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Great house Ruins. Including more than 600 rooms, this great house is a National Historic Landmark located on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation. [1] Kinnazinde: Ruins. Lomaki: Sinagua Flagstaff Ruins located in the Wupatki National Monument. Los Morteros: Hohokam Trincheras Ruins. Montezuma Castle: Sinagua Ruins. A National Monument. Nalakihu ...
Frank F. Cranz House – built in 1900 and located at 321 Arroyo Street. It is the largest Queen Anne style-influenced residence in Nogales, the Frank F. Cranz House was built for the prominent mining man and Mayor of Nogales (1904–1906). Listed in the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1985, reference: #85001849.
Navajo National Monument is a national monument located within the northwest portion of the Navajo Nation territory in northern Arizona, which was established to preserve three well-preserved cliff dwellings of the Ancestral Puebloan people: Keet Seel (Broken Pottery) (Kitsʼiil), Betatakin (Ledge House) (Bitátʼahkin), and Inscription House (Tsʼah Biiʼ Kin).
Featuring one of the best collections of ancient ruins north of Mexico, the UNESCO World Heritage Site was a major center of culture from 850 A.D. to 1250 A.D. and today houses a number of ...
Cliff dwellings – Constructed in the sides of the mesas and mountains of the Southwest, cliff dwellings comprised a large number of the defensive structures of the Pueblo people. Jacal is a traditional adobe house built by the ancestral Pueblo peoples. Slim close-set poles were tied together and filled out with mud, clay and grasses, or adobe ...
Nogales (Spanish:; English: / n ə ˈ ɡ ɑː l ɪ s / or / n oʊ ˈ ɡ ɑː l eɪ s /) [4] is a city in and the county seat of Santa Cruz County, Arizona.The population was 20,837 at the 2010 census and estimated 20,103 in 2019. [5]
Nogales Cliff House (AR-03-10-02-124) May 14, 1989 : Address Restricted: Llaves: SRCP 67: Georgia O'Keeffe Ghost Ranch House: December 14, 2020 : US-84, 280 Private Dr. 1708, House 115 northwest of the Ghost Ranch Education and Retreat Center
Navajo boy at T-shaped door. The Pueblo III Period (AD 1150 to AD 1350) was the third period, also called the "Great Pueblo period" when Ancestral Puebloans lived in large cliff-dwelling, multi-storied pueblo, or cliff-side talus house communities.