Bulletin, Vydání 32U.S. Government Printing Office, 1906 |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 15
Strana 3
... ancient inhabitants .. Distribution of the ruins . I. Ruins of the Pajarito plateau No. 1. Shufinne . No. 2. Puyé ... No. 3. Chipiwi ... No. 4. Navahú . No. 5. Pininicangwi .. No. 6. Chupadero . No. 7. Perage .. No. 8. Otowi . No. 9 ...
... ancient inhabitants .. Distribution of the ruins . I. Ruins of the Pajarito plateau No. 1. Shufinne . No. 2. Puyé ... No. 3. Chipiwi ... No. 4. Navahú . No. 5. Pininicangwi .. No. 6. Chupadero . No. 7. Perage .. No. 8. Otowi . No. 9 ...
Strana 10
... ancient civilization are distributed through the Pajarito plateau , the Chama drainage , and the Jemez valley . The culture that developed here was evidently molded largely by the physiographic conditions above described . Being ...
... ancient civilization are distributed through the Pajarito plateau , the Chama drainage , and the Jemez valley . The culture that developed here was evidently molded largely by the physiographic conditions above described . Being ...
Strana 11
... The accompanying plans of pueblos represent only an approximation to the arrangement and extent of the rooms . THE ANCIENT INHABITANTS Naturally the first question that arises in HEWETT ] 11 ANTIQUITIES OF THE JEMEZ PLATEAU.
... The accompanying plans of pueblos represent only an approximation to the arrangement and extent of the rooms . THE ANCIENT INHABITANTS Naturally the first question that arises in HEWETT ] 11 ANTIQUITIES OF THE JEMEZ PLATEAU.
Strana 12
THE ANCIENT INHABITANTS Naturally the first question that arises in the mind of every intelli- gent visitor to these cliff - dwellings , is : Who were the people who built and lived in these peculiar homes ? It has been customary to ...
THE ANCIENT INHABITANTS Naturally the first question that arises in the mind of every intelli- gent visitor to these cliff - dwellings , is : Who were the people who built and lived in these peculiar homes ? It has been customary to ...
Strana 13
... ancient Tewa people were , as are their modern successors , agricul- turists ; hence , their living was dependent on the water supply . Only the most primitive style of irrigation was practised and there is every evidence that the ...
... ancient Tewa people were , as are their modern successors , agricul- turists ; hence , their living was dependent on the water supply . Only the most primitive style of irrigation was practised and there is every evidence that the ...
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Native Villages and Village Sites East of the Mississippi David Ives Bushnell (Jr.) Úplné zobrazení - 1919 |
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Abiquiu adobe Alamo AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN ancient antiquities Archæological Institute archeological Bandelier buildings built BULLETIN 32 PLATE BUREAU OF AMERICAN Cañada de Cochiti Chama drainage Chipiinuinge cliff cliff-dwellings Cochiti consists court creek Cueva Pintada débris east estufas ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 32 FEET FIG feet in diameter feet in height floor Frijoles gorge Ground plan half a mile inches inclosure Indians Jemez plateau Jemez pueblo Jemez valley kivas Kua-pa large pueblo ledge length meters miles above Jemez miles west Navahú Navawi occupied Otowi Pajarito park Pajarito plateau Petroglyphs plan of ruin Poihuuinge Potrero pottery pueblo and cliff-village Puyé quadrangle Queres remains ridge Rio Chama Rio Grande Rito rock rooms ruined pueblo San Ildefonso Santa Clara settlement Shufinne situated slope small pueblo ruin southeast southwest stone stories high structure subterranean summit talus terrace Tewa trail Tsankawi Tshirege tufa Vacas Vallecito creek village walls ware width yards
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Strana 16 - Navahu but also of the more populous settlements beyond the great mesa to the north where tillable land is wanting. The Tewa Indians assert that the name ' ' Navahu ' ' refers to the large area of cultivated lands.
Strana 30 - Canon del Alamo, are fairly preserved. The upper part of that gorge is wooded, and the caves were thus somewhat sheltered. They offer nothing worthy of special mention, and do not compare in numbers with the settlement at the Rito. The Queres say that these caves also are ' probably
Strana 24 - The main dwelling contained approximately 600 rooms with 10 kivas of the circular subterranean type. A defensive wall extended from the southwest corner of the main building to the rim of the cliff 150 feet away. Below this wall, cut on the face of the cliff, is one of the best petroglyphs in the Southwest, a representation of a plumed serpent seven feet long. The cliff dwellings along the mesa side, extending for three quarters of a mile, contain the largest number of caves in one group. Tshirege...
Strana 16 - Tewa of the pre-Spanish period. This particular pueblo was well situated for agriculture, there being a considerable acreage of tillable land near by — far more than this small population would have utilized. The old trail across the neck of the mesa to the north is worn hip-deep in the rock, showing constant, long-continued use.