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Anasazi
Heritage Center The
Anasazi Heritage Center is a museum of the Ancestral Puebloan (or Anasazi)
culture and other Native cultures in the Four Corners region.
Archaeological
Research In the Upper Gunnison Basin
Western State College has conducted field schools on the
Tenderfoot Site since 1991. The research described here is the result
of countless hours of work by Western State College undergraduate anthropology
students, Colorado Archaeological Society volunteers, and colleagues.
Colorado
Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation
The
mission of the Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation (OAHP)
is to help individuals, communities, and organizations to identify, protect,
and preserve the State's cultural resources and to foster widespread appreciation
of and respect for Colorado's cultural heritage.
Colorado
Council of Professional Archaeologists
The Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists (CCPA) is a community
of people concerned with the preservation, recovery, and interpretation
of Colorados prehistoric and historic archaeological resources
The
Hisatsinom Chapter of the Colorado Archaeological Society
The Hisatsinom Chapter is centered at
Cortez near Mesa Verde National Park, and among the many ruins of the
prehistoric Anasazi Culture.
Indian
Peaks Chapter of the Colorado Archaeological Society
Based in Boulder, Colorado, IPCAS has
been promoting and participating in Colorado Archaeology for fourteen
years. We organize a series of lectures, host tours, provide volunteer
opportunities, and publish a monthly newsletter, the Calumet newsletter.
Mesa
Verde National Park Mesa
Verde, Spanish for "green table", offers an unparalleled opportunity
to see and experience a unique cultural and physical landscape. The culture
represented at Mesa Verde reflects more than 700 years of history. From
approximately A.D. 600 through A.D. 1300 people lived and flourished in
communities throughout the area, eventually building elaborate stone villages
in the sheltered alcoves of the canyon walls. Today most people call these
sheltered villages "cliff dwellings". The cliff dwellings represent
the last 75 to 100 years of occupation at Mesa Verde. In the late 1200s
within the span of one or two generations, they left their homes and moved
away.
PAAC
(Program for Avocational Archaeological Certification)
The Program for Avocational Archaeological
Certification (PAAC) is designed to be a mutually beneficial educational
program for avocational and professional archaeologists. It was established
in 1978 by the Colorado
Archaeological Society (CAS)
and the Office
of the State Archaeologist of Colorado (OSAC).
It provides a means for CAS members and other citizens of Colorado to
obtain formally recognized levels of expertise outside of an academic
degree program. It also facilitates contributions by avocationalists to
public service and assistance in education, governmental management of
cultural resources, research, and the protection of archaeological resources
in Colorado.
Ute
Mountain Tribal Park
Come experience a trip back into time
and learn a special Native American interpretation of the culturally diverse
homelands of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. Spend time in our incomparable
Ute Mountain Tribal Park with one of our knowledgeable Native American
Ute tour guides. Guides interpret Ute* Indian History, Ute pictographs,
geological land formations, and Ancestral Pueblo* petroglyphs, artifacts
and dwellings.
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