Amsden, Charles A.
([1]) 1939. The Ancient Basketmakers: Southwest Museum Leaflet No. 11, Los Angeles, California.
Bartlett, Katharine
([2]) 1934. Material [Culture] of Pueblo II in the San Francisco Mountains: Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 7, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Beals, Ralph L., G. W. Brainerd and Watson Smith
([3]) 1945. Archaeological Studies in Northeast Arizona: Univ. of Calif. Pub. in Am. Arch. and Ethn. Vol. 44, No. 1, Berkeley, California.
Benedict, Ruth
([4]) 1934. Patterns of Culture: Houghton-Mifflin Co., New York.
Boekelman, H. J.
([5]) 1936. A Shell Trumpet from Arizona: American Antiquity, Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 27-31, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Bradfield, Wesley
([6]) 1929. Cameron Creek Village, a Site in the Mimbres Area in Grant County, New Mexico: School of American Research, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Brew, John Otis
([7]) 1946. [Archaeology] of Alkali Ridge, Southeastern Utah. Appendices by Alice Brues and Volney H. Jones: Papers of the Peabody Museum of Am. Arch. and Ethn., Harvard University, Vol. XXI, Cambridge, Mass.
Bryan, B.
([8]) 1931. Excavation of the Galaz Ruin: The Masterkey, Vol. IV, Nos. 6 and 7, pp. 179-189, 221-226, Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, Calif.
Bryan, Kirk
([9]) 1941. Correlation of the Deposits of Sandia Cave, New Mexico, with the Glacial [Chronology]: Smithsonian Misc. Col., Vol. 99, No. 23, Washington.
([10]) 1941. Pre-Columbian Agriculture in the Southwest as Conditioned by Periods of Alluviation: Association of American Geographers, Annals, Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 219-242.
Bryan, Kirk, and Louis L. Ray
([11]) 1940. Geologic Antiquity of the Lindenmeier Site in Colorado: Smithsonian Misc. Col. Vol. 99. No. 2, Washington, D. C.
Carter, George F.
([12]) 1945. Plant Geography and Culture History in the American Southwest: Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology, No. 5, New York.
Caywood, Louis R. and Edward H. Spicer
([13]) 1935. Tuzigoot, the Excavation and Repair of a Ruin in the Verde Valley near Clarkdale, Arizona: Office of Southwestern Monuments, National Park Service, Coolidge, Arizona (Mimeographed).
Cockerell, T. D. A.
([14]) 1946. The Function of Psychology: Letter to the Editor, Science, Vol. 103 No. 2670, p. 281, Lancaster, Pa.
Colton, Harold S.
([15]) 1939. The Reducing and [Oxidizing Atmosphere] in Prehistoric Southwestern Ceramics: American Antiquity, Vol. IV, No. 3, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([16]) 1939. Prehistoric Culture Units and their Relationships in Northern Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona Bull. 17, Flagstaff, Arizona.
([17]) 1945. The Patayan Problem in the Colorado River Valley: Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, Vol. I, No. 1, Univ. of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
([18]) 1946. The Sinagua: A Summary of the Archaeology of the Region of Flagstaff, Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 22, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Colton, Harold S. and L. L. Hargrave
([19]) 1933. Pueblo II in the San Francisco Mountains, Arizona; Pueblo II Houses of the San Francisco Mountains, Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 4, Flagstaff, Arizona.
([20]) 1937. Handbook of Northern Arizona Pottery Wares: Museum of Northern Arizona, Bulletin 11, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Cosgrove, H. S. and C. B.
([21]) 1932. The Swarts Ruin, a typical Mimbres Site in Southwestern New Mexico: Peabody Museum Papers Vol. XV, No. 1, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Cummings, Byron
([22]) 1940. Kinishba. A prehistoric Pueblo of the Great Pueblo Period: Hohokam Museums Association and University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
Douglass, A. E.
([23]) 1929. The Secret of the Southwest Solved by the Talkative Tree-rings: National Geographic Magazine, Vol. 54, pp. 737-770, Washington, D. C.
Fewkes, J. W.
([24]) 1911. Antiquities of the Mesa Verde National Park; Cliff Palace: Bulletin 51, Bureau of American [Ethnology], Washington, D. C.
Figgins, J. D.
([25]) 1927. The Antiquity of Man in America: Natural History, Vol. XXVII, No. 3, pp. 229-239, New York.
Gladwin, Harold S.
([26]) 1928. Excavations at Casa Grande, Arizona: Southwest Museum Paper No. 2, Los Angeles, California.
([27]) 1937. Excavations at Snaketown: Comparisons and Theories: Medallion Papers, No. XXVI, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([28]) 1942. Excavations at Snaketown: Revisions: Medallion Papers, No. XXX, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([29]) 1943. A Review and Analysis of the Flagstaff Culture: Medallion Papers, No. XXXI, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([30]) 1947. Personal Communication.
Gladwin, Harold S.,a Emil W. Haury,b E. B. Sayles,c and Nora Gladwin.d
([31]) 1937. Excavations at Snaketown: Material Culture: Medallion Papers, No. XXV, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
Gladwin, Winifred and Harold S.
([32]) 1929. The Red-on-Buff-Culture of the Gila Basin: Medallion Papers No. II, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([33]) 1930. Some Southwestern Pottery Types, Series I: Medallion Papers No. VIII, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([34]) 1933. Some Southwestern Pottery Types, Series III: Medallion Papers No. XIII, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([35]) 1934. A Method for the Designation of Cultures and their Variations: Medallion Papers, No. XIV, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([36]) 1935. The Eastern Range of the Red-on-Buff Culture: Medallion Papers XVI, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
Guernsey, S. J.
([37]) 1931. Explorations in Northeastern Arizona: Peabody Museum Papers, Vol. XII, No. 1, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Guernsey, S. J. and A. V. Kidder
([38]) 1921. Basket-maker Caves of Northeastern Arizona: Peabody Museum Papers, Volume VIII, No. 2, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Hack, J. T.
([39]) 1941. The Changing Physical Environment of the Hopi Indians of Arizona: Peabody Museum Papers, Vol. XXXV, No. 1, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Hall, Edward Twitchell, Jr.
([40]) 1944. Recent Clues to Athapaskan Prehistory in the Southwest: American Anthropologist, Vol. 46, No. 1, pp. 98-105, Menasha, Wis.
([41]) 1944. Early Stockaded Settlements in the Governador, New Mexico. A Marginal Anasazi Development from Basket Maker III to Pueblo I Times; Columbia University Press, New York.
Hargrave, Lyndon L.
([42]) 1930. Prehistoric Earth Lodges of the San Francisco Mountains: Museum Notes, Vol. III, No. 5, Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, Arizona.
([43]) 1932. Guide to Forty Pottery Types from the Hopi Country and the San Francisco Mountains, Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin No. 1, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Hargrave, Lyndon L.
([44]) 1933. Pueblo II houses of the San Francisco Mountains, Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 4, pp. 15-75, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Harrington, Mark Raymond
([45]) 1924. The Ozark Bluff-Dwellers: American Anthropologist, N. S. Vol. XXVI, No. 1, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([46]) 1927. A Primitive Pueblo City in Nevada: American Anthropologist, N. S. Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 262-277, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([47]) 1933. Gypsum Cave, Nevada: Southwest Museum Papers, No. 8, Los Angeles, California.
Haury, Emil W.
([48]) 1932. Roosevelt 9:6, a Hohokam Site of the Colonial Period: Medallion Papers, No. XI, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([49]) 1935. Tree-Rings—The Archaeologist’s Time Piece: American Antiquity, Vol. I, No. 2, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([50]) 1936. The Mogollon Culture of Southwestern New Mexico: Medallion Papers, No. XX, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([51]) 1936. Some Southwestern Pottery Types, Series IV: Medallion Papers, No. XIX, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
([52]) 1937. A Pre-Spanish Rubber Ball from Arizona: American Antiquity, Vol. II, No. 4, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([53]) 1940. Excavations in the Forestdale Valley, East-Central Arizona: University of Arizona Social Science Bulletin No. 12, Tucson, Arizona.
([54]) 1943. A Possible Cochise-Mogollon-Hohokam Sequence: Recent Advances in American Archaeology, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 86, No. 2, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
([55]) 1943. The stratigraphy of Ventana Cave, Arizona: American Antiquity, Vol. VIII, No. 3, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([56]) 1945. The Excavation of Los Muertos and Neighboring Ruins in the Salt River Valley, southern Arizona: Peabody Museum Papers, Vol. XXIV, No. 1, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
([57]) 1945. Arizona’s Ancient Irrigation Builders: Natural History, Vol. LIV, No. 7, New York.
([58]) 1946. Report on Field Work in Notes and News: American Antiquity, Vol. XII, No. 1, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([59]) 1947. Personal Communication.
Hawley, Florence M.
1936. Field Manual of Prehistoric Southwestern Pottery Types: University of New Mexico Anthropological Series, Bulletin 291, Vol. I, No. 4, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Hendron, J. W.
([60]) 1940. Prehistory of El Rito de los Frijoles, Bandelier National Monument: Southwestern Monuments Association, Technical Series, No. 1, Coolidge, Arizona.
Hewett, Edgar L.
([61]) 1935. The Chaco Canyon and its Monuments: Handbooks of Archaeological History, University of New Mexico and School of American Research, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Hewett, Edgar L.
([62]) 1938. The Pajarito Plateau and its Ancient People: Handbooks of Archaeological History, University of New Mexico and School of American Research, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Hibben, Frank C.
([63]) 1938. The Gallina [Phase]: American Antiquity, Vol. IV, No. 2, pp. 131-136, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([64]) 1941. Evidences of Early Occupation in Sandia Cave, New Mexico, and other sites in the Sandia-Manzano Region: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 99, No. 23.
Howard, Edgar B.
([65]) 1935. Evidence of Early Man in North America: The Museum Journal, Vol. XXIV, Nos. 2-3, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Hurst, C. T.
([66]) 1945. Completion of Excavation of Tabequache Cave II: Southwestern Lore, Vol. II, No. 1, Gunnison, Colorado.
([67]) 1946. Colorado’s Old Timers: Colorado Archaeological Society, Gunnison, Colorado.
Huscher, Betty H. and Harold A.
([68]) 1943. The [Hogan] Builders of Colorado: Colorado Archaeological Society, Gunnison, Colorado.
Jenks, Albert E.
([69]) 1936. Pleistocene Man In Minnesota, a Fossil Homo Sapiens: Minneapolis, Minnesota.
([70]) 1937. Minnesota’s Browns Valley Man and Associated Burial Artifacts: Memoirs, American Anthropological Association, No. 49, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Judd, Neil M.
([71]) 1925. Everyday Life in Pueblo Bonito: National Geographic Magazine, Vol. XLVIII, No. 3, pp. 227-262, Washington, D. C.
([72]) 1940. Progress in the Southwest: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Volume 100, Washington, D. C.
Kidder, Alfred Vincent
([73]) 1924. An Introduction to the Study of Southwestern Archaeology, with a Preliminary Account of the Excavations at Pecos: Papers, Southwestern Expedition, Phillips Academy, No. 1, Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn.
([74]) 1927. Southwestern Archaeological Conference: Science, Vol. 66, No. 1716, pp. 489-91, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
([75]) 1931. The Pottery of Pecos: Vol. I, Papers, Southwestern Expedition, Phillips Academy, Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn.
Kidder, Alfred Vincent and S. J. Guernsey
([76]) 1919. Archaeological Explorations in Northeastern Arizona: Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin No. 65, Washington, D. C.
Kidder, Alfred Vincent and Anna O. Shepard
([77]) 1936. The Pottery of Pecos: Vol. II, Papers, Southwestern Expedition, Phillips Academy, Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.
Kroeber, A. L.
([78]) 1928. Native Culture of the Southwest: Univ. of California Pub. in Am. Arch. and Ethn., Vol. XXIII, No. 9, pp. 373-398, Berkeley, Calif.
Linton, Ralph
([79]) 1936. The Study of Man: D. Appleton-Century Co. New York.
([80]) 1944. Nomad Raids and Fortified Pueblos: American Antiquity, Vol. X, No. 1, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Martin, Paul S., Lawrence Roys and Gerhardt von Bonin
([81]) 1936. Lowry Ruin in Southwestern Colorado: Anthropological Series, Vol. XXIII, No. 1, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois.
Martin, Paul S., Carl Lloyd and Alexander Spoehr
([82]) 1938. Archaeological Field Work in the Ackmen-Lowry Area, Southwestern Colorado, 1937. Anthropological Series, Vol. XXIII, No. 2, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois.
Martin, Paul S. and John Rinaldo
([83]) 1939. Modified Basket Maker Sites, Ackmen-Lowry Area, Southwestern Colorado, 1938: Anthropological Series, Vol. XXIII, No. 3, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois.
Martin, Paul S., John Rinaldo, and Marjorie Kelly
([84]) 1940. The SU Site, Excavations at a Mogollon Village, Western New Mexico, 1939. Anthropological Series, Vol. XXXII, No. 1, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois.
Martin, Paul S., Robert J. Braidwood, John Rinaldo, Marjorie Kelly and Brigham A. Arnold.
([85]) 1943. The SU Site, Excavations at a Mogollon Village, Western New Mexico: Second Season, 1941. Anthropological Series, Vol. 32, No. 2, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois.
McGregor, John C.
([86]) 1941. Winona and Ridge Ruin: Part I, Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, Bulletin 18, Flagstaff, Arizona.
([87]) 1941. Southwestern Archaeology: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York.
([88]) 1943. Burial of an Early American Magician: Recent Advances in American Archaeology, Proceeding of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 86, No. 2, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Mera, Harry P.
([89]) 1934. Observations on the Archaeology of Petrified Forest National Monument: Laboratory of Anthropology, Tech. Bulletin 7, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
([90]) 1935. [Ceramic] Clues to the Prehistory of North Central New Mexico. Tech. Bulletin 8, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
([91]) 1938. Some Aspects of the Largo Cultural Phase, Northern New Mexico: American Antiquity, Vol. III, No. 3, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Morris, Earl H.
([92]) 1925. Exploring in the Canyon of Death: National Geographic Magazine, Volume XLVIII, No. 3, pp. 262-300, Washington, D. C.
([93]) 1927. The Beginnings of Pottery Making in the San Juan Area, Unfired Prototypes and the Wares of the Earliest Ceramic Period: Anthropological Papers, American Museum of Natural History, Vol. XXVIII, Pt. 2, New York.
([94]) 1928. The Aztec Ruin: Arch M. Huntington Survey of the Southwest, Anthropological Papers, American Museum of Natural History, Vol. XXVI, Pts. 1-5. New York.
([95]) 1939. Archaeological Studies in the La Plata District, Southwestern Colorado and Northwestern New Mexico: Appendix by Anna O. Shepard. Carnegie Institution, Washington, D. C.
([96]) 1946. Personal Communication.
Morss, Noel
([97]) 1931. The Ancient Culture of the Fremont River in Utah: Peabody Museum Papers, Vol. XII, No. 3, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Nesbitt, Paul H.
([98]) 1931. The Ancient Mimbrenos, Based on Investigations at the Mattocks Ruin, Mimbres, Valley, New Mexico: Logan Museum Publications, Bull. No. 4, Beloit, Wisconsin.
([99]) 1938. Starkweather Ruin: Logan Museum Publications Bull. No. 6, Beloit, Wisconsin.
Nusbaum, J. L.
([100]) 1922. A Basket-Maker Cave in Kane County, Utah; with Notes on the Artifacts by A. V. Kidder and S. J. Guernsey: Indian Notes and Monographs, Museum of the American Indian, No. 29, Heye Foundation, New York.
Parsons, Elsie Clews
([101]) 1939. Pueblo Indian Religion: University of Chicago Publications in Anth. and Ethn., Chicago, Illinois.
Reed, Erik K.
([102]) 1942. Implications of the Mogollon [Complex]: American Antiquity, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Rinaldo, John
([103]) 1941. Conjectures on the Independent Development of the Mogollon Culture: American Antiquity, Vol. VII, No. 1, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr.
([104]) 1929. Recent Archeological Developments in the Vicinity of El Paso, Texas: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 81, No. 7, Washington, D. C.
([105]) 1929. Shabik’eschee Village, A Late Basket Maker Site in the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Bulletin 92, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C.
([106]) 1930. Early Pueblo Ruins in the Piedra District, southwestern Colorado: Bulletin 96, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C.
([107]) 1931. The Ruins at Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona: Bulletin 100, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C.
([108]) 1932. The Village of the Great Kivas on the Zuni Reservation, New Mexico, Bulletin 111, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C.
([109]) 1935. A Folsom Complex. Preliminary Report on Investigations at the Lindenmeier Site in northern Colorado: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 94, Washington, D. C.
([110]) 1935. A Survey of Southwestern Archeology: American Anthropologist, Vol. XXXVII, No. 1, pp. 1-33, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([111]) 1937. Archaeology in the Southwest: American Antiquity, Vol. III, No. 1, pp. 3-33, Menasha, Wisconsin.
([112]) 1939. Archeological Remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona; Part I, House Types: Bulletin 121, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C.
([113]) 1939. The Development of a Unit-Type Dwelling: Hewett Anniversary Volume “So Live The Works of Men”, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
([114]) 1942. Archeological and Geological Investigations in the San Jon District, eastern New Mexico: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 103, No. 4, Washington, D. C.
Rogers, Malcolm J.
([115]) 1939. Early Lithic Industries of the Lower Basin of the Colorado River and Adjacent Desert Areas: San Diego Museum Papers, No. 3, San Diego, California.
([116]) 1945. An Outline of Yuman Prehistory: Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, Vol. I, No. 2, pp. 167-198, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Sayles, E. B.
([117]) 1935. An Archaeological Survey of Texas: Medallion Papers, No. XVII, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
Sayles, E. B. and Ernst Antevs
([118]) 1941. The Cochise Culture: Medallion Papers, No. XXIV, Gila Pueblo, Globe, Arizona.
Seltzer, Carl C.
([119]) 1944. Racial Prehistory in the Southwest and the Hawikuh Zunis: Peabody Museum Papers, Vol. XXIII, No. 1, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Stallings, W. S., Jr.
([120]) 1937. Southwestern Dated Ruins: I, Tree-Ring Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 2, Tucson, Arizona.
([121]) 1939. Dating Prehistoric Ruins by Tree-Rings: General Series, Bulletin 8, Laboratory of Anthropology, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
([122]) 1941. A Basketmaker II Date from Cave du Pont, Utah: Tree-Ring Bulletin, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, Tucson, Arizona.
Steward, Julian H.
([123]) 1933. Archaeological Problems of the Northern [Periphery] of the Southwest: Bulletin No. 5, Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, Ariz.
Underhill, Ruth
([124]) 1947. First Penthouse Dwellers of America: Second Revised Edition, Laboratory of Anthropology, Santa Fe, N. M.
Watson, Don
([125]) 1946. Cliff Palace; the Story of an Ancient City: Mesa Verde National Park Museum, Mesa Verde, Colorado.
Weatherwax, Paul
([126]) 1936. The Origin of the Maize Plant and Maize Agriculture in Ancient America: Symposium on Prehistoric Agriculture, Bulletin 296, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N. M.
Weltfish, Gene
([127]) 1932. Preliminary Classification of Prehistoric Southwestern Basketry: Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections: Vol. 87, No. 7, Washington, D. C.
([128]) 1932. Problems in the Study of Ancient and Modern Basketmakers: American Anthropologist, N. S. Vol. XXXIV, No. 1, pp. 108-117, Menasha, Wisconsin.
Woodward, Arthur
([129]) 1931. The Grewe Site: Occasional Papers, No. 1, Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art, Los Angeles, California.
Wormington, H. M.
([130]) 1944. Ancient Man in North America, (Second Revised Edition): Popular Series, No. 4, Colorado Museum of Natural History, Denver, Colorado.

APPENDIX
Outstanding Exhibit-Sites, Modern Pueblos, Local Museums

by
ERIK K. REED
Regional Archaeologist
National Park Service

After reading about the prehistoric inhabitants of the Southwest many people feel that they would like to visit the places where they lived, examine examples of their ancient arts and crafts, and see their present-day descendants. No description can produce the feeling that one experiences when viewing the imposing ruins found in our National Monuments and Parks. Even a short time spent looking at pottery and other artifacts in a museum will give a far better idea of their appearance than will photographs, drawings, or the most detailed descriptions. A visit to a modern pueblo makes it possible to visualize something of the life of bygone centuries and to think of the ancient inhabitants of the area as living, breathing people rather than as lifeless specimens. The following lists have been prepared in an effort to help those who wish to visit the Southwest and to learn about its people through their own experience.

I. OUTSTANDING EXHIBIT-SITES
The San Juan Anasazi [Culture]

MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK.

Great cliff-dwellings and open pueblos of the Classic period. Pit-house, mesa-top villages and cave remains of earlier periods, Modified Basketmaker and Developmental Pueblo. One of the major foci of the Anasazi [culture] of 300-1300 A. D., and the most accessible and best-exhibited, interpreted by caravan-tours and an outstanding museum. Paved entrance-road from Highway U. S.-160 between Mancos and Cortez, Colorado. Lodge with adequate accommodations open May-October.

CHACO CANYON NATIONAL MONUMENT.

The greatest concentration of open pueblo ruins in a valley floor, another of the major foci of prehistoric Anasazi civilization. The famous huge buildings, Pueblo Bonito, Chetro Ketl, Pueblo del Arroyo, etc.; a restored Great [Kiva], an excavated Modified-Basketmaker village; and innumerable small pueblo sites. Undeveloped museum. Very restricted accommodations. In the middle of northwestern New Mexico, 64 miles north of Thoreau (which is on Highway U. S.-66) and 64 miles south of Aztec, New Mexico (on U. S.-550); 25 miles from nearest paved road (State 55, Cuba to Bloomfield).

AZTEC RUINS NATIONAL MONUMENT.