas Grandes, by Paul Minnis and Michael Whalen
- No 10 – April 2009 – Hopi Summer: Letters from First Mesa, by Carolyn O’Bagy Davis
- No 11 – May 2009 – Human Adaptation to Catastrophic Events: Lessons from the 11th Century A.D. Eruption of Sunset Crater Volcano, by Mark Elson
- No 12 – June 2009 – Migration, Aggregation, and Collapse in the Southern Southwest, by Jeffery Clark
Glyphs Volume 58 (2007-2008)
- No 1 – July 2007 – Large-scale Excavations at Honey Bee, a Hohokam Town in Oro Valley, by Henry Wallace
- No 2 – August 2007 – In Awato’ovi’s Shadow: Kawàyka’a in the History of Southwestern Archaeology, by Kelley Hays-Gilpin
- No 3 – September 2007 – California Basketry, by Suzanne Griset
- No 4 – October 2007 – Out of the Museum Basement: The Textiles, Baskets, and Painted Wood from Pueblo Bonito and Aztec Ruins, by Laurie Webster
- No 5 – November 2007 – Recent Investigations of the Hohokam Colonial Period in the Tucson Basin, by Eric Klucas
- No 6 – December 2007 – Preservation Archaeology at Casa Malpais, by Doug Gann
- No 7 – January 2008 – Pueblo Social History: Upstreaming into the Past, by John Ware
- No 8 – Feburary 2008 – A Millennium on the Meridian: Chaco Meridian Revisited, by Stephen H. Lekson
- No 9 – March – 2008 – Geoglyphs: Orphans of Rock Art, by John Fountain
- No 10 – April 2008 – At the Still Point of the Turning World: Chaco and Its Outliers, by Ruth Van Dyke
- No 11 – May 2008 – Issue Missing
- No 12 – June 2008 – Landscapes of Fraud: Mission Tumacácori and the Betrayal of the O’odham, by Thomas E. Sheridan
Glyphs Volume 57 – 50
- Past Issues of Glyphs via Brian Kenny’s SWA-Net