Specifically who the Hohokam people were and when the site was inhabited is subject to debate.
This indicates the extent and prominence of the Hohokam people at their height.
Housing of Hohokam people varies according to status, time and sources.
As irrigation grew, the Hohokam people continued to prosper.
For more than 2,000 years, the Hohokam peoples occupied the land that would become Phoenix.
The history of Mesa dates back at least 2,000 years to the arrival of the Hohokam people.
It's believed the Hohokam people carved these images and patterns into boulders while on hunting and gathering expeditions.
Tumamoc Hill was a home to the ancient Hohokam people.
The first occupants of Phoenix, the Hohokam people, built more than 200 miles of irrigation channels and then vanished 500 years ago.
The Hohokam people were the first miners in the area.