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West Ruin at Aztec Ruins National Monument in 1940s
perspective view, from the west, of series of kivas in North Wing
U.S. National Park Service
Aztec Ruins, built and used over a 200-year period, is the largest ancestral Pueblo community in the Animas River valley. Concentrated on and below a terrace overlooking the Animas River, the people at Aztec built several multi-story buildings called great houses and many smaller structures. An interesting 700 yard trail leads visitors through the West Ruin, an excavated great house that had at least 400 interconnected rooms built around an open plaza. Its massive sandstone walls tower over 30 feet. Many rooms contain the original pine, spruce, and aspen beams hauled from distant mountains. || Original photos probably taken sometime in the 1940s.
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Aztec Ruins National Monument, Code: AZRU
HABS/HAER/HALS Programs, Code: HABS-HAER
Aztec Ruins National Monument, San Juan County, New Mexico
Latitude: 36.836799621582, Longitude: -108

04/08/2005
01/01/1940 - 12/30/1950
Original print version: in Library of Congress, Prints and Photograph Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
Public Can View
U.S. National Park Service. HABS-HAER Division
Allison Denny
Friday, April 8, 2005 1:00:14 PM
Thursday, August 10, 2017 11:02:19 AM
AZRU-WestRuinNorthWingKivas-1940s.tiff
Monday, January 1, 0001 12:00:00 AM
tiff
3.4 MB
Historic