enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ancestral Puebloans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancestral_Puebloans

    Most modern Pueblo peoples (whether Keresans, Hopi, or Tanoans) assert the Ancestral Puebloans did not "vanish", as is commonly portrayed. They say that the people migrated to areas in the southwest with more favorable rainfall and dependable streams. They merged into the various Pueblo peoples whose descendants still live in Arizona and New ...

  3. Virgin Anasazi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_Anasazi

    The Virgin Anasazi were the westernmost Ancestral Puebloan group in the American Southwest. They occupied the area in and around the Virgin River and Muddy Rivers, the western Colorado Plateau, the Moapa Valley and were bordered to the south by the Colorado River. [1] They occupied areas in present-day Nevada, Arizona, and Utah.

  4. Pueblo peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_peoples

    The term Anasazi is sometimes used to refer to Ancestral Puebloan peoples, but it is considered derogatory and offensive. "Anasazi" is a Navajo adoption of a Ute term that translates to Ancient Enemy or Primitive Enemy, but was used by them to mean something like "barbarian" or "savage", hence the modern Pueblo peoples' rejection of it (see ...

  5. Indigenous peoples of the North American Southwest

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the...

    This region has long been occupied by hunter-gatherers and agricultural people. Many contemporary cultural traditions exist within the Greater Southwest, including Yuman -speaking peoples inhabiting the Colorado River valley, the uplands, and Baja California , O'odham peoples of Southern Arizona and northern Sonora, and the Pueblo peoples of ...

  6. Chaco Culture National Historical Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaco_Culture_National...

    The American trader Josiah Gregg wrote about the ruins of Chaco Canyon, referring in 1832 to Pueblo Bonito as "built of fine-grit sandstone". In 1849, a U.S. Army detachment passed through and surveyed the ruins, following United States acquisition of the Southwest with its victory in the Mexican War in 1848. [ 41 ]

  7. Ancestral Puebloan dwellings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancestral_Puebloan_dwellings

    Map of Ancient Pueblo People regions, including the northern Mesa Verde region and the southern Chaco Canyon region. Archaeologists have agreed on three main periods of ancient occupation by Pueblo peoples throughout the Southwest called Pueblo I, Pueblo II, and Pueblo III. [2] Pueblo I (750–900 CE). Pueblo buildings were built with stone ...

  8. Southwestern archaeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwestern_archaeology

    Southwestern archaeology is a branch of archaeology concerned with the Southwestern United States and Northwestern Mexico. This region was first occupied by hunter-gatherers, and thousands of years later by advanced civilizations, such as the Ancestral Puebloans, the Hohokam, and the Mogollon.

  9. Pueblo V Period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_V_Period

    The Pueblo V Period (AD 1600 to present) is the final period of ancestral puebloan culture in the American Southwest, or Oasisamerica, and includes the contemporary Pueblo peoples. From the previous Pueblo IV Period , all 19 of the Rio Grande valley pueblos remain in the contemporary period.