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  • Interior walls of Pueblo Bonito, the largest Great House at Chaco Culture National Historical Park, once the center of the Ancient World and home to the most sweeping collection of ancient ruins in the American Southwest.
    Ancient Doorways.tif
  • Interior walls of Pueblo Bonito, the largest Great House at Chaco Culture National Historical Park, once the center of the Ancient World and home to the most sweeping collection of ancient ruins in the American Southwest.
    Lost Passages-2203.tif
  • Reflected light at House on Fire (sometimes called Flaming House Ruin), an ancient Anasazi dwelling/granary deep in Utah's backcountry. The ruins in Mule Canyon are said to be over 800 years old and never restored in any way.
    House on Fire-6128.jpg
  • One of several sections of ancient petroglyphs along Mouse's Tank trail in Valley of Fire State Park. Nevada's oldest and largest state park, it derives its name from red sandstone formations, formed from great shifting sand dunes during the age of dinosaurs. These features, which are the centerpiece of the park's attractions, often appear to be on fire when reflecting the sun's rays.
    Valley of Fire Petroglyphs.jpg
  • Devastating wildfires have burned 70% of Mesa Verde National Park since it was established in 1906. Over 95% of these were started by lightning. Mesa Verde is prone to lightning strikes - receiving up to 100 in a 24-hour period during the summer. But despite its utter destruction, the forest here on Chapin Mesa is starkly beautiful.
    Dead-tree-fire-Mesa-Verde-8272.jpg
  • Taos Pueblo is the only living Native American community designated both a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and a National Historic Landmark. The multi-storied adobe buildings have been continuously inhabited for over 1000 years. It is the longest continuously inhabited place in the U.S.
    Taos-Pueblo-NM-7876.jpg
  • Taos Pueblo is the only living Native American community designated both a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and a National Historic Landmark. The multi-storied adobe buildings have been continuously inhabited for over 1000 years. It is the longest continuously inhabited place in the U.S.
    Taos-Pueblo-NM-7827.jpg
  • Traditional farolitas (or luminarias) adorn the ruins of San Jose de los Jemez Mission Church near Jemez Springs, NM
    Luminaries-ruins-church-Jemez-4135-E...jpg
  • Taos Pueblo is the only living Native American community designated both a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and a National Historic Landmark. The multi-storied adobe buildings have been continuously inhabited for over 1000 years. It is the longest continuously inhabited place in the U.S.
    Taos-Pueblo-NM-7867.jpg
  • San Geronimo Chapel looking towards the Sangre de Christo Mountains at Taos Peublo, the oldest living Native American community designated both a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and a National Historic Landmark.
    San-Geronimo-Taos-Pueblo-7839.jpg
  • Montezuma Castle National Monument offers one of the best preserved cliff dwellings in North America. This 20 room high-rise apartment, nestled into a towering limestone cliff, tells a 1,000 year-old story of ingenuity and survival in an unforgiving desert landscape.
    Montezuma Castle.jpg
  • Mile marker 13 on U.S. Route 163 in Utah, looking south towards Monument Valley. Also known in the movie as the exact spot where Forrest Gump finally decides to stop running.
    Road-Monument-Valley-UT-0953.jpg
  • Known as Shiprock, this 1700-foot eroded volcanic plume is sacred to the Navajos as Tse Bi dahi, or the Rock with Wings. The name comes from an ancient folk myth that tells how the rock was once a great bird that transported the ancestral people of the Navajos to their lands in what is now northwestern New Mexico. Geologists tell us this mountain was formed by a volcanic vent 27 million years ago. Shiprock is the world's finest example of an exposed volcanic throat. It can be seen for 100 miles.
    Shiprock-NM-8291.jpg
  • Known as Shiprock, this 1700-foot eroded volcanic plume is sacred to the Navajos as Tse Bi dahi, or the Rock with Wings. The name comes from an ancient folk myth that tells how the rock was once a great bird that transported the ancestral people of the Navajos to their lands in what is now northwestern New Mexico. Geologists tell us this mountain was formed by a volcanic vent 27 million years ago. Shiprock is the world's finest example of an exposed volcanic throat. It can be seen for 100 miles.
    Shiprock-NM-8294.jpg
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Rozanne Hakala Photography

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