Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mesa Verde National Park' has mentioned 'Mountain' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Starting c.xe2x80x897500 BC Mesa Verde was seasonally inhabited by a group of nomadic Paleo-Indians known as the Foothills Mountain Complex. | WIKI |
Contents 1 Inhabitants 1.1 Paleo-Indians 1.2 Archaic 1.3 Basketmaker culture 1.4 Ancestral Puebloans 1.4.1 Pueblo I: 750 to 900 1.4.2 Pueblo II: 900 to 1150 1.4.3 Pueblo III: 1150 to 1300 1.4.4 Warfare 1.4.5 Migration 1.4.6 Organization 1.4.7 Architecture 1.4.8 Astronomy 1.4.9 Agriculture and water-control systems 1.4.10 Hunting and foraging 1.4.11 Pottery 1.4.12 Rock art and murals 2 Climate 3 Anthropogenic ecology and geography 4 Geology 5 Rediscovery 5.1 Wetherills 5.2 Gustaf Nordenskixc3xb6ld 6 National park 6.1 Excavation and protection 6.2 Conflicts with local tribes 6.3 Services 6.4 Wildfires and culturally modified trees 6.5 Ute Mountain Tribal Park 7 Key sites 7.1 Balcony House 7.2 Cliff Palace 7.3 Long House 7.4 Mug, Oak Tree, Spruce Tree, and Square Tower houses 8 See also 9 References 10 External links | WIKI |
Archaeologists differ as to the origin of the Mesa Verde Archaic population; some believe they developed exclusively from local Paleo-Indians, called the Foothills Mountain Complex, but others suggest that the variety of projectile points found in Mesa Verde indicates influence from surrounding areas, including the Great Basin, the San Juan Basin, and the Rio Grande Valley. | WIKI |
They used sagebrush and mountain mahogany, along with pixc3xb1on and juniper, for firewood. | WIKI |
Cooking pots made with crushed igneous rock tempers from places like Ute Mountain were more resilient and desirable, and Puebloans from throughout the region traded for them. | WIKI |
Mesa Verde's Petroglyph Point; the glyphs represent (top; from right to left) the Eagle, Mountain Sheep, Parrot, Horned Toad, and Mountain Lion clans, and the Ancestral Puebloans (bottom). | WIKI |
Abbott later claimed that the "government was stronger than the Utes," saying that when the government finds "old ruins on land that it wants to take for public purposes, it has the right to take it ..." Feeling they were left with no other options, the Utes reluctantly agreed to trade the 10,000 acres on Chapin Mesa for 19,500 acres on Ute Mountain. | WIKI |
Additionally, superintendent Jesse L. Nusbaum later confessed that the Ute Mountain land traded for Chapin Mesa in 1911 belonged to the tribe anyway, meaning the government had traded land that never belonged to them in the first place. | WIKI |
Additionally, the park offered little financial benefits to the Ute Mountain Ute despite their land swap making much of the park possible. | WIKI |
Ute Mountain Tribal Park[edit] | WIKI |
Main article: Ute Mountain Tribal Park | WIKI |
The Ute Mountain Tribal Park, adjoining Mesa Verde National Park to the east of the mountains, is approximately 125,000 acres (51,000xc2xa0ha) along the Mancos River. | WIKI |