
audiobook
by Southwest Parks and Monuments Association, United States. National Park Service
Step onto the half‑mile trail winding through Arizona’s Upper Sonoran Desert, where scorching summer heat gives way to bitter winter frosts and wind‑scoured sagebrush. This audio guide leads you past numbered markers that reveal the story of the Salado people, who lived in cool, thick‑walled cliff apartments about 700 years ago, cultivating corn, beans, and cotton in an arid landscape. Along the way you’ll hear vivid descriptions of the ruins, their fragile stone walls, and the careful stewardship needed to keep them open for future generations.
The narration also paints a living portrait of the desert’s plant life—baby saguaros shielding under nurse mesquite, bright hedgehog cactus blossoms announcing spring, and the versatile yucca whose fibers made rope, sandals, and even soap. You’ll discover how the Salado used these resources for food, medicine, and craft, and why today’s visitors are asked to tread lightly, keeping children from climbing and preserving the ancient walls. With its blend of natural history and archaeology, the guide invites you to breathe the fragrant dry air, listen to the quiet, and feel a deep connection to this timeless landscape.
Full title
Tonto Cliff Dwellings Guide: Tonto National Monument, Arizona 11th Edition, Revised
Language
en
Duration
~23 minutes (22K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2015-06-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A longtime nonprofit partner of the National Park Service, this organization grew from a small Southwestern effort into today’s Western National Parks. Its publications and park-store work have helped generations of visitors connect more deeply with the landscapes, history, and cultures of the American West.
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Charged with caring for America's most treasured landscapes and historic places, this federal agency helps protect natural wonders, cultural sites, and stories that stretch across the United States. Since its creation in 1916, it has become the steward of a vast system of parks, monuments, memorials, and heritage areas.
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