[7] Jour. Amer. Geog. Soc., xxiii, no. 4, 598, New York, 1891.
[8] In The Cliff Dwellers of the Mesa Verde (a translation in English from the Swedish edition, Stockholm, 1893), (pp. 59-66), unfortunately not accessible to most readers on account of the limited edition and the cost. For this reason the description is here reproduced in extenso. (The references to illustrations and the footnotes in this excerpt follow Nordenskiöld.)
[9] The room marked 48 in the plan is visible in Pl. XIII. Almost in the center of the plate, but a little to the right, two small loopholes may be seen, and to their right a doorway, all of which belong to room 48; the walls of 49 and 50 are much lower than those of 48. Behind 48 the high walls of 43 may be distinguished.
[10] They are shown in the plate just to the left of the fold at its middle, rather low down.
[11] A part of this wall may be seen to the extreme right of Pl. XIII, and also in Fig. 34 behind and to the right of the tower.
[12] The illustrations referred to in this paragraph are in Nordenskiöld's work.
[13] As stated in a note (Peet, p. 133) Chapter VII is a reprint of Doctor Birdsall's article in the Journal of the American Geographical Society, op. cit.
[14] In Les Communautés Anciennes dans le Désert Américain. In this work may be found a ground plan of Cliff Palace by Morley and Kidder, the interior of kiva Q (pl. viii, e), and a large view of the ruin taken from the north (pl. i, b). (Plate and figure designations from Hewett.)
[15] Clearings in the forest indicate the positions of the former farms of the inhabitants of Cliff Palace.
[16] Access to Cliff Palace from the bottom of the canyon, although difficult, is possible, and a pathway might be constructed down its sides or along the top of the talus to several other cliff-dwellings. In the vicinity of Cliff Palace there are at least 20 ruins, large and small.