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Archaeologists are thrilled about the state of
Utah’s acquisition of Waldo Wilcox’s Range Creek Canyon
ranch, site of a thousand-year-old Frement Indian
settlement
by Dan Wilcock,
Aug 30, 2004
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The writer praises a Utah man for keeping an ancient
Native American village safe from vandals for half a
century
by Jim Stiles,
Aug 09, 2004
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On a 10-day walk through the northwestern New Mexico
desert, the author follows an ancient road that leads him from
silent Indian ruins into noisy, modern gas fields
by Craig Childs,
Jun 21, 2004
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In Soul of Nowhere, writer Craig Childs
explores the rugged canyons of the southwest and the ruins left
behind by past civilizations that did their best to "match the
scenery" yet still perished.
by Adam Burke,
Feb 17, 2003
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Archaeologists are appalled at Anasazi Digs, a
family-owned business near Monticello, Utah, that plans to sell the
right to dig and keep artifacts from prehistoric ruins on private
land.
by Sarah Wright,
Feb 18, 2002
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Archaeologists fear that without more funds to manage
tourism, the ruins in newly designated Canyons of the Ancients
National Monument, Colo., will suffer from increased
visitors.
by Gail Binkly,
Apr 23, 2001
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A new kind of easement, put together by the Montezuma Land
Conservancy and landowner Don Dove, will protect ruins and buried
artifacts on archaeologically rich land near Cortez,
Colorado.
by Gail Binkly,
Feb 12, 2001
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In Arizona, two businessmen plan to turn the former
Paulsell Ranch, an archaeologically rich site bordering Petrified
Forest National Park, into a privately owned park they are calling
the International Petrified Forest.
by Katherine Drouin Keith,
Jun 07, 1999
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Physical anthropologist Christy Turner's controversial
theories that the Anasazi practiced cannibalism leave the writer
pondering the balance of good and evil that existed in the
no-longer idealized past as well as in the present.
by Art Goodtimes,
May 24, 1999
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The Anasazi Heritage Center in Dolores, Colo., displays
the century-old photos and records kept by pioneer, amateur
archaeologist Tom Wetherill and his family.
by Staff,
Jun 08, 1998