... 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... Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico - Strana 16autor/autoři: Edgar Lee Hewett - 1906 - 55 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| 1906 - 102 str.
...neck of the mesa to the north is worn hip-deep in the rock by the attrition of human feet, shewing constant long-continued use. I infer that here were...of cultivated lands. This suggests an identity with Navajo, which Fray Alonso de Benavides, in his Memorial on New Mexico published in 1630, says signifies... | |
| 1906 - 852 str.
...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...of cultivated lands. This suggests an identity with Navajb which Fray Alonso de Benavides, in his Memorial on New Mexico published in 1630, applied to... | |
| 1906 - 856 str.
...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...of cultivated lands. This suggests an identity with Navajb which Fray Alonso de Benavides, in his Memorial on New Mexico published in 1630, applied to... | |
| Franciscans, St. Michaels, Ariz - 1910 - 706 str.
...use. I infer that these were the fields of not only the people of Navahu, but also of the more popular settlements beyond the great mesa to the north where...assert that the name ' Navahu ' refers to the large arm of cultirated lands. This suggests an identity with Navajo, which Fray Alonzo Benavides applied... | |
| Ralph Emerson Twitchell - 2007 - 717 str.
...constant, long continued ose. I infer that these were the fields of not only the people of Na-vaju but also of the more populous settlements beyond the...is wanting. The Te-wa Indians assert that the name 'Na-va-ju' refers to the large area of cultivated lands. This suggests an identity with Navajo, which... | |
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