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Powers, Margaret A., and Johnson, Byron P. Defensive Sites of Dinetah. New Mexico Bureau of Land Management Cultural Resources Series No. 2, 1987. Albuquerque, New Mexico. Roessel, Robert A. Jr. Dinétah - Navajo History Vol. II. Navajo Curriculum Center and Title IV-B Materials Project, Rough Rock Demonstration School, Rough Rock, Arizona, 1983.
The majority of pueblito sites are located on lands administered by the United States Bureau of Land Management in Rio Arriba and San Juan counties, New Mexico. Pueblitos, as well as a large number of other early Navajo sites are clustered in the Largo and Gobernador canyons, which drain in a north and westerly direction to the San Juan River.
The Crow Canyon Archaeological District is located in the heart of the Dinétah region of the American Southwest in Rio Arriba and San Juan counties in New Mexico approximately 30 miles southeast of the city of Farmington. [2]
Felix Earle is a Diné (Navajo) fashion designer, lapidary artist and Indigenous food-security farmer. He lives on the Navajo Nation land (Dinétah) in Ganado, Arizona.. He is of the Tó Dích’íi’nii (Bitter Water clan), born for the Tábąąhí (Waters Edge clan), maternal grandfather is Tsi’naajinii (The Black Streak Running into the Water clan), and paternal grandfather is Dibé ...
Old Fort Ruin is an archaeological site located in Rio Arriba County, northwestern New Mexico, United States, on lands owned by the State of New Mexico.The site consists of the ruins of a Navajo pueblito and associated hogans and artifacts.
Map of Navajo Nation chapters in Navajo Navajo Woman at a waterfall c. 1920. The Navajo Nation (Navajo: Naabeehó Bináhásdzo), also known as Navajoland, [3] is an Indian reservation of Navajo people in the United States.
The Navajo [a] or Diné are an Indigenous people of the Southwestern United States.Their traditional language is Diné bizaad, a Southern Athabascan language.. The states with the largest Diné populations are Arizona (140,263) and New Mexico (108,305).
Diné Bahaneʼ (Navajo pronunciation: [tɪ̀né pɑ̀xɑ̀nèʔ], Navajo: "Story of the People"), is a Navajo creation story that describes the prehistoric emergence of the Navajo as a part of the Navajo religious beliefs.