From Deseret News archives:
Mesa Verde National park will celebrate its centennial next year
On a lofty, remote plateau in southwestern Colorado sits Mesa Verde, one of the most unusual gems in the National Park system. This is a park dedicated primarily to the past achievements of mankind amid a harsh, high-desert environment rather than a monument to nature's own handiwork.
Mesa Verde the nation's largest archaeological preserve was established as a national park on June 29, 1906. Starting Dec. 8 of this year and running through December 2006, it will celebrate its centennial with a multitude of special events.
According to Tessy Shirakawa, public information officer for Mesa Verde, details of the park's 100-year celebration are still being finalized, but special tours, a lecture series and alumni reunions are being planned.
"This is something to look forward to," she said.
Although some other national parks also celebrate American Indian cultures, Mesa Verde looms as the forerunner.
The culture represented by Mesa Verde reflects more than 700 years, from about A.D. 600-1300. The best-known habitations the cliff dwellings represent the final 100 years of residence in the area. In the late 1200s, the inhabitants left their homes and moved away.
Why they abandoned Mesa Verde has never been firmly established, but it may have been because of a drought and lack of water.
Some two dozen American Indian tribes in the Southwest have an ancestral affiliation with the sites of Mesa Verde. Thus, unlike the Incas or Aztecs, these inhabitants didn't just vanish they relocated in the same region.
More than 4,000 known archaeological sites are inside the park, 600 of which are cliff dwellings. Only a small number have been excavated. Most have been weakened by natural forces, and some have been damaged by looters.
Comments
- No comeback for Utes this time 11:59 p.m.
- Utes could end up in San Diego 11:49 p.m.
- Wildcats prove no match for Tribe 11:44 p.m.
- No. 4 Frogs crush the Lobos 11:36 p.m.
- Cougars honor 1984 champs 11:36 p.m.
- Field goals, penalties doomed Utes 11:33 p.m.
- A reason why they play the game 11:30 p.m.
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah 11:29 p.m.
- Broncos still hope to crash BCS party 11:26 p.m.
- Gerhart helps Stanford steam past... 11:25 p.m.
- Cave to be sealed with body inside
- Predicting the unpredictable: BYU wins
- Vegas, Poinsettia bowls or bust
- Glover gives Utes last-second upset
- BYU football: 5 keys to victory
- Cougars turn back Wildcats'
- Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
- Running game key to BYU offense
- Woods, wife unavailable for interview
- Idaho woman dies after fall
- Cougars beat Utes, 26-23
393 - Thunder rolls by Jazz
136 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
134 - Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
124 - Cave to be sealed with body inside
115 - Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
115 - Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin
113 - Letters: Trump card for believers
99 - Rivalry Week is highly profane
88 - Hall's legacy measured today
75
Everyone repeat after me: BYU has a better football team than Utah.
Whether or not these words needed to be said isn't important. What's...
Bronco is VERY LUCKY his strategy to run the clock out by running up the...
Well said...
As a BYU fan, I want Max Hall suspended for these truly embarrassing juvenile...
I am happy to see how many people on here get it - yes there are classless...
that was well written and should serve as press release and translation by...
If what hall said is true, Ute fans needs to think. I feel Hall has the right...
i think it is fair to say that there was some questionable officiating...like...
Shouldn't she be suing the people who provided alcohol to a minor?



You can be the first to comment on this story.