
audiobook
by Albert H. Schroeder, Homer F. Hastings
MONTEZUMA CASTLE NATIONAL MONUMENT Arizona
Forces of Earth
Man in the Verde Valley
Sinagua Pueblo Life
Montezuma Castle
Montezuma Well
History of the Monument
The Natural Scene
How to Reach the Monument
About Your Visit
The book opens with a vivid picture of how the Verde Valley was sculpted by ancient forces. A lava flow from the Black Hills created a natural dam that filled the canyon with a sprawling lake, depositing limestone and salts that would later become the foundation of the landscape. Over millennia the lake drained, water seeped through the rock, carving caves and ultimately forming the striking Montezuma Well that crowns the cliff today. The narrative weaves together these geological processes with striking photographs and maps, helping listeners visualize the slow dance of lava, water, and stone that gave rise to the monument.
From this dramatic setting emerge the earliest human inhabitants, hunters and gatherers whose simple stone tools hint at a nomadic life. Around AD 600, a new wave of settlers known as the Hohokam arrived, turning the fertile valley floor into cultivated fields while building modest pole‑and‑mud homes on the surrounding terraces. Their everyday artifacts—plain utensils and early irrigation channels—illustrate how they adapted to and thrived within this uniquely shaped environment. The authors balance scientific explanation with cultural insight, inviting listeners to appreciate both the natural marvel and the human stories etched into its cliffs.
Language
en
Duration
~59 minutes (56K characters)
Series
Historical Handbook Number 27
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-08-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A prolific Southwestern archaeologist and historian, he wrote with the curiosity of a field researcher and the clarity of a guide. His books open windows onto New Mexico, Apache history, and the ancient cultures of the American Southwest.
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Best known for helping write a National Park Service handbook on Montezuma Castle, this little-known author focused on making the history of the American Southwest accessible to general readers. His surviving published work has the clear, practical feel of someone closely connected to public history and preservation.
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