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List of Ancestral Puebloan dwellings in Colorado

This is a list of Ancestral Puebloan dwellings in the U.S. State of Colorado.

The location of the State of Colorado in the United States of America.

Pueblo periods edit

Archaeologists have agreed on three main periods of occupation by Pueblo peoples in southwestern Colorado: Pueblo I, Pueblo II, and Pueblo III.[1]

  • Pueblo I (750 to 900). Pueblo buildings were built with stone, generally oriented to the south, and in U, E and L shapes. The buildings were located more closely together than the previous Basketmaker period and reflected deepening religious celebration. Towers were built, often near kivas, though their purpose (defense?, storage?, ceremonies?) still is debated. Pottery became more versatile, not just for cooking, but now included pitchers, ladles, bowls, jars and dishware for food and drink. White pottery with black designs emerged, the pigments coming from plants. Water management and conservation techniques, including the use of reservoirs and silt-retaining dams, also emerged during this period.[2] Midway through this period, about 900, the number of residential sites in the Hovenweep area increased.[3]
  • Pueblo II (900-1150). During the Pueblo II period there was an increase in population that resulted in creation of more than 10,000 sites in 250 years. Because much of the land is arid, and crop yields were highly variable, people supplemented their diets by hunting, foraging and trading for food.[4] By the end of the period, there were multiple-story dwellings made primarily of stone masonry, towers (especially in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah), and family and community kivas.[2][5][6]
  • Pueblo III (1150-1300). Rohn and Ferguson, authors of Puebloan Ruins of the Southwest, state that during the Pueblo III period there was a significant community change. Population tended to coalesce into larger community centers at canyon heads or under cliff overhangs. Population peaked between 1200 and 1250 to more than 20,000 in the Mesa Verde region.[7] However, by 1300 most Pueblo people had abandoned the Four Corners area, as the result of climate changes and food shortages. They are believed to have moved south and east to villages in Arizona and New Mexico, especially the Rio Grande valley near what is today Santa Fe and Albuquerque.[7]

Types of Buildings edit

In addition to the movable structures used by other Native Americans across North and South America, the Pueblo peoples created distinctive structures for living, worshiping, defense, storage, and daily life.

  • Pueblo - Referring to both a certain style of Puebloan architecture and groups of people themselves, the term pueblo is used in architectural terms to describe single-story or multistory buildings made of coursed stone or adobe, and occasionally jacal. Usually these buildings were plastered with adobe both inside and outside.
  • Kiva - Circular underground buildings used for ceremonies, preparations for ceremonies and as retreats for families during the worst months of winter. Kivas may have evolved from pit houses. Found throughout the Ancestral Pueblo area and in parts of the Mogollon region (central Arizona), they generally feature a bench around the inside walls, pilasters against the walls to hold up the beams of the roof, a fire pit, a ventilator shaft to bring air to the fire pit and a square opening in the roof with a ladder to enter the kiva. A kiva generally was located in front of a family's suite of pueblo rooms.
  • Great houses - Large adobe-plastered stone buildings believed to be mostly ceremonial in use, though they may have been used in part as residences. In the Chacoan period (roughly equivalent to PII, 900 to 1150 A.D.) these buildings share certain features, such as large rooms (15 feet square), massive size, elevated position and core-and-veneer masonry. They also often have blocked-in kivas, tower kivas and nearby great kivas. In the Pueblo III (PIII) period (1150-1300 A.D.) ceremonial buildings were less distinct from residential structures in room size and often included enclosed plazas.
  • Great kivas - Large versions of traditional "family" kivas that appear to have been intended for use by the larger community, especially in Chacoan times. There are great kivas as large as 75 feet across, such as Casa Rinconada in Chaco Canyon. Roofs are held up by massive posts set into special recesses in the floors. In earlier times, such as PI, great kivas might not be roofed. In the Mogollon region, square great kivas often were built.
  • Pit houses - In the Basketmaker and early PI periods most of the populations of the Southwest lived in pit houses, carefully dug rectangular or circular depressions in the earth with branch and mud adobe walls supported by log sized corner posts. While pit houses never completely disappeared, after PI most residences were above-ground blocks of pueblo rooms, usually with at least one "family" kiva in front.
  • Cliff dwellings - Pueblos constructed under overhangs in the cliff sides of the mesas in the Southwest. Cliff dwellings were a relatively late development in Pueblo communities (mostly after 1150) and are considered to have been built at least partly for defensive reasons.
  • Trincheras - The Hohokam and Trincheras culture used these distinctive type sites in the Southwest and northwest Mexico. Trincheras sites are usually located on steep slopes of hills and low mountains, and are characterized by terraces and walls that stairstep up the slope. Remains of the terraces and walls reminded early explorers of "trincheras," the Spanish term for entrenchments or fortifications.
  • Jacal is a type of wall in Pueblo buildings made of woven reeds and sticks covered with adobe. Slim close-set poles were tied together and filled out with mud, clay and grasses.[8]

Locations edit

Archuleta County edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Chimney Rock
(Site ID 5AA.985)
Anasazi Pueblo II Chimney Rock Chimney Rock National Monument Great house The Ancient Pueblo People site, designated on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, was a community inhabited between Durango and Pagosa Springs about 1,000 years ago with about 200 rooms. Rooms in the buildings were used for living, work areas and ceremonial purposes. The site is located within the San Juan National Forest Archaeological Area on 4,100 acres of land. Between May 15 and September 30 the Visitor Center is open and guided walking tours are conducted daily.[9]  

Dolores County edit

For Canyons of the Ancients sites, also see the Canyons of the Ancients section.

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Ansel Hall
(Site ID 5DL.27)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Cahone Private owner The pueblo village was at least a moderate-sized community.[10] There was one occupation at Ansel Hall from 1080–1150, with its peak period about 1125. The community had great kivas and great houses.[11] Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Research found that at least one of the small sites was built late in the 11th century, about 1074. The village may have been abandoned by 1100, based upon the absence of 12th century white and black pottery.[12]
Brewer Archaeological District
(Site ID 5DL.578)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Dove Creek Brewer Archaeological District has two large prehistoric settlement sites: Brewer Mesa Pueblo (11th century) and Brewer Canyon Pueblo (13th century).[13] Brewer Canyon Pueblo, part of the Upper Squaw Canyon Center, had 245 site clusters from 1225 to 1290.[14]
Champagne Springs (Greenlee) Ruins (Sites 5DL2333-5DL2338) Anasazi Pueblo I, Pueblo II Squaw Point, s. of Dove Creek Ruins situated on two low hill tops on the top of Squaw Point Mesa approximately 6 miles south-southwest of Dove Creek, Colorado. Both sites are characterized by a material culture that appears to be representative of the years spanning the late Pueblo I and early Pueblo II periods.[15]

La Plata County edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Darkmold Site
(Site ID 5LP4991)
Anasazi Basketmaker Durango The Late Archaic Basketmaker II Darkmold Site, inhabited from about 220 BC through AD 750, was added to the Colorado Register of Historic Properties in 2000. Archaeological evidence found at the site include slab-lined roasting pits and bell-shaped pits.[16]
Durango Rock Shelters Archeology Site
(Site ID 5LP4134)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo I Durango Durango Rock Shelters Archeology Site, also known as the Fall Creek Rock Shelters Site, is an Ancient Pueblo People (Anasazi) archaeological site, located in La Plata County, Colorado. People from the Late Basketmaker II and Basketmaker III Eras inhabited the site between AD 1 and AD 1000.[17]
Spring Creek Archeological District
(Site ID 5LP1254)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo periods Bayfield Spring Creek Archaeological District, also known as Zabel Canyon Indian Ruins, is located in the San Juan National Forest. The site was inhabited from 300 BC through Pueblo times Ancient Pueblo People. In the protohistoric periods of southwestern Colorado the Ute, Apache and Navajo ranged and lived in the area. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.[16]
Talus Village
(Site ID 5LP4223)
Anasazi Basketmaker Durango Talus Village, a Basketmaker II site with Basketmaker pit-house dwellings, was excavated in 1940 by Earl Morris, the first archaeologist to conduct professional excavations in LaPlata County. It was added to the Colorado Register of Historic Properties in 1996.[16]
Ute Mountain Ute Tribe
(Site ID 5MT.4342)
Anasazi Pueblo I, Pueblo II, Pueblo III Red Mesa Ute Mountain Ute Mancos Canyon Historic District, located on the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe reservation, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. It was occupied by puebloan people during the broad periods from 500 to 1499 [they left southwestern Colorado by 1300].[17]

Montezuma County edit

Anasazi Heritage Center edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Escalante
(Site ID 5MT2149)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Dolores Anasazi Heritage Center Great house Ruins. Escalante Pueblo was constructed approximately 1120 to 1130 and made of groupings of stone walled family and communal rooms, including kivas. The architecture is like that of the Chaco Canyon in present-day New Mexico.[18] The pueblo was also occupied about 1150 and again 1200.[19]  
Dominguez Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Dolores Anasazi Heritage Center Great house Ruins. Dominguez Pueblo, an example of independent family homes outside the main pueblo. Discovered at the site were items that shed light on how the people may have lived, including "6,900 turquoise, jet and shell beads; a shell and turquoise frog pendant and mosaics, two fine ceramic vessels, six bone scrapers, a woven mat and many other items."[18]  

Canyons of the Ancients edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Sand Canyon
(Site ID 5MT16853)
Anasazi Pueblo III Dolores Canyons of the Ancients National Monument One of the largest pueblos of the 13th century, Sand Canyon Pueblo, built between 1250 and 1280, contains at least 20 multi-family room blocks with 420 rooms, 90 kivas, and 14 towers. A spring runs through the center of the walled site that held up to 725 people. Construction was exacting, with care taken to shape stone, and some double and triple walls for stability. Families lived in clusters of rooms that included living, storage and work rooms and had their own family kivas. The community shared roofed plazas, great kivas and towers often connected to kivas. By 1280 new construction had stopped and people began migrating out of the pueblo; By 1290 the pueblo was abandoned, as were other Colorado pueblo sites, never to be inhabited again by puebloan people.[20][21] The Northern San Juan pueblo, significant for its ceremonial use and burial remains, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.[17]
Castle Rock Pueblo Anasazi Pueblo III Dolores Canyons of the Ancients National Monument Great house There was one occupation at the Castle Rock Pueblo from 1250–1275, with its peak period about 1260. The community had Great Houses.[11] There were at least 16 kivas, 40 surface rooms, nine possible towers, and a D-shaped enclosure.
Lowry Pueblo
(Site ID 5MT1566)
Anasazi Pueblo II Pleasant View Canyons of the Ancients National Monument There was one occupation at Lowry Pueblo from 1080–1150, with its peak period about 1125. The community had Great Houses, Great kivas and roads.[11] The Lowry Pueblo National Historic Landmark consists of 8 kivas, a great (community) kiva and 40 rooms built as high as three stories. The underground great kiva was built about 1103 and had murals painted over about 5 layers of plaster. About 1110 another kiva was built on top of the original kiva. Based upon the size of the kiva it's thought that the Lowry Pueblo may have been a local center for religious gatherings and celebration.[20][22][23]  

Hawkins Preserve edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Hawkins Pueblo Anasazi Pueblo II Cortez Cortez Cultural Center, Hawkins Preserve Hawkins Pueblo, occupied by several related groups, is the largest ruin within the preserve. It was most populated in the Pueblo II period, from about 1000 to 1150. The site contains several room block ruins and rubble that contains a kiva, mounds, and middens.[24]

Hovenweep National Monument edit

The Hovenweep National Monument (Site ID 5MT.604) is registered on the National and Colorado State Historic Registers.

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Cajon Group Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument Cajon Group, constructed like the Holly, Hackberry and Horseshoe configuration, is located at the head of Allen Canyon. It consists of a cluster of room blocks and the remains of a tower, estimated to house 80-100 people, that was constructed on a boulder that sits below the rim of the canyon.[25][26] Up to seven kiva depressions are located around the spring. Remnants of wall alignments below the rim on the talus represent possible terrace farming.[27]
Cutthroat Castle Group Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument Cutthroat Castle, the largest of the remains, is located on the north side of the stream. Cutthroat is unique among the units due to the lack of a spring, the numerous kivas and the fact that much of the architecture sits below the rim.[28]
Goodman Point (Site ID 5MT604) Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument Goodman Point group, the largest and easternmost village, contains small and large clusters of pueblo buildings built partially underground. It was most heavily populated in between 1150-1300, the Pueblo III period. Earlier residents include Basketmakers from 200-450 and during the second Pueblo period 900-1150.[29][31]
Hackberry and Horseshoe group Anasazi Pueblo III Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument Hackberry was a medium-sized Pueblo III village in the east fork of Bridge Canyon.[32] About 250 to 350 inhabitants are thought to have resided in the Hackberry Group. Located about 500 yards away, the Horseshoe group consists of four pueblo buildings that for a U-shape.[33] Horseshoe Ruin had a dam at the rim to create a reservoir. Horseshoe House is a D-shaped structure containing three rooms surrounding a possible central kiva. The architectural style suggests ceremonial or public use.[32] About 800 years ago the buildings were constructed with "precisely fit" stones and set with mortar of sand, ash, clay and water.[33]
Holly Group Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument The Holly group is located at the head of Keeley Canyon.[34] Holly is the site known for a rock art panel that has been interpreted as a summer solstice marker.[35] The five named buildings at the site are Curved Wall House, Great House, Holly Tower, Isolated Boulder House and Tilted Tower.[36]
Hovenweep Castle Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument  
Hovenweep House Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument
Rim Rock House Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument
Stronghold House Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument
Square Tower Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument Square Tower group is the largest collection of pueblo buildings at Hovenweep and was populated with up to 500 people. It is located in Little Ruin Canyon[37] which is made up of Square Tower, Tower Point, and Twin Towers ruin groups. Towers at Hovenweep were built in a variety of shapes; D-shapes, squares, ovals and circles[38] and for several purposes, including tool and grinding work areas, kivas for ritual functions, residential rooms and storage.[39] Towers have limited access, contain few windows and many have narrow slots or peepholes placed in the walls. The slots and doors of Hovenweep Castle, in Square Tower Group, have been shown to define an apparent solar calendar. The building is aligned so that light is channeled through openings into the building at sunset of the summer solstice, the winter solstice and the spring and fall equinox. The light falls in a predictable pattern on interior door lintels.[39][40]  
Twin Towers Anasazi Between Cortez, CO and Blanding, UT Hovenweep National Monument

McElmo Drainage Unit edit

The McElmo Drainage Unit, located in Montezuma and Dolores Counties, consists of tributaries of McElmo Creek, situated north of the northern slopes of Mesa Verde and Ute Mountain, that is part of the northern San Juan River drainage.[41] For Sand Canyon, see the Canyons of the Ancients and for Ansel Hall, see Dolores County.

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Albert Porter Pueblo
(Site ID 5MT123)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Private owner Great house Albert Porter Pueblo, also known by its Site ID and as Hedrick Ruin, was a small puebloan North San Juan village.[17] See the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
Unnamed (Site ID 5MT4700) Anasazi Pueblo III Yellow Jacket There was one occupation from 1200–1250 of the Mesa Verde culture site.[42]
Bass site
(Site ID 5MT136)
Anasazi Pueblo II Yellow Jacket Federal owner There was one occupation with Great Houses at the Bass Site from 1080–1150, with its peak period about 1125.[11] Based upon reporting to the Colorado Historical Society, occupancy extended into the early 13th century.[42] The North San Juan pueblo site was added to the National Register of Historic Places for Montezuma County, Colorado in 1999.[17]
Cannonball Ruins
(Site ID 5MT338)
Anasazi Late Pueblo II, Pueblo III Cortez Private owner Cannonball Ruins, part of the Great Pueblo Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit, was occupied from 1140-1300. The large settlement had architectural characteristics similar to the nearby Hovenweep pueblos. The site was first excavated in 1908 by Sylvanus Morley. Cannonball Ruins has been listed on the Colorado State Register of Historical Properties and the National Register for Historic Places since 1997.[42]
James A. Lancaster Site
(Site ID 5MT4803)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo I-III Pleasant View Private owner Ruins also called Clawson Ruins[42] were of the Pueblo tradition from the broad periods of 1-1499 AD [Pueblo people left Montezuma County area by 1300.] The previous village was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.[17]
Joe Ben Wheat Site Complex
(Site ID 5MT.16722)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Ruins from about 1075-1300. The site is a large multi-component site with 90 rooms and 14 kivas.[42]
Mitchell Springs Archeological Site
(Site ID 5MT.10991)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo I, Pueblo II Cortez Private owner Ruins from 500 - 1000,[42] also known as the Mitchell Springs Ruin Group, is a Northern San Juan pueblo. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in Montezuma County in 2001.[17] Ruins of 9 medium-sized pueblos from the Basketmaker II period to late Pueblo III. Occupying up to 1,000 people the pueblo had a total of 300 rooms, 35 kivas and towers.
Mud Springs Pueblo
(Site ID 5MT4466)
Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Private owner Ruins, also called Toltec Springs,[42] was occupied from 1200–1250, with its peak period about 1225. The community had reservoirs and construction with double or triple walls.[11] The pueblo site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982,[17]
Pigge Site
(Site ID 5MT4802)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo I-III Pleasant View Private owner There was an occupation, with roads, at the Pigge Site from 1175–1225, with its peak period about 1200.[11] The National Register of Historic Places reports occupation through the broad periods of AD 1 - 1499 [by 1300 puebloan people from southwestern Colorado had migrated out of their pueblos.] The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.[17]
Roy's Ruin
(Site ID 5MT3930)
Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Roy's Ruin, part of the Great Pueblo Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit, was occupied in the early 13th century. It is a classic Prudden Unit. The pueblo was built with masonry construction in roomblocks. The small site had a tower, kiva and a midden. Roy's Ruin has been listed on the Colorado State Register of Historical Properties and the National Register for Historic Places since 1992.[42]
Seven Towers Pueblo
(5MT1000)
Anasazi Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Federal owner The Northern San Juan pueblo ruins from about 1150-1300 was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.[17]
Wallace Ruin
(Site ID 5MT5670)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Cortez Private Wallace Ruin, was a Northern San Juan and Chaco pueblo inhabited during the broad 1000 to 1499 period [Ancient Pueblo People left southwestern Colorado by 1300]. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.[17]
Woods Canyon Pueblo
(Site ID 5MT.11842)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Federal Great house Woods Canyon Pueblo, also known as Wood Canyon Ruin, was a Northern San Juan pueblo inhabited during the broad 1000 to 1499 period [Ancient Pueblo People left southwestern Colorado by 1300]. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.[17] Ruins consisting of as many as 200 rooms, 50 kivas, and 16 towers, and possibly a plaza.
Yellow Jacket Pueblo
(Site ID 5MT5)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Private owner. Great house Yellowjacket pueblo experienced two periods of occupation. The first occurred between 1075 and 1150, with peak residency in 1125. The next period occurred between 1175 and 1250. The peak of the second period occurred in 1225. The community had Great Houses, Great kivas, reservoirs and roads.[11] Yellow Jacket pueblo was a village of the Mesa Verde culture was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.[17] Covering 100 acres, the pueblo contains at least 195 kivas (including a probable great kiva), 19 towers, a possible Chaco-era great house, and as many as 1,200 surface rooms. See the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.

Mesa Verde edit

Mesa Verde National Park (Site ID 5MT.9790) is listed in the National and State Registers of Historic places.

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Balcony House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Great house Ruins. Set on a high ledge facing east, Balcony House with 45 rooms and 2 kivas, which would have been cold for its residents in the winter. The modern visitor enters by climbing a 32-foot ladder and a crawling through a 12-foot tunnel. The exit, a series of toe-holds in a cleft of the cliff, was believed to be the only entry and exit route for the cliff dwellers, which made the small village was easy to defend. One log was dated at 1278 so it was likely built not long before the Mesa Verde people migrated out of the area.[43][44] Visitors can enter Balcony House through ranger guided tours.[45]

This photo is of an Emmett Harryson, a Navajo, at a T-shaped doorway at Balcony House (1929).
 
Cliff Palace Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park This multi-storied ruin, the largest and best-known of the cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde, is located in the largest cave in the center of the Great Mesa. It was south and southwest facing, providing greater warmth from the sun in the winter. The site had 217 rooms, including storage rooms, open courts, walkways, and 23 kivas. Many of the rooms were brightly painted.[46][47]  
Fire Temple Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park  
Long House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Cliff dwellings Ruins. Located on the Wetherill Mesa, Long House is the 2nd largest village for about 150 people. The 150 rooms are not clustered like the standard cliff dwellings, nor is it one of the most elegant set of buildings; Stones were used without shaping for fit and stability. Two overhead ledges contain more rooms. One ledge seems to include an overlook with small holes in the wall to see the rest of the village below. A spring is accessible within several hundred feet and seeps are located in the rear of the village.[48]  
Mesa Verde Reservoirs Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park A Historic Civil Engineering Landmark. These ancient reservoirs, built by the Ancient Puebloans, were named a National Civil Engineering Historic Landmark on September 26, 2004.  
Mug House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park This ruin situated on Wetherill Mesa was professionally excavated in the late 1960s by archaeologist Arthur Rohn. The structure contains 94 rooms, in four levels, including a large kiva, with simple vertical walls and masonry pilasters. This ceremonial structure has a keyhole shape, due to a recess behind the fireplace and a deflector, that is considered an element of the Mesa Verde style. The rooms clustered around the kiva formed part of the courtyard, indicating the kiva would have been roofed.
Oak Tree House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Ruins. Oak Tree House and neighboring Fire Temple can be visited via a 2-hour ranger-guided hike.[49]  
Spruce Tree House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Ruins. Spruce Tree House is the 3rd largest village, within several hundred feet of a spring, had 130 rooms and 8 kivas. Because of its protective location, it is well preserved.[50][51] The short trail to Spruce House begins at the Chapin Mesa Archeological Museum.[52]  
Square Tower House Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Mesa Verde National Park The Square Tower House is one of the stops on the Mesa Top Loop Road diving tour.[52] The tower that gives this site its name is the tallest structure in Mesa Verde. This cliff dwelling was occupied between 1200 and 1300.  

Towaoc area edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Cowboy Wash
(Site ID 5MT10010)
Anasazi Pueblo III Towaoc The site is dated between approximately 1150 and 1175 A.D. It is located on the south slopes of Ute Mountain. Some archeologists believe that the site was settled by immigrants from Chaco Canyon, or the Chuska Mountains.[53]
Ute Mountain Ute Tribe
(Site ID 5MT.4342)
Anasazi Pueblo I, Pueblo II, Pueblo III Towaoc Ute Mountain Ute Mancos Canyon Historic District, located on the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe reservation, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.[17]  
Yucca House
(Site ID 5MT5006)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Towaoc Yucca House National Monument Pueblo village There were two occupations at Yucca House: 1) 1080-1150, with its peak period about 1125 and 2) 1225-1275, with its peak in 1250. The community had Great kivas and Great Houses.[11] Two unexcavated settlement areas covered in vegetation include: 1) Western Complex was a large pueblo of up to 600 rooms, 100 kivas and a giant, perhaps community, kiva. A spring runs through the complex. A large building, Upper House, was made of adobe. 2) Lower House is an L-shaped pueblo with a plaza, 8 rooms and a large kiva.[30]  

Other edit

The sites are sorted by nearest town and site name.

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
O'Brien Site
(Site ID 5MT.5518)
Anasazi Pueblo II Dolores Ruins from 1075 - 1150. On the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties.[42]
Bement Site
(Site ID 5MT.4388)
Anasazi Pueblo I, Pueblo II Mancos Bement Site is a Colorado State Register of Historic Properties site, representing the first and second Pueblo periods. Between 750-850 there was one shelter on the site. About 150 years later, a group of six structures were inhabited from 1000 to 1150.[42]
Lost Canyon Archeological District
(Site ID 5MT.10435)
Anasazi Pueblo II, Pueblo III Mancos Federal owner Ruins from 1050-1300[42] or earlier was Mesa Verde culture pueblo. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[17]
Puzzle House
(Site ID 5MT.11787)
Anasazi Basketmaker, Pueblo II-III Pleasant View Puzzle House, is a pueblo settlement occupied three times, first about 650 and two occupations between 1075-1225. The site is on the state register.[54][55]
Shields Pueblo Anasazi Ruins in southwestern Colorado.

Montrose County edit

Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town (modern name) Location Type Description Photo
Dolores Cave
(Site ID 5MN.915)
Gateway Basketmaker and Pueblo periods Uravan The rock shelter is listed on the State register. Corn dated at 1500 found at the site provides evidence that some people from the Ancient Pueblo periods may have remained in the area and farmed corn.[42]
Tabeguache Pueblo
(Site ID 5MN.1609)
Gateway Pueblo II Nucla Tabeguache Pueblo is an example of an early, dispersed Ancient Pueblo settlement, inhabited about 1100 and later abandoned.[56]
Tabeguache Cave II
(Site ID 5MN.890)
Gateway Basketmaker, Pueblo I-III Uravan Tabeguache Cave II is a large prehistoric rock shelter occupied from about 600 - 1500. There is also a Tabeguache Cave and two other rock shelters near Nucla, Colorado.[56]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rohn, Arthur H.; Ferguson, William M. Puebloan ruins of the Southwest. University of New Mexico Press, 2006. pp. 43. ISBN 0-8263-3969-7.
  2. ^ a b Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde Museum Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. pp. 39-45.
  3. ^ History & Culture. 2011-10-28 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  4. ^ Stuart, Moczygemba-McKinsey, pp. 56-57.
  5. ^ Pueblo Indian History. 2011-10-08 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. Retrieved 10-9-2011.
  6. ^ Lancaster, James A.; Pinkley, Jean M. Excavation at Site 16 of three Pueblo II Mesa-Top Ruins. 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine Archeological Excavations in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado. National Park Service. May 19, 2008. Retrieved 10-9-2011.
  7. ^ a b Pueblo III - Overview. 2011-09-25 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. 2011. Retrieved 9-27-2011.
  8. ^ "DeWitt Colony Life" 2010-12-05 at the Wayback Machine. Texas A&M University. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  9. ^ "Chimney Rock Archaeological Area.". from the original on 2012-01-02. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
  10. ^ Cordell, Gumerman, p. 161.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Aldenderfer, Mark S.; Maschner, Herber D. G. (1996). Anthropology, Space and Geographic Information Systems. Oxford University Press. p. 127. ISBN 0-19-508575-2.
  12. ^ Regional Context: Architecture, Settlement Patterns, and Abandonment. 2011-07-01 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. 2011. Retrieved 9-26-2011.
  13. ^ National & State Registers for Dolores County, Colorado. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 10-8-2011.
  14. ^ Varien, Mark D.; Wilshusen, Richard H. (editors). (2002). Seeking the Center Place, Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region. University of Utah Press. p. 210. ISBN 0-87480-735-2.
  15. ^ Dove, Donald E. Greenlee Ruins Conclusions and Recommendations. 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Archaeology Society. 2011. Retrieved 9-27-2011.
  16. ^ a b c Colorado State Register of Historic Places for LaPlata County, Colorado. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  18. ^ a b "What is unique about the Escalante and Dominguez Pueblos?". U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. 2011-08-08. from the original on 2011-07-02. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
  19. ^ . Mesa Verde Country Visitor Information Bureau. 1995–2011. Archived from the original on 2011-04-27. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
  20. ^ a b Canyons of the Ancients Visitor Information. 2016-09-30 at the Wayback Machine Bureau of Land Management. Retrieved 9-24-2011.
  21. ^ Plog, Stephen. (1997). Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-02116-3.
  22. ^ Gregory, Lee. Colorado Scenic Guide: Southern Region. Johnson Books, Boulder, Colorado, 1996 (1st edition 1984). pp. 17-18. ISBN 1-55566-145-9.
  23. ^ Casey, Robert. L. (1993) [1983]. High Journey to the Southwest. The Globe Pequot Press. p. 229. ISBN 1-56440-151-0.
  24. ^ Hawkins Preserve: Research. 2012-03-06 at the Wayback Machine Cortez Cultural Center. 2011. Retrieved 9-26-2011.
  25. ^ Cajon Group 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine. National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  26. ^ Winter, Joseph (1975). Hovenweep 1974: Archeological Report No.1. San Jose, CA: Anthropology Department, San Jose State University.
  27. ^ Winter, Joseph (1976). Hovenweep 1975 Archeological Report no.2. San Jose, CA: Anthropology Dept, San Jose State University.
  28. ^ Most information from this section can be found here:Ferguson, William (1987). Anasazi Ruins of the Southwest in Color. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-0873-2.
  29. ^ Goodman Point. 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  30. ^ a b Hovenweep Visitor Guide 2011-12-16 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  31. ^ The Hovenweep Visitor's Guide published by the National Park Service does not include Goodman Point,[30]
  32. ^ a b Rohn, Arthur H.; Ferguson, William M. Puebloan ruins of the Southwest. University of New Mexico Press, 2006. p. 157. ISBN 0-8263-3969-7.
  33. ^ a b Horseshoe and Hackberry Groups. 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  34. ^ Holly Ruin. 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  35. ^ Frazier, Kendrick. People of Chaco: A Canyon and Its Culture. W.W. Norton and Company, New York, 1986. p. 200. ISBN 0-393-30496-5.
  36. ^ Rohn, Arthur H.; Ferguson, William M. Puebloan ruins of the Southwest. University of New Mexico Press, 2006. p. 153. ISBN 0-8263-3969-7.
  37. ^ Square Tower. 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  38. ^ Little Ruin Canyon Trail Guide. 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-20-2011.
  39. ^ a b Gibbon, Guy E.; Ames, Kenneth M. (1998) Archaeology of Prehistoric Native America: An Encyclopedia. 2016-05-19 at the Wayback Machine p. 377. ISBN 0-8153-0725-X.
  40. ^ Frazier, Kendrick. People of Chaco: A Canyon and Its Culture. W.W. Norton and Company, New York, 1986. pp. 199-200. ISBN 0-393-30496-5.
  41. ^ Great Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit, A.D. 1075-1300. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine National Register of Historic Places, Multiple Property Documentation Form. pp. 1, 3, 8. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l National & State Registers. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 10-7-2011.
  43. ^ Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde Museum Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. pp. 55-56. ISBN 0-937062-15-4.
  44. ^ Casey, Robert. L. (1993) [1983]. High Journey to the Southwest. The Globe Pequot Press. pp. 225-226. ISBN 1-56440-151-0.
  45. ^ Balcony House. 2011-08-04 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park. Retrieved 9-21-2011.
  46. ^ Watson, Don. Indians of the Mesa Verde. Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. pp. 3, 29, 31, 37. ISBN 0-937062-00-6.
  47. ^ Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde Museum Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. p. 51. ISBN 0-937062-15-4.
  48. ^ Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde Museum Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. p. 57. ISBN 0-937062-15-4.
  49. ^ New 2011 Backcountry Hikes. 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service. Retrieved 9-24-2011.
  50. ^ Spruce Tree House. 2011-08-04 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park. Retrieved 9-21-2011.
  51. ^ Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde Museum Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. p. 52. ISBN 0-937062-15-4.
  52. ^ a b Self-Guided Tours: Chapin Mesa. 2011-09-26 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park. Retrieved 9-21-2011.
  53. ^ Cassells, E. Steve. (1997). The Archeology of Colorado, Revised Edition. Boulder, Colorado: Johnson Books. pp. 162. ISBN 1-55566-193-9.
  54. ^ National & State Registers for Montezuma County, Colorado. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 10-8-2011.
  55. ^ <<</state.html National Register of Historic Places in <<< County[permanent dead link] American Dreams, Inc. Retrieved 2011-10-6.
  56. ^ a b National & State Registers. 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 10-8-2011.

External links edit


38°59′50″N 105°32′52″W / 38.9972°N 105.5478°W / 38.9972; -105.5478 (State of Colorado)

list, ancestral, puebloan, dwellings, colorado, this, list, ancestral, puebloan, dwellings, state, colorado, location, state, colorado, united, states, america, contents, pueblo, periods, types, buildings, locations, archuleta, county, dolores, county, plata, . This is a list of Ancestral Puebloan dwellings in the U S State of Colorado The location of the State of Colorado in the United States of America Contents 1 Pueblo periods 2 Types of Buildings 3 Locations 3 1 Archuleta County 3 2 Dolores County 3 3 La Plata County 3 4 Montezuma County 3 4 1 Anasazi Heritage Center 3 4 2 Canyons of the Ancients 3 4 3 Hawkins Preserve 3 4 4 Hovenweep National Monument 3 4 5 McElmo Drainage Unit 3 4 6 Mesa Verde 3 4 7 Towaoc area 3 4 8 Other 3 5 Montrose County 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPueblo periods editArchaeologists have agreed on three main periods of occupation by Pueblo peoples in southwestern Colorado Pueblo I Pueblo II and Pueblo III 1 Pueblo I 750 to 900 Pueblo buildings were built with stone generally oriented to the south and in U E and L shapes The buildings were located more closely together than the previous Basketmaker period and reflected deepening religious celebration Towers were built often near kivas though their purpose defense storage ceremonies still is debated Pottery became more versatile not just for cooking but now included pitchers ladles bowls jars and dishware for food and drink White pottery with black designs emerged the pigments coming from plants Water management and conservation techniques including the use of reservoirs and silt retaining dams also emerged during this period 2 Midway through this period about 900 the number of residential sites in the Hovenweep area increased 3 Pueblo II 900 1150 During the Pueblo II period there was an increase in population that resulted in creation of more than 10 000 sites in 250 years Because much of the land is arid and crop yields were highly variable people supplemented their diets by hunting foraging and trading for food 4 By the end of the period there were multiple story dwellings made primarily of stone masonry towers especially in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah and family and community kivas 2 5 6 Pueblo III 1150 1300 Rohn and Ferguson authors of Puebloan Ruins of the Southwest state that during the Pueblo III period there was a significant community change Population tended to coalesce into larger community centers at canyon heads or under cliff overhangs Population peaked between 1200 and 1250 to more than 20 000 in the Mesa Verde region 7 However by 1300 most Pueblo people had abandoned the Four Corners area as the result of climate changes and food shortages They are believed to have moved south and east to villages in Arizona and New Mexico especially the Rio Grande valley near what is today Santa Fe and Albuquerque 7 Types of Buildings editIn addition to the movable structures used by other Native Americans across North and South America the Pueblo peoples created distinctive structures for living worshiping defense storage and daily life Pueblo Referring to both a certain style of Puebloan architecture and groups of people themselves the term pueblo is used in architectural terms to describe single story or multistory buildings made of coursed stone or adobe and occasionally jacal Usually these buildings were plastered with adobe both inside and outside Kiva Circular underground buildings used for ceremonies preparations for ceremonies and as retreats for families during the worst months of winter Kivas may have evolved from pit houses Found throughout the Ancestral Pueblo area and in parts of the Mogollon region central Arizona they generally feature a bench around the inside walls pilasters against the walls to hold up the beams of the roof a fire pit a ventilator shaft to bring air to the fire pit and a square opening in the roof with a ladder to enter the kiva A kiva generally was located in front of a family s suite of pueblo rooms Great houses Large adobe plastered stone buildings believed to be mostly ceremonial in use though they may have been used in part as residences In the Chacoan period roughly equivalent to PII 900 to 1150 A D these buildings share certain features such as large rooms 15 feet square massive size elevated position and core and veneer masonry They also often have blocked in kivas tower kivas and nearby great kivas In the Pueblo III PIII period 1150 1300 A D ceremonial buildings were less distinct from residential structures in room size and often included enclosed plazas Great kivas Large versions of traditional family kivas that appear to have been intended for use by the larger community especially in Chacoan times There are great kivas as large as 75 feet across such as Casa Rinconada in Chaco Canyon Roofs are held up by massive posts set into special recesses in the floors In earlier times such as PI great kivas might not be roofed In the Mogollon region square great kivas often were built Pit houses In the Basketmaker and early PI periods most of the populations of the Southwest lived in pit houses carefully dug rectangular or circular depressions in the earth with branch and mud adobe walls supported by log sized corner posts While pit houses never completely disappeared after PI most residences were above ground blocks of pueblo rooms usually with at least one family kiva in front Cliff dwellings Pueblos constructed under overhangs in the cliff sides of the mesas in the Southwest Cliff dwellings were a relatively late development in Pueblo communities mostly after 1150 and are considered to have been built at least partly for defensive reasons Trincheras The Hohokam and Trincheras culture used these distinctive type sites in the Southwest and northwest Mexico Trincheras sites are usually located on steep slopes of hills and low mountains and are characterized by terraces and walls that stairstep up the slope Remains of the terraces and walls reminded early explorers of trincheras the Spanish term for entrenchments or fortifications Jacal is a type of wall in Pueblo buildings made of woven reeds and sticks covered with adobe Slim close set poles were tied together and filled out with mud clay and grasses 8 Locations editArchuleta County edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Chimney Rock Site ID 5AA 985 Anasazi Pueblo II Chimney Rock Chimney Rock National Monument Great house The Ancient Pueblo People site designated on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970 was a community inhabited between Durango and Pagosa Springs about 1 000 years ago with about 200 rooms Rooms in the buildings were used for living work areas and ceremonial purposes The site is located within the San Juan National Forest Archaeological Area on 4 100 acres of land Between May 15 and September 30 the Visitor Center is open and guided walking tours are conducted daily 9 nbsp Dolores County edit For Canyons of the Ancients sites also see the Canyons of the Ancients section Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Ansel Hall Site ID 5DL 27 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Cahone Private owner The pueblo village was at least a moderate sized community 10 There was one occupation at Ansel Hall from 1080 1150 with its peak period about 1125 The community had great kivas and great houses 11 Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Research found that at least one of the small sites was built late in the 11th century about 1074 The village may have been abandoned by 1100 based upon the absence of 12th century white and black pottery 12 Brewer Archaeological District Site ID 5DL 578 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Dove Creek Brewer Archaeological District has two large prehistoric settlement sites Brewer Mesa Pueblo 11th century and Brewer Canyon Pueblo 13th century 13 Brewer Canyon Pueblo part of the Upper Squaw Canyon Center had 245 site clusters from 1225 to 1290 14 Champagne Springs Greenlee Ruins Sites 5DL2333 5DL2338 Anasazi Pueblo I Pueblo II Squaw Point s of Dove Creek Ruins situated on two low hill tops on the top of Squaw Point Mesa approximately 6 miles south southwest of Dove Creek Colorado Both sites are characterized by a material culture that appears to be representative of the years spanning the late Pueblo I and early Pueblo II periods 15 La Plata County edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Darkmold Site Site ID 5LP4991 Anasazi Basketmaker Durango The Late Archaic Basketmaker II Darkmold Site inhabited from about 220 BC through AD 750 was added to the Colorado Register of Historic Properties in 2000 Archaeological evidence found at the site include slab lined roasting pits and bell shaped pits 16 Durango Rock Shelters Archeology Site Site ID 5LP4134 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo I Durango Durango Rock Shelters Archeology Site also known as the Fall Creek Rock Shelters Site is an Ancient Pueblo People Anasazi archaeological site located in La Plata County Colorado People from the Late Basketmaker II and Basketmaker III Eras inhabited the site between AD 1 and AD 1000 17 Spring Creek Archeological District Site ID 5LP1254 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo periods Bayfield Spring Creek Archaeological District also known as Zabel Canyon Indian Ruins is located in the San Juan National Forest The site was inhabited from 300 BC through Pueblo times Ancient Pueblo People In the protohistoric periods of southwestern Colorado the Ute Apache and Navajo ranged and lived in the area It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 16 Talus Village Site ID 5LP4223 Anasazi Basketmaker Durango Talus Village a Basketmaker II site with Basketmaker pit house dwellings was excavated in 1940 by Earl Morris the first archaeologist to conduct professional excavations in LaPlata County It was added to the Colorado Register of Historic Properties in 1996 16 Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Site ID 5MT 4342 Anasazi Pueblo I Pueblo II Pueblo III Red Mesa Ute Mountain Ute Mancos Canyon Historic District located on the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe reservation was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 It was occupied by puebloan people during the broad periods from 500 to 1499 they left southwestern Colorado by 1300 17 Montezuma County edit Anasazi Heritage Center edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Escalante Site ID 5MT2149 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Dolores Anasazi Heritage Center Great house Ruins Escalante Pueblo was constructed approximately 1120 to 1130 and made of groupings of stone walled family and communal rooms including kivas The architecture is like that of the Chaco Canyon in present day New Mexico 18 The pueblo was also occupied about 1150 and again 1200 19 nbsp Dominguez Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Dolores Anasazi Heritage Center Great house Ruins Dominguez Pueblo an example of independent family homes outside the main pueblo Discovered at the site were items that shed light on how the people may have lived including 6 900 turquoise jet and shell beads a shell and turquoise frog pendant and mosaics two fine ceramic vessels six bone scrapers a woven mat and many other items 18 nbsp Canyons of the Ancients edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Sand Canyon Site ID 5MT16853 Anasazi Pueblo III Dolores Canyons of the Ancients National Monument One of the largest pueblos of the 13th century Sand Canyon Pueblo built between 1250 and 1280 contains at least 20 multi family room blocks with 420 rooms 90 kivas and 14 towers A spring runs through the center of the walled site that held up to 725 people Construction was exacting with care taken to shape stone and some double and triple walls for stability Families lived in clusters of rooms that included living storage and work rooms and had their own family kivas The community shared roofed plazas great kivas and towers often connected to kivas By 1280 new construction had stopped and people began migrating out of the pueblo By 1290 the pueblo was abandoned as were other Colorado pueblo sites never to be inhabited again by puebloan people 20 21 The Northern San Juan pueblo significant for its ceremonial use and burial remains was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005 17 Castle Rock Pueblo Anasazi Pueblo III Dolores Canyons of the Ancients National Monument Great house There was one occupation at the Castle Rock Pueblo from 1250 1275 with its peak period about 1260 The community had Great Houses 11 There were at least 16 kivas 40 surface rooms nine possible towers and a D shaped enclosure Lowry Pueblo Site ID 5MT1566 Anasazi Pueblo II Pleasant View Canyons of the Ancients National Monument There was one occupation at Lowry Pueblo from 1080 1150 with its peak period about 1125 The community had Great Houses Great kivas and roads 11 The Lowry Pueblo National Historic Landmark consists of 8 kivas a great community kiva and 40 rooms built as high as three stories The underground great kiva was built about 1103 and had murals painted over about 5 layers of plaster About 1110 another kiva was built on top of the original kiva Based upon the size of the kiva it s thought that the Lowry Pueblo may have been a local center for religious gatherings and celebration 20 22 23 nbsp Hawkins Preserve edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Hawkins Pueblo Anasazi Pueblo II Cortez Cortez Cultural Center Hawkins Preserve Hawkins Pueblo occupied by several related groups is the largest ruin within the preserve It was most populated in the Pueblo II period from about 1000 to 1150 The site contains several room block ruins and rubble that contains a kiva mounds and middens 24 Hovenweep National Monument edit The Hovenweep National Monument Site ID 5MT 604 is registered on the National and Colorado State Historic Registers Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Cajon Group Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Cajon Group constructed like the Holly Hackberry and Horseshoe configuration is located at the head of Allen Canyon It consists of a cluster of room blocks and the remains of a tower estimated to house 80 100 people that was constructed on a boulder that sits below the rim of the canyon 25 26 Up to seven kiva depressions are located around the spring Remnants of wall alignments below the rim on the talus represent possible terrace farming 27 Cutthroat Castle Group Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Cutthroat Castle the largest of the remains is located on the north side of the stream Cutthroat is unique among the units due to the lack of a spring the numerous kivas and the fact that much of the architecture sits below the rim 28 Goodman Point Site ID 5MT604 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Goodman Point group the largest and easternmost village contains small and large clusters of pueblo buildings built partially underground It was most heavily populated in between 1150 1300 the Pueblo III period Earlier residents include Basketmakers from 200 450 and during the second Pueblo period 900 1150 29 31 Hackberry and Horseshoe group Anasazi Pueblo III Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Hackberry was a medium sized Pueblo III village in the east fork of Bridge Canyon 32 About 250 to 350 inhabitants are thought to have resided in the Hackberry Group Located about 500 yards away the Horseshoe group consists of four pueblo buildings that for a U shape 33 Horseshoe Ruin had a dam at the rim to create a reservoir Horseshoe House is a D shaped structure containing three rooms surrounding a possible central kiva The architectural style suggests ceremonial or public use 32 About 800 years ago the buildings were constructed with precisely fit stones and set with mortar of sand ash clay and water 33 Holly Group Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument The Holly group is located at the head of Keeley Canyon 34 Holly is the site known for a rock art panel that has been interpreted as a summer solstice marker 35 The five named buildings at the site are Curved Wall House Great House Holly Tower Isolated Boulder House and Tilted Tower 36 Hovenweep Castle Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument nbsp Hovenweep House Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Rim Rock House Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Stronghold House Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Square Tower Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument Square Tower group is the largest collection of pueblo buildings at Hovenweep and was populated with up to 500 people It is located in Little Ruin Canyon 37 which is made up of Square Tower Tower Point and Twin Towers ruin groups Towers at Hovenweep were built in a variety of shapes D shapes squares ovals and circles 38 and for several purposes including tool and grinding work areas kivas for ritual functions residential rooms and storage 39 Towers have limited access contain few windows and many have narrow slots or peepholes placed in the walls The slots and doors of Hovenweep Castle in Square Tower Group have been shown to define an apparent solar calendar The building is aligned so that light is channeled through openings into the building at sunset of the summer solstice the winter solstice and the spring and fall equinox The light falls in a predictable pattern on interior door lintels 39 40 nbsp Twin Towers Anasazi Between Cortez CO and Blanding UT Hovenweep National Monument McElmo Drainage Unit edit The McElmo Drainage Unit located in Montezuma and Dolores Counties consists of tributaries of McElmo Creek situated north of the northern slopes of Mesa Verde and Ute Mountain that is part of the northern San Juan River drainage 41 For Sand Canyon see the Canyons of the Ancients and for Ansel Hall see Dolores County Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Albert Porter Pueblo Site ID 5MT123 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Private owner Great house Albert Porter Pueblo also known by its Site ID and as Hedrick Ruin was a small puebloan North San Juan village 17 See the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Unnamed Site ID 5MT4700 Anasazi Pueblo III Yellow Jacket There was one occupation from 1200 1250 of the Mesa Verde culture site 42 Bass site Site ID 5MT136 Anasazi Pueblo II Yellow Jacket Federal owner There was one occupation with Great Houses at the Bass Site from 1080 1150 with its peak period about 1125 11 Based upon reporting to the Colorado Historical Society occupancy extended into the early 13th century 42 The North San Juan pueblo site was added to the National Register of Historic Places for Montezuma County Colorado in 1999 17 Cannonball Ruins Site ID 5MT338 Anasazi Late Pueblo II Pueblo III Cortez Private owner Cannonball Ruins part of the Great Pueblo Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit was occupied from 1140 1300 The large settlement had architectural characteristics similar to the nearby Hovenweep pueblos The site was first excavated in 1908 by Sylvanus Morley Cannonball Ruins has been listed on the Colorado State Register of Historical Properties and the National Register for Historic Places since 1997 42 James A Lancaster Site Site ID 5MT4803 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo I III Pleasant View Private owner Ruins also called Clawson Ruins 42 were of the Pueblo tradition from the broad periods of 1 1499 AD Pueblo people left Montezuma County area by 1300 The previous village was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 17 Joe Ben Wheat Site Complex Site ID 5MT 16722 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Ruins from about 1075 1300 The site is a large multi component site with 90 rooms and 14 kivas 42 Mitchell Springs Archeological Site Site ID 5MT 10991 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo I Pueblo II Cortez Private owner Ruins from 500 1000 42 also known as the Mitchell Springs Ruin Group is a Northern San Juan pueblo It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in Montezuma County in 2001 17 Ruins of 9 medium sized pueblos from the Basketmaker II period to late Pueblo III Occupying up to 1 000 people the pueblo had a total of 300 rooms 35 kivas and towers Mud Springs Pueblo Site ID 5MT4466 Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Private owner Ruins also called Toltec Springs 42 was occupied from 1200 1250 with its peak period about 1225 The community had reservoirs and construction with double or triple walls 11 The pueblo site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 17 Pigge Site Site ID 5MT4802 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo I III Pleasant View Private owner There was an occupation with roads at the Pigge Site from 1175 1225 with its peak period about 1200 11 The National Register of Historic Places reports occupation through the broad periods of AD 1 1499 by 1300 puebloan people from southwestern Colorado had migrated out of their pueblos The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 17 Roy s Ruin Site ID 5MT3930 Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Roy s Ruin part of the Great Pueblo Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit was occupied in the early 13th century It is a classic Prudden Unit The pueblo was built with masonry construction in roomblocks The small site had a tower kiva and a midden Roy s Ruin has been listed on the Colorado State Register of Historical Properties and the National Register for Historic Places since 1992 42 Seven Towers Pueblo 5MT1000 Anasazi Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Federal owner The Northern San Juan pueblo ruins from about 1150 1300 was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 17 Wallace Ruin Site ID 5MT5670 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Cortez Private Wallace Ruin was a Northern San Juan and Chaco pueblo inhabited during the broad 1000 to 1499 period Ancient Pueblo People left southwestern Colorado by 1300 It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005 17 Woods Canyon Pueblo Site ID 5MT 11842 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Federal Great house Woods Canyon Pueblo also known as Wood Canyon Ruin was a Northern San Juan pueblo inhabited during the broad 1000 to 1499 period Ancient Pueblo People left southwestern Colorado by 1300 It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 17 Ruins consisting of as many as 200 rooms 50 kivas and 16 towers and possibly a plaza Yellow Jacket Pueblo Site ID 5MT5 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Yellow Jacket Private owner Great house Yellowjacket pueblo experienced two periods of occupation The first occurred between 1075 and 1150 with peak residency in 1125 The next period occurred between 1175 and 1250 The peak of the second period occurred in 1225 The community had Great Houses Great kivas reservoirs and roads 11 Yellow Jacket pueblo was a village of the Mesa Verde culture was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 17 Covering 100 acres the pueblo contains at least 195 kivas including a probable great kiva 19 towers a possible Chaco era great house and as many as 1 200 surface rooms See the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Mesa Verde edit Mesa Verde National Park Site ID 5MT 9790 is listed in the National and State Registers of Historic places Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Balcony House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Great house Ruins Set on a high ledge facing east Balcony House with 45 rooms and 2 kivas which would have been cold for its residents in the winter The modern visitor enters by climbing a 32 foot ladder and a crawling through a 12 foot tunnel The exit a series of toe holds in a cleft of the cliff was believed to be the only entry and exit route for the cliff dwellers which made the small village was easy to defend One log was dated at 1278 so it was likely built not long before the Mesa Verde people migrated out of the area 43 44 Visitors can enter Balcony House through ranger guided tours 45 This photo is of an Emmett Harryson a Navajo at a T shaped doorway at Balcony House 1929 nbsp Cliff Palace Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park This multi storied ruin the largest and best known of the cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde is located in the largest cave in the center of the Great Mesa It was south and southwest facing providing greater warmth from the sun in the winter The site had 217 rooms including storage rooms open courts walkways and 23 kivas Many of the rooms were brightly painted 46 47 nbsp Fire Temple Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park nbsp Long House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Cliff dwellings Ruins Located on the Wetherill Mesa Long House is the 2nd largest village for about 150 people The 150 rooms are not clustered like the standard cliff dwellings nor is it one of the most elegant set of buildings Stones were used without shaping for fit and stability Two overhead ledges contain more rooms One ledge seems to include an overlook with small holes in the wall to see the rest of the village below A spring is accessible within several hundred feet and seeps are located in the rear of the village 48 nbsp Mesa Verde Reservoirs Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park A Historic Civil Engineering Landmark These ancient reservoirs built by the Ancient Puebloans were named a National Civil Engineering Historic Landmark on September 26 2004 nbsp Mug House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park This ruin situated on Wetherill Mesa was professionally excavated in the late 1960s by archaeologist Arthur Rohn The structure contains 94 rooms in four levels including a large kiva with simple vertical walls and masonry pilasters This ceremonial structure has a keyhole shape due to a recess behind the fireplace and a deflector that is considered an element of the Mesa Verde style The rooms clustered around the kiva formed part of the courtyard indicating the kiva would have been roofed Oak Tree House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Ruins Oak Tree House and neighboring Fire Temple can be visited via a 2 hour ranger guided hike 49 nbsp Spruce Tree House Anasazi Cortez Mesa Verde National Park Ruins Spruce Tree House is the 3rd largest village within several hundred feet of a spring had 130 rooms and 8 kivas Because of its protective location it is well preserved 50 51 The short trail to Spruce House begins at the Chapin Mesa Archeological Museum 52 nbsp Square Tower House Anasazi Pueblo III Cortez Mesa Verde National Park The Square Tower House is one of the stops on the Mesa Top Loop Road diving tour 52 The tower that gives this site its name is the tallest structure in Mesa Verde This cliff dwelling was occupied between 1200 and 1300 nbsp Towaoc area edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Cowboy Wash Site ID 5MT10010 Anasazi Pueblo III Towaoc The site is dated between approximately 1150 and 1175 A D It is located on the south slopes of Ute Mountain Some archeologists believe that the site was settled by immigrants from Chaco Canyon or the Chuska Mountains 53 Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Site ID 5MT 4342 Anasazi Pueblo I Pueblo II Pueblo III Towaoc Ute Mountain Ute Mancos Canyon Historic District located on the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe reservation was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 17 nbsp Yucca House Site ID 5MT5006 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Towaoc Yucca House National Monument Pueblo village There were two occupations at Yucca House 1 1080 1150 with its peak period about 1125 and 2 1225 1275 with its peak in 1250 The community had Great kivas and Great Houses 11 Two unexcavated settlement areas covered in vegetation include 1 Western Complex was a large pueblo of up to 600 rooms 100 kivas and a giant perhaps community kiva A spring runs through the complex A large building Upper House was made of adobe 2 Lower House is an L shaped pueblo with a plaza 8 rooms and a large kiva 30 nbsp Other edit The sites are sorted by nearest town and site name Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo O Brien Site Site ID 5MT 5518 Anasazi Pueblo II Dolores Ruins from 1075 1150 On the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties 42 Bement Site Site ID 5MT 4388 Anasazi Pueblo I Pueblo II Mancos Bement Site is a Colorado State Register of Historic Properties site representing the first and second Pueblo periods Between 750 850 there was one shelter on the site About 150 years later a group of six structures were inhabited from 1000 to 1150 42 Lost Canyon Archeological District Site ID 5MT 10435 Anasazi Pueblo II Pueblo III Mancos Federal owner Ruins from 1050 1300 42 or earlier was Mesa Verde culture pueblo It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988 17 Puzzle House Site ID 5MT 11787 Anasazi Basketmaker Pueblo II III Pleasant View Puzzle House is a pueblo settlement occupied three times first about 650 and two occupations between 1075 1225 The site is on the state register 54 55 Shields Pueblo Anasazi Ruins in southwestern Colorado Montrose County edit Site name Pueblo peoples Period Nearest town modern name Location Type Description Photo Dolores Cave Site ID 5MN 915 Gateway Basketmaker and Pueblo periods Uravan The rock shelter is listed on the State register Corn dated at 1500 found at the site provides evidence that some people from the Ancient Pueblo periods may have remained in the area and farmed corn 42 Tabeguache Pueblo Site ID 5MN 1609 Gateway Pueblo II Nucla Tabeguache Pueblo is an example of an early dispersed Ancient Pueblo settlement inhabited about 1100 and later abandoned 56 Tabeguache Cave II Site ID 5MN 890 Gateway Basketmaker Pueblo I III Uravan Tabeguache Cave II is a large prehistoric rock shelter occupied from about 600 1500 There is also a Tabeguache Cave and two other rock shelters near Nucla Colorado 56 Gallery edit nbsp Map of Ancient Pueblo People Anasazi regions including the northern Mesa Verde region and the southern Chaco Canyon region nbsp A jacal in Big Bend National Park See also edit nbsp Geography portal nbsp History portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Colorado portal Bibliography of Colorado Geography of Colorado History of Colorado Index of Colorado related articles List of Colorado related lists List of prehistoric sites in Colorado Outline of Colorado Outline of Colorado prehistory Trail of the AncientsReferences edit Rohn Arthur H Ferguson William M Puebloan ruins of the Southwest University of New Mexico Press 2006 pp 43 ISBN 0 8263 3969 7 a b Wenger Gilbert R 1991 1980 The Story of Mesa Verde National Park Mesa Verde Museum Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association pp 39 45 History amp Culture Archived 2011 10 28 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 Stuart Moczygemba McKinsey pp 56 57 Pueblo Indian History Archived 2011 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center Retrieved 10 9 2011 Lancaster James A Pinkley Jean M Excavation at Site 16 of three Pueblo II Mesa Top Ruins Archived 2014 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Archeological Excavations in Mesa Verde National Park Colorado National Park Service May 19 2008 Retrieved 10 9 2011 a b Pueblo III Overview Archived 2011 09 25 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center 2011 Retrieved 9 27 2011 DeWitt Colony Life Archived 2010 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Texas A amp M University Retrieved July 27 2011 Chimney Rock Archaeological Area Archived from the original on 2012 01 02 Retrieved 2011 12 12 Cordell Gumerman p 161 a b c d e f g h Aldenderfer Mark S Maschner Herber D G 1996 Anthropology Space and Geographic Information Systems Oxford University Press p 127 ISBN 0 19 508575 2 Regional Context Architecture Settlement Patterns and Abandonment Archived 2011 07 01 at the Wayback Machine Crow Canyon Archaeological Center 2011 Retrieved 9 26 2011 National amp State Registers for Dolores County Colorado Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation Retrieved 10 8 2011 Varien Mark D Wilshusen Richard H editors 2002 Seeking the Center Place Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region University of Utah Press p 210 ISBN 0 87480 735 2 Dove Donald E Greenlee Ruins Conclusions and Recommendations Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Archaeology Society 2011 Retrieved 9 27 2011 a b c Colorado State Register of Historic Places for LaPlata County Colorado Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society Retrieved December 13 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b What is unique about the Escalante and Dominguez Pueblos U S Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management 2011 08 08 Archived from the original on 2011 07 02 Retrieved 2011 06 18 Mesa Verde County Archaeology Anasazi Heritage Center Mesa Verde Country Visitor Information Bureau 1995 2011 Archived from the original on 2011 04 27 Retrieved 2011 06 18 a b Canyons of the Ancients Visitor Information Archived 2016 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Bureau of Land Management Retrieved 9 24 2011 Plog Stephen 1997 Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 02116 3 Gregory Lee Colorado Scenic Guide Southern Region Johnson Books Boulder Colorado 1996 1st edition 1984 pp 17 18 ISBN 1 55566 145 9 Casey Robert L 1993 1983 High Journey to the Southwest The Globe Pequot Press p 229 ISBN 1 56440 151 0 Hawkins Preserve Research Archived 2012 03 06 at the Wayback Machine Cortez Cultural Center 2011 Retrieved 9 26 2011 Cajon Group Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 Winter Joseph 1975 Hovenweep 1974 Archeological Report No 1 San Jose CA Anthropology Department San Jose State University Winter Joseph 1976 Hovenweep 1975 Archeological Report no 2 San Jose CA Anthropology Dept San Jose State University Most information from this section can be found here Ferguson William 1987 Anasazi Ruins of the Southwest in Color Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 0873 2 Goodman Point Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 a b Hovenweep Visitor Guide Archived 2011 12 16 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 The Hovenweep Visitor s Guide published by the National Park Service does not include Goodman Point 30 a b Rohn Arthur H Ferguson William M Puebloan ruins of the Southwest University of New Mexico Press 2006 p 157 ISBN 0 8263 3969 7 a b Horseshoe and Hackberry Groups Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 Holly Ruin Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 Frazier Kendrick People of Chaco A Canyon and Its Culture W W Norton and Company New York 1986 p 200 ISBN 0 393 30496 5 Rohn Arthur H Ferguson William M Puebloan ruins of the Southwest University of New Mexico Press 2006 p 153 ISBN 0 8263 3969 7 Square Tower Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 Little Ruin Canyon Trail Guide Archived 2012 11 08 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 20 2011 a b Gibbon Guy E Ames Kenneth M 1998 Archaeology of Prehistoric Native America An Encyclopedia Archived 2016 05 19 at the Wayback Machine p 377 ISBN 0 8153 0725 X Frazier Kendrick People of Chaco A Canyon and Its Culture W W Norton and Company New York 1986 pp 199 200 ISBN 0 393 30496 5 Great Period of the McElmo Drainage Unit A D 1075 1300 Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form pp 1 3 8 Retrieved December 13 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l National amp State Registers Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation Retrieved 10 7 2011 Wenger Gilbert R 1991 1980 The Story of Mesa Verde National Park Mesa Verde Museum Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association pp 55 56 ISBN 0 937062 15 4 Casey Robert L 1993 1983 High Journey to the Southwest The Globe Pequot Press pp 225 226 ISBN 1 56440 151 0 Balcony House Archived 2011 08 04 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park Retrieved 9 21 2011 Watson Don Indians of the Mesa Verde Mesa Verde National Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association pp 3 29 31 37 ISBN 0 937062 00 6 Wenger Gilbert R 1991 1980 The Story of Mesa Verde National Park Mesa Verde Museum Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association p 51 ISBN 0 937062 15 4 Wenger Gilbert R 1991 1980 The Story of Mesa Verde National Park Mesa Verde Museum Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association p 57 ISBN 0 937062 15 4 New 2011 Backcountry Hikes Archived 2012 11 08 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service Retrieved 9 24 2011 Spruce Tree House Archived 2011 08 04 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park Retrieved 9 21 2011 Wenger Gilbert R 1991 1980 The Story of Mesa Verde National Park Mesa Verde Museum Park Colorado Mesa Verde Museum Association p 52 ISBN 0 937062 15 4 a b Self Guided Tours Chapin Mesa Archived 2011 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Mesa Verde National Park Retrieved 9 21 2011 Cassells E Steve 1997 The Archeology of Colorado Revised Edition Boulder Colorado Johnson Books pp 162 ISBN 1 55566 193 9 National amp State Registers for Montezuma County Colorado Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation Retrieved 10 8 2011 lt lt lt state html National Register of Historic Places in lt lt lt County permanent dead link American Dreams Inc Retrieved 2011 10 6 a b National amp State Registers Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Historical Society Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation Retrieved 10 8 2011 External links editColorado at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage 38 59 50 N 105 32 52 W 38 9972 N 105 5478 W 38 9972 105 5478 State of Colorado Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Ancestral Puebloan dwellings in Colorado amp oldid 1223120260 McElmo Drainage Unit, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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