Marcos Farfan de los Godos expedition into the Verde valley led to heavy Spanish settlement throughout that region.
Question 2(2 points)
The Hohokam cultured featured extensive use of irrigation.
Question 3(2 points)
Athapaskan hunters and gatherers made extensive use of mules and horses as they migrated from Northern Canada to the Southwest.
Question 4(2 points)
The Mogollon civilization made no pottery but instead used nets and baskets to carry food and other goods.
Question 5(2 points)
Tubac was exemplary of most towns in the Northern Spanish Frontier in that its inhabitants were a mixture of races and cultures.
Question 6(2 points)
The Native Americans' use of the horse and small pox are both examples of the Columbian Exchange.
Question 7(2 points)
The Archaic period is defined as the time from the disappearance of the mammoth hunters to the beginning of pottery making societies.
Question 8(2 points)
The 'big house" in the Casa Grande area is an excellent example of public architecture by the Hohokam people.
Question 9(2 points)
The Hopis and Pimas readily adapted to mission life because of the efforts of the Jesuit missionary Eusebio Francisco Kino.
Question 10(2 points)
Mangas Coloradas and Cochise were both important Navajo war chiefs.
Question 11(2 points)
Mining in Arizona during the mid 1800's was beset by ethnic conflict and racism.
Question 12(2 points)
As governor of New Mexico, Juan Bautista de Anza successfully manipulated some Indian groups to fight against the Apaches.
Question 13(2 points)
The Gadsden Purchase allowed the United States to acquire more land in Mexico, including all of Baja California for $10 million.
Question 14(2 points)
The concept of Manifest Destiny had little to do with the U. S.-Mexico War of 1846.
Question 15(2 points)
Steamboats greatly accelerated the development of the lower Colorado River.
Question 16(2 points)
One of the important Bourbon Reforms included realigning presidios to more effectively fend off Apache attacks in Northern New Spain.
Question 17(2 points)
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo allowed the United States to annex New Mexico, Arizona, California (and other parts of the Southwest) and confirm its title to Texas.
Question 18(2 points)
General George Crook became one of the staunchest allies of the Chiricahuas towards the end of his life.
Question 19(2 points)
For assisting Europenas for generations, the Pima Indians were allowed to remain on their homelands rahter than be relocated to a reservation.
Question 20(2 points)
General George Crook's leadership was largely responsible for the military conquest of Native Americans in Arizona.
Question 21(2 points)
The camp Grant Massacre was perpetrated against the Apaches by a mixture of O'odhams, Anglos and Mexicans.
Question 22(2 points)
The Navajo were forcibly removed from their homeland and banished to Bosque Redondo.
Question 23(2 points)
The Arizona Volunteers were mostly comprised of Mexican and Indians and formed to combat hostile Indian tribes.
Question 24(2 points)
Cochise, Geronimo and Victorio led the Apaches against subjugation by both the united States and Mexican governments.
Question 25(2 points)
The use of Native American scouts and the utilization of strategies perfected during the Civil War greatly faciltated the defeat of the Western Apaches.
Question 26(2 points)
Collin Huntington is associated more with the railroad than cattle ranching.
Question 27(2 points)
The Territorial Railraod effectively ended the use of the steamer down the Colorado River.
Question 28(2 points)
Before the completion of the railroad system, Northern Mexico was in many ways more important economically to Arizona than was the United States.
Question 29(2 points)
The "closing of the frontier" brought about many social and economic changes in Arizona, including the increased integration of the Mexican and Anglo populations.
Question 30(2 points)
Due to the proximity of the border, Mexican laborers dominated the workforce that constructed railroad track beds across the southwest.
Question 31(2 points)
The Murphy Wagon was utilized for hauling freight across the frontier before the advent of the railroad.
Question 32(2 points)
Phillip Drachman and Joseph Goldwater are examples of European immigrants who became successful entrepreneurs in Territorial Arizona.
Question 33(2 points)
The Pleasant Valley War was completely the result of a feud between cattle ranchers and sheep herders.
Question 34(2 points)
The Hopis were the first to raise and herd sheep in Arizona.
Question 35(2 points)
The Bisbee Deportation is associated with labor issues between large cattle ranches and ranch hands.
Question 36(2 points)
Mining in Arizona was originally brought to the region by the Spanish.
Question 37(2 points)
Arizonans rejected proposed "joint statehood" with New Mexico due to largely racist motives.
Question 38(2 points)
Phelps-Dodge was one of the largest cattle ranches in the southwest.
Question 39(2 points)
The Tombstone mine is the exception to the "boom and bust" cycles that characterized the mining industry.
Question 40(2 points)
Placer mining was followed by Hardrock mining as the gold or silver were "exhausted."
Question 41(2 points)
Proposition 91 was a response to the unsafe conditions in mines across Arizona.
Question 42(2 points)
Governor Hunt generally sided with mining companies over striking workers and labor unions.
Question 43(2 points)
The Roosevelt Dam was named after Theodore Roosevelt and completed several years after his death.
Question 44(2 points)
Migrant farm workers from Mexico lived in deplorable conditions and often did not receive the compensation their contracts entitled them to.
Question 45(2 points)
World War I caused an unprecedented boom cycle in cotton in Arizona.
Question 46(2 points)
The San Carlos Project included building numerous dams that would prevent flooding and allow equitable water sharing with California.
Question 47(2 points)
Early Mormon settlements throughout Arizona were in remote areas located far from population centers.
Question 48(2 points)
The Colorado River Compact sought to equitably share Colorado River Water between seven states.
Question 49(2 points)
Emma Lee is associated with Lee's Ferry on the Colorado River.
Question 50(2 points)
The discovery of "white gold" during the 1920's led to mining companies hiring significant numbers of new workers.
Solution: HIS147 exam 1