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- Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S. National Park Service)
Aztec Ruins has some of the best-preserved Chacoan structures of its kind Learn more about the ancestral Pueblo people in the park's museum and explore the Aztec West great house to see exceptionally advanced architecture, original wooden beams, and a restored Great Kiva Aztec Ruins is a deeply sacred place to many Indigenous peoples across the American Southwest Please visit with respect
- New Mexico: Aztec Ruins National Monument - U. S. National Park Service
Aztec Ruins National Monument connects modern people with a distinct civilization that inhabited the Aztec, New Mexico area over 1,000 years ago Aztec Ruins National Monument, a unit of the National Park System, is located one mile north of Aztec, NM, near the junction of U S 550 and NM 516
- Things To Do - Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S. National Park Service)
There are many things to do at Aztec Ruins, including a museum, self-guided trail through Aztec West, and Junior Ranger program
- Basic Information - Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S. National Park . . .
Aztec Ruins National Monument is open to the public from 7:00am-5:00pm, which includes the parking areas, archeological sites, picnic areas, and trails The visitor center is open from 9:00am-5:00pm daily The monument and visitor center close on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Days Unless there is a public program scheduled, there is no after-hours access Vehicles are not permitted
- Plan Your Visit - Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S. National Park . . .
From there, you can tour the museum, watch the 15-minute video "Aztec Ruins: Footprint of the Past," and explore a three-story archeological site on a half-mile self-guided trail Trail guides are available in the visitor center, and 30-minute ranger programs are typically offered during the summer months, weather and staff depending
- Aztec Ruins - U. S. National Park Service
Pueblo of Zia, New Mexico Pueblo of Zuni, New Mexico Southern Ute Indian Tribe, Colorado Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah Ysleta del Sur Pueblo of Texas You can learn more about aspects of ancestral Pueblo culture, as well as other people associated with Aztec Ruins National Monument, by visiting the following pages:
- Aztec Ruins NM: Guidebook (1946) - U. S. National Park Service
The "Aztec Ruins" of New Mexico have no particular connection with the Aztecs who dominated the valley of Mexico in the late prehistoric period and until the coming of the Spaniards in the early sixteenth century Like other similar sites throughout the northern Southwest, these are the ruins of the former homes of the modern Pueblo Indians, especially those now living in the valley of the Rio
- Maps - Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S. National Park Service)
There are currently no amenities or services available at Aztec Ruins National Monument due to the lapse in government funding
- Excavation of a Portion of the East Ruins, Aztec Ruins National . . .
LOCATION Aztec Ruins National Monument is located in the southeast quarter (SE1 4) of the southwest quarter (SW1 4) of Section 4, T 30 N , R 11 W , New Mexico principal meridian, San Juan County, New Mexico, at approximately longitude 108° W and latitude 36° 50' N , about one mile north of the town of Aztec The elevation is 5,642 feet above sea level ENVIRONMENT Situated in extreme
- Frequently Asked Questions - Aztec Ruins National Monument (U. S . . .
Popular and scholarly opinion in the nineteenth century held that the ancestors of the Aztecs migrated southward into Mexico from the U S Southwest As a result, Euro-American explorers at the time often gave ancient ruins names such as “Aztec,” “Montezuma,” or “Toltec ” Q: Where are the artifacts excavated from the site?
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