Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New MexicoU.S. Government Printing Office, 1906 - Počet stran: 55 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 11
Strana 11
... represent nothing more than idle picture - making , perhaps most of them are of serious totemic , legend- ary , and religious significance . a The accompanyng plans of pueblos represent only an approximation to the arrangement and ...
... represent nothing more than idle picture - making , perhaps most of them are of serious totemic , legend- ary , and religious significance . a The accompanyng plans of pueblos represent only an approximation to the arrangement and ...
Strana 12
... represents an infusion of blood from the ancient cliff - dwelling tribes . In the light of the mass of evidence now at hand the answer of the present author to the question , Who were the inhabi- tants of the cliff - dwellings and ...
... represents an infusion of blood from the ancient cliff - dwelling tribes . In the light of the mass of evidence now at hand the answer of the present author to the question , Who were the inhabi- tants of the cliff - dwellings and ...
Strana 25
... represents accessions from many small pueblos . Tshirege is said to have been the last of all the villages of Pajarito park to be abandoned . A limited supply of water can still be obtained at almost any season at the spring in the ...
... represents accessions from many small pueblos . Tshirege is said to have been the last of all the villages of Pajarito park to be abandoned . A limited supply of water can still be obtained at almost any season at the spring in the ...
Strana 29
... representing the animals as crouching with tails extended , and their heads pointing to the east . They are much disfigured , especially the heads . Still the natural agencies to which the images have been exposed in the open air have ...
... representing the animals as crouching with tails extended , and their heads pointing to the east . They are much disfigured , especially the heads . Still the natural agencies to which the images have been exposed in the open air have ...
Strana 30
... represent panthers preparing for a spring . The length of each statue is 1.80 m . ( 6 feet ) , of which 0.74 and 0.71 m . , respectively ( or a little over one - third ) , make the extended tails ; the height is nearly 0.60 m . ( 2 feet ) ...
... represent panthers preparing for a spring . The length of each statue is 1.80 m . ( 6 feet ) , of which 0.74 and 0.71 m . , respectively ( or a little over one - third ) , make the extended tails ; the height is nearly 0.60 m . ( 2 feet ) ...
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico, Vydání 29,Vydání 31–32 Edgar Lee Hewett Úplné zobrazení - 1906 |
Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico, Vydání 29,Vydání 31–32 Edgar Lee Hewett Úplné zobrazení - 1906 |
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
50 feet Abiquiu adobe Alamo AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY ancient ancient pueblo antiquities archeological Bandelier buildings built BUREAU OF AMERICAN canyon caves Chama drainage Chipiinuinge circular kivas clan houses cliff cliff-dwellings consists court Cueva Pintada débris dwellings east estufas excavated feet high feet in diameter feet in height floor Francisco de Barrionuevo Frijoles gorge Ground plan hog-back inches inclose inclosure Indians Jemez plateau Jemez pueblo Jemez valley kivas large pueblo ledge length meters miles above Jemez miles west mounds Navahú Navawi occupied Ojo Caliente Otowi overlooking Pajarito park Pajarito plateau plan of ruin portion Potrero pottery pueblo and cliff-village Puyé quadrangle Queres remains ridge Rio Chama Rio Grande Rito rock rooms ruined pueblo San Ildefonso Santa Clara situated slope small pueblo ruin southeast southwest Spanish stone stories high structure subterranean summit talus terrace Tewa trail Tsankawi Tshirege tufa Vacas Vallecito creek village walls width yards
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 18 - ... two small canyons and the formerly intervening mesa. From the midst of this little park, roughly a mile square, a view of surpassing beauty is to be had. Half a mile to the south the huge mesa which is terminated by Rincon del Pueblo bounds the valley with a high unbroken line, perhaps 500 feet above the dry arroyo at the bottom.
Strana 41 - My attention was first called to the arcbaiology of the region by observing that the conic hills just mentioned appeared to be in many instances crowned with stone structures, which, on examination, proved to be ruined buildings. These are round or square, with rounded angles, and from 15 to 25 feet in diameter. The walls are...
Strana 16 - ... 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. I infer that these were the fields of not only the people of 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...