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    The Anasazi Culture at Mesa Verde (Events That Shaped America Series) by Sabrina Crewe, Dale Anderson

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    (Library Binding)

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    • ISBN: 0836833902
    • Publisher: Gareth Stevens Publishing
    • Pub. Date: May 2003
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    Comments from the Seller: New New, neatly stored and in excellent condition. International orders via air mail except large books.

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    Annotation

    Discusses the cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde, Colorado, and what is known about the history and culture of the Anasazi Indians who lived in them.

    Children's Literature

    In the Four Corners region of the American Southwest a Native-American culture known as the Anasazi once thrived. There, for centuries, Anasazi people tended to their fields along the ridgeline of Mesa Verde and other plateaus. Over time, the Anasazi people developed an effective agricultural model as well as a complex culture. The Anasazi culture featured a society built around their farming methods as well as their unique living places sited along isolated and nearly inaccessible cliffs. Later, for reasons that are not completely clear, the Anasazi people left their ancestral homeland and moved to other parts of the Southwest. Once relocated the Anasazi disappeared and remain only in the form of their hypothetical descendents such as the Zuni and Hopi tribes. Why did the Anasazi culture rise in the region it did? What caused the Anasazi to move to the remote cliff villages? How did the Anasazi determine that life in their homelands was no longer viable? These, and other questions about this nearly mythological people, are addressed in this slim volume. Written as a portion of the "Events That Shaped America" series this book is a reasonable introduction to a fascinating Native-American culture. Readers with an interest in deeper information on this same subject should turn their attention to a book of the same title that Dale Anderson has recently written for the "Landmark Events in American History" series published by an affiliated company. However, readers just beginning to study this portion of Native-American history will do well to peruse this concise and illustrated work. 2003, Gareth Stevens, Romaneck

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