According to the U.S. National Park Service, Mesa Verde National Park features 5,000 known archeological sites, including 600 spectacular cliff dwellings. The name is Spanish for “Green Table,” and the area was inhabited by the Ancestral Pueblo people from AD 600 to 1300, over 700 years. (source) Mesa Verde, as well as nearby Aztec Ruins National Monument located in Aztec, New Mexico, are an important link to the Native American past of the region and provide significant economic stimulus, with well over half a million people visiting each year. (source)
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- Painted Room, Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde Ruins
- Painting in Spruce Tree House, Mesa Verde Ruins, Colo
- Panorama from the North- Manitou Cliff Dwellings, Manitou Springs, Colo.
- Peabody House (Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.)
- Peabody House (Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.)
- Peabody House (Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.)
- Peabody House (Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.)
- Peabody House, Cliff Dwelling in Mesa Verde National Park, Denver and Rio Grande System, Colo.
- Peabody House, a prehistoric cliff dwelling recently discovered in the Mesa Verde National Park, southwestern Colorado
- Picture Rock, Yellow Jacket Canon, Mesa Verde Ruins, Colo.,
- Picture Rocks - Hieroglyphics - Near Aztec New Mexico.
- Pine River Lodge postcard
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