Arizona State Museum
SITE NUMBERING AND
QUADRANGLE SYSTEM
The system used by the Arizona State Museum for designating
sites is based on one devised originally by Gila Pueblo in the late 1920s.
Modifications have been made to eliminate inconsistencies in the older system.
Both systems are based on the premise that a relatively large area can be
systematically subdivided and that a site can be located with respect to these
smaller units of area by means of a simple designation. In the Arizona State
Museum system a five‑part site designation is used; for example, AZ
U:15:2(ASM).
The Five Parts of a Site
Designation
1. A standard political
division such as a state, territory, or small country, is considered as the
basic unit of area for the survey. The name of this standard political division
becomes the first component of the site designation (Fig. 1). Although such a
name may be abbreviated for convenience (as in the example above), it can never
be omitted. The name or abbreviation of the standard political division must
always appear as the first component of the site designation.
2. The standard political
division is divided into quadrangles based on the standard meridians and
parallels. Each quadrangle measures one degree of longitude and one degree of
latitude. Quadrangles are designated by the letters of the alphabet, beginning
in the northwest corner and ending in the southeast corner of the political
division.
If there are more than 26 quadrangles in the political
division, the additional ones are identified by double letters (AZ AA). In Arizona the first complete quadrangle is
AZ A, in the northwest corner of the state, while the last quadrangle is AZ FF
in the southeast corner. Our example, AZ U:15:2(ASM), is a site in a quadrangle
in the south‑central part‑of the state. The letter(s) identifying
the quadrangles are always the second component of the site designation.
3. The third component of
the site designation is the number of a subdivision of the quadrangle, which is
called a rectangle. In every quadrangle there are 16 rectangles, and
each rectangle represents one U.S.G.S. 15’ map. Within a quadrangle the
rectangles are numbered 1 to 16, beginning in the northwest corner and ending
in the southeast corner of the quadrangle (See AZ S in Fig. 1). The relative
position of a given rectangle is always the same within any quadrangle. For
example, rectangle 4 is invariably in the northeast corner. In our example, the
Site AZ U:15:2(ASM) is in rectangle 15 of quadrangle U in Arizona. The number
of the rectangle is always the third component of the site designation.
4. A number identifying the
site within the rectangle constitutes the fourth component of the site
designation. The sites in a rectangle are numbered serially as they are found
and recorded. The site AZ U:15:2(ASM) was the second one recorded in rectangle
15 of quadrangle U in Arizona. Since the
site numbers within a rectangle are assigned serially, they carry no
implication about relative geographical position.
5. The final component of the site number is the
suffix (ASM), which is essential to indicate that the number was assigned by
ASM. Several other institutions (ASU,
BLM, MNA, some branches of the NPS) have adopted a
similar site number format, but on their own numbering systems. Therefore, while AZ U:15:2(ASM) and AZ
U:15:2(ASU) are both in the AZ U:15 rectangle, they are not the same site.
Arizona State Museum Site
Files Maps
ASM records the site numbers by U.S.G.S 15’ maps, but the
sites are plotted on paper copies of U.S.G.S. 7.5’ maps (1:24,000). These maps are filed in bound books by the
quadrangle (e.g., AZ U:15) and, within the quadrangle in the order NW, NE, SW,
SE. Therefore, the next site number for
a site in the Magma quad will be given a number in AZ U:15, and will be plotted
on AZ U:15:NW, which is the quadrangle designation for the U.S.G.S. Magma quad.