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A photograph of ruins of a watch tower perched atop a rock overlooking Navajo Canyon in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado.
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Colored print of a Paul Coze painting. The caption reads, "Circular subterranean chambers (kivas) were used for religious ceremonies by men of the prehistoric period. Kivas are still used by present day Pueblo tribes." This is card No. 16 of a series of 24 Mesa Verde paintings by Paul Coze.
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Print from a lithograph by Eugene Kingman of A kiva in Cliff Palace. Card addressed to Mr. & Mrs. James Makinson, and dated 8/16/1947. On back of postcard: From a lithography by Eugene Kingman.
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Black and white image picturing ancient cliff dwellings built on and below a rock wall in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado.
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Color photograph looking across a canyon at Cliff Palace ruins of Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, with fall colors highlighting the surrounding vegetation.
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The Balcony Cliff Dwelling at Mesa Verde National Park is pictured from a side angle encompassing the length of the dwelling on the side of the cliff with trees at the base showing its fantastically unusual location.
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View of Balcony House archaeological site at Mesa Verde, under the overhanging rock. Written on back and postmarked from Mesa Verde on June 14, 193[?] to Miss Grace Rose in Ottawa, Kansas.
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Diorama at State Museum E. 14th and Sherman Street-Denver Balcony House was a typical communal dwelling of the pre-Columbian Pueblo Indians. Nestled in a cliff of the Mesa Verde area of southwestern Colorado, it was easily defended from attacks of..." Genuine Curteich-Chicago C.T. Art-Color tone Post Card.
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Balcony House Ruin occupies a deep cave in the west wall of Soda Canyon which is here seen in the distance. The balcony at the left, perfectly preserved from prehistoric times gives this spectacular ruin its name. Color note: For best autumn..."
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Picture of Balcony House at Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado
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Balcony House, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado. Visitors inspect the most spectacularly located of the major cliff dwellings in the park.
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Situated in a deep cave high on the west wall of Soda Canyon, Balcony House is reached via a scenic trail and a 40-foot ladder."
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Mesa Verde National Park, so long inaccessible and little known, now invites discovery by motorists. Fine new highways, most of them completely paved, have shortened the driving time to only one day from Denver, Salt Lake City, Grand Canyon, or Santa Fe.
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Colored print of a Paul Coze painting of a couple looking over the canyon from Balcony House at Mesa Verde National Park. This is card No. 10 of a series of 24 Mesa Verde paintings by Paul Coze.
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Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado.
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Shows a close-up view of the balcony under the overhanging rock.
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Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado.
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Balcony House. Note on the back (Sept. 19, 1915).
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Picture of Balcony House ruins at Mesa Verde National Park.
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Black and white drawing of cliffs