Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado

audiobook

Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado

by Jesse Walter Fewkes

EN·~3 hours·29 chapters

Chapters

29 total

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION

0:04

PREHISTORIC VILLAGES, CASTLES, AND TOWERS OF SOUTHWESTERNCOLORADO

2:09

ILLUSTRATIONS

4:00

INTRODUCTION

3:58

HISTORICAL

10:04

CLASSIFICATION

1:19:50

Surouaro

1:56

Goodman Point Ruin

2:06

Johnson Ruin

1:45

Bug Mesa Ruin

0:48

Description

A meticulous early‑20th‑century survey brings the ancient landscape of southwestern Colorado to life, cataloguing dozens of ruins that once housed thriving communities. The author, working for a leading scientific institution, organizes the sites into clear types—rectangular villages, circular forts, cliff‑side dwellings, and soaring stone towers—providing a systematic framework for understanding how these structures were built and used.

The text is richly illustrated with photographs and detailed plates that show everything from the modest mud‑spring houses to the elaborate Hovenweep castles. Alongside the architectural descriptions, the work touches on associated features such as pictographs, reservoirs, and smaller artifacts, offering clues to the daily lives of the people who created them. Listeners will gain a vivid sense of the region’s archaeological diversity and the early scholarly efforts to piece together its prehistoric story.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (179K characters)

Series

Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology, bulletin 70.

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: Smithsonian Institution, 1919.

Credits

The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2022-11-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Jesse Walter Fewkes

Jesse Walter Fewkes

1850–1930

A pioneering American anthropologist and archaeologist, he helped open the modern study of Indigenous cultures of the American Southwest. His fieldwork at places like Mesa Verde and among Hopi and Zuni communities made him one of the best-known researchers of his era.

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