Ruins at Tuzigoot.
Related Areas
You may see many types of ruins in the Verde Valley
and in other parts of the Southwest. Most common are the pueblos. Most
of them were occupied between A. D. 1100 and 1400. They range in size
from 4 or 5 rooms up to more than 1,000 rooms. Many still stand several
stories high. A few have open courts in which the people could gather
for social or ceremonial purposes. None of the pueblos in the valley
contain kivas, the ceremonial chambers so common in northeastern
Arizona and adjoining districts of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico.
Conversely, ball courts are found in the Verde Valley and around
Flagstaff but not in other Pueblo areas.
Two miles east of Clarkdale, Ariz., is Tuzigoot
National Monumentan Indian pueblo of more than 100 rooms.
Tuzigoot was occupied by Indians similar to those of Montezuma Castle,
but they lived under somewhat different circumstances. They found
tillable land and water for irrigation, but there were no caves to
shelter their homes. Instead, they chose the end of a steep ridge that
rises 120 feet above the Verde River. For defense, these Indians built
their pueblo with few exterior doors; instead they used hatchlike
openings through the roof. The pueblo was entered by ladders which could
be removed. The ruins and an extensive museum are open between 8 a. m.
and 5 p. m. every day.
Aside from the pueblos included in Tuzigoot and
Montezuma Castle National Monuments, there are other examples to be seen
on the many buttes and mesas in the Verde Valley.
Among the thousands of open pueblo sites in the
Southwest, the National Park System includes, besides Tuzigoot, the
following outstanding examples: Casa Grande and Wupatki National
Monuments in Arizona; Aztec Ruins, Bandelier, and Chaco Canyon National
Monuments in New Mexico; and Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado.
Walnut Canyon dwellings.
Many interesting areas can be reached easily from
Flagstaff, Ariz. They include Walnut Canyon National Monument, a natural
area of great beauty featuring 5 miles of cliff dwellings clinging to
rock ledges; Wuptaki National Monument, a series of remarkable pueblo
dwellings; and Sunset Crater National Monument site of the last active
volcano in the Southwest. Sunset Crater was formed by an eruption which
covered many early pithouse dwellings about A. D. 1064. The Museum of
Northern Arizona, containing very fine archeological and geological
exhibits is located near Flagstaff, on Fort Valley road.
One hundred and seven miles south of Montezuma
Castle, near Roosevelt, Ariz., is Tonto National Monument, where other
cliff dwellings may be seen.
Administration
Montezuma Castle National Monument is administered by
the National Park Service of the U. S. Department of the Interior. A
superintendent, whose address is Camp Verde, Ariz., is in immediate
charge.
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