Canyons of the Ancients National Park Cortez, Colorado Ancestral Pueblo Anasazi archaeological
Canyons of the Ancients National Monument National Park Cortez, Colorado USA Ancient Ancestral Pueblo Anasazi People archaeological sites Four Corners area
CANYONS
OF THE
ANCIENTS
National Park,
Colorado USA
Canyons of the Ancients National
Monument (the Monument)
encompasses 176,000 acres
of federal land administered
by the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM).
The Monument is located
in the Four Corners region
of southwestern Colorado,
about 50 miles west of Durango,
10 miles west of Cortez
and 12 miles west of
Mesa Verde National Park.
The Monument was
designated on June 9, 2000
by Presidential Proclamation
to protect cultural and natural
resources on a landscape scale.
The Monument contains the
highest known archaeological
site density in the United States,
with rich, well-preserved evidence
of native cultures.
The archeological record etched
into this landscape is
much more than isolated
islands of architecture.
This cultural landscape contains
more than 6,355 recorded sites
reflect all the physical components
of past human life: villages,
field houses, check dams, reservoirs,
great kivas, cliff dwellings,
shrines, sacred springs,
agricultural fields,
petroglyphs and sweat lodges.
Some areas have more than
100 sites per square mile.
The number of sites is
estimated to be up to 30,000.
The Monument has been
used or inhabited by humans,
including the Northern
Ancestral Puebloan culture
(or Anasazi), for 10,000 years,
and continues to be a
landscape used by humans today.
Historic uses of the Monument
include recreation, hunting,
livestock grazing and
energy development.
Credit NPS
CONTACT THE PARK
Monument Manager:
Marietta Eaton
Anasazi Heritage Center
970-882-5600
Anazazi Heritage
Center
Lowry Pueblo
Hovenweep
National
Monument
Sand Canyon
Trailhead
Music By
trac 1
song
Distant Lands
artist Hanu Dixit
youtube.com/
audiolibrary/music
trac 2
song
Heading Home
artist Nekzlo
soundcloud.com/nekzlo
trac 3
song
Somewhere
artist
Nekzlo
soundcloud.com/nekzlo
trac 4
song
vacation
artist
scandinavianz
soundcloud.com/
scandinavianz
trac 5
song
Explore
artist
Ikson
soundcloud.com/ikson
trac 6
song
Chasing Palm Trees
artist
Ehrling
Music by Ehrling
trac 7
song
In the Garden
artist
Silent Partner
youtube.com/
audiolibrary/music
a looknavigator film
produced by
looknavigator
© 2018
looknavigator
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
4.20.18
Thank You
America for our
National Park
Service
credit NPS
credit NPS photos
THANK YOU
LOOKNAVIGATOR
Mesa Verde and the preservation of Ancestral Puebloan heritage
Mesa Verde and the preservation of Ancestral Puebloan heritage
ARCHES: At Risk Cultural Heritage Education Series
Speakers: Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank and Dr. Steven Zucker
Canyons of the Ancients National Park 3 Cortez, Colorado USA Pueblo Anasazi archaeological Music
CANYONS OF THE
ANCIENTS
National Park,
Colorado USA
3
Canyons of the Ancients National
Monument (the Monument)
encompasses 176,000 acres
of federal land administered
by the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM).
The Monument is located
in the Four Corners region
of southwestern Colorado,
about 50 miles west of Durango,
10 miles west of Cortez
and 12 miles west of
Mesa Verde National Park.
The Monument was
designated on June 9, 2000
by Presidential Proclamation
to protect cultural and natural
resources on a landscape scale.
The Monument contains the
highest known archaeological
site density in the United States,
with rich, well-preserved evidence
of native cultures.
The archeological record etched
into this landscape is
much more than isolated
islands of architecture.
This cultural landscape contains
more than 6,355 recorded sites
reflect all the physical components
of past human life: villages,
field houses, check dams, reservoirs,
great kivas, cliff dwellings,
shrines, sacred springs,
agricultural fields,
petroglyphs and sweat lodges.
Some areas have more than
100 sites per square mile.
The number of sites is
estimated to be up to 30,000.
The Monument has been
used or inhabited by humans,
including the Northern
Ancestral Puebloan culture
(or Anasazi), for 10,000 years,
and continues to be a
landscape used by humans today.
Historic uses of the Monument
include recreation, hunting,
livestock grazing and
energy development.
Credit NPS
CONTACT THE PARK
Monument Manager:
Marietta Eaton
Anasazi Heritage Center
970-882-5600
Anazazi Heritage
Center
Lowry Pueblo
Hovenweep
National
Monument
Sand Canyon
Trailhead
Music By
trac 1
Artist Dan Lebowitz
Song Surrender
youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
trac 2
Artist MBB
Song Happy
soundcloud.com/mbbofficial
trac 3
Artist Ikson
Song Dreamer
soundcloud.com/ikson
trac 4
Artist Ikson
Song AM
soundcloud.com/ikson
a looknavigator film
produced by
looknavigator
© 2019
looknavigator
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
5.6.19
Thank You
America for our
National Park
Service
credit
NPS
National Park
Service
credit NPS photos
State of Colorado, Utah USA
BLM, BOR
U.S. Department of the Interior
The Bureau of Land Management
THANK YOU
LOOKNAVIGATOR
ANASAZI STATE PARK MUSEUM Ancestral Puebloan Hop Zuni Acoma Pueblo Mesoamerica Boulder, Utah USA
ANASAZI STATE PARK MUSEUM
Boulder, Utah USA
WELCOME TO ANASAZI
STATE PARK MUSEUM
Explore an Ancestral Puebloan
(Anasazi) village that was likely
occupied from A.D. 1050 to 1200,
and one of the largest communities
west of the Colorado River.
Outside the museum, tour a
life-sized, six-room replica of an
ancient dwelling and view a portion
of the original site. Inside, view
artifacts excavated from this
site and learn the lifeways
of these people.
DISCOVER
The Coombs Site is unique in
comparison to many other
Ancestral Puebloan
sites in the southwest.
It is located near what is considered
to be the border of the
Ancestral Puebloan and
Fremont cultures.
The Fremont were a prehistoric
group that occupied most of
Utah during the same period as
the Ancestral Puebloans.
The result is a blending of traits
or a prehistoric “melting pot”
that is reflected in the artifacts
recovered from this site, as well
as in the architecture.
In addition, elements from other
branches of the Ancestral Puebloan
have been identified here,
suggesting the presence ofan
extensive trade network.
Opened to the public as a state park in 1970.
Park Elevation: 6,700 feet
Who were the Anasazi?
Anasazi is a Navajo word interpreted
to mean ancient enemies or
enemy ancestors, but is now
referred to as the ancient ones.
Pueblo Indians, who also inhabited
the area have various names for
their ancestors.
The Hopi prefer the word,
Hisatsinom, for their ancestors
and strongly object to the term “Anasazi”.
The Hopi prefer not to call anyone enemy.
What the Anasazi called themselves
will probably never be known.
More recently, the term Ancestral Pueblo
is used, which suggests common
ties with modern Pueblos.
Although Ancestral Pueblo is probably
more accurate and
becoming more preferred.
The term Anasazi has been used
for many decades, and is still generally
accepted. It refers to village dwelling
farmers who existed on the
Colorado Plateau between
A.D. 1 and 1300.
Most of the sites were left after A.D. 1300,
but a few continued to flourish,
Hopi, Zuni, and Acoma to the west,
and eastern Pueblo villages
along the Rio Grande River.
Ancestral Puebloans were likely
the descendants of an Archaic Desert
culture known as the Basket maker cultures.
Some archaeologists claim they
may have migrated from Mesoamerica.
They eventually cultivated crops,
and the primary products were corn,
beans, squash, and cotton.
They domesticated the turkey, and
continued to gather wild plant foods
and hunt game in order
to supplement their diet.
The Ancestral Puebloans are known
for their extraordinary building techniques.
From pit houses to multi-storied
cliff dwellings, these structures remain
as a tribute to their outstanding
architectural abilities.
The Ancestral Puebloans were also
highly skilled potters.
Beautifully decorated pots, bowls,
ladles, mugs, and other elaborate
ceramic objects have been found
in sites throughout the region.
CONTACT THE PARK
Anasazi State Park Museum
PO Box 1429
Boulder, UT 84716-1429
(435) 335-7308
Utah State Parks and Recreation
PO Box 146001
Salt Lake City, UT 84114-6001
(801) 538-7220
(877) UT-PARKS
(801) 538-7458 (TTY)
stateparks.utah.gov
Open year-round,
seven days a week.
Nov. 1 – March 31:
8am-4pm
April 1 – Oct. 31:
8am-6pm
Holiday Closures:
Thanksgiving, Christmas, & New Year’s Day
Phone:
435-335-7308
Fax:
435-335-7352
Management:
Mike Nelson, Park Manager
Music
trac 1
Artist DIZARO
Song Kannushi
soundcloud.com/dizarofr
trac 2
Artist Ikson
Song Apart
soundcloud.com/ikson
trac 3
Artist Ikson
Song Good
soundcloud.com/ikson
trac 4
Artist Ikson
Song Up Here
soundcloud.com/ikson
a looknavigator film
produced by
looknavigator
© 2018
looknavigator
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
8.26.2018
Thank You
America for the
National and State
Park Service
Credit
Utah State Parks and Recreation
NPS
State of Utah USA
BLM, BOR
U.S. Department of the Interior
The Bureau of Land Management
THANK YOU
LOOKNAVIGATOR
Canyons of the Ancients National Park 2 Cortez, Colorado Ancestral Pueblo Anasazi archaeological
CANYONS OF THE
ANCIENTS
National Park,
Colorado USA
2
Canyons of the Ancients National
Monument (the Monument)
encompasses 176,000 acres
of federal land administered
by the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM).
The Monument is located
in the Four Corners region
of southwestern Colorado,
about 50 miles west of Durango,
10 miles west of Cortez
and 12 miles west of
Mesa Verde National Park.
The Monument was
designated on June 9, 2000
by Presidential Proclamation
to protect cultural and natural
resources on a landscape scale.
The Monument contains the
highest known archaeological
site density in the United States,
with rich, well-preserved evidence
of native cultures.
The archeological record etched
into this landscape is
much more than isolated
islands of architecture.
This cultural landscape contains
more than 6,355 recorded sites
reflect all the physical components
of past human life: villages,
field houses, check dams, reservoirs,
great kivas, cliff dwellings,
shrines, sacred springs,
agricultural fields,
petroglyphs and sweat lodges.
Some areas have more than
100 sites per square mile.
The number of sites is
estimated to be up to 30,000.
The Monument has been
used or inhabited by humans,
including the Northern
Ancestral Puebloan culture
(or Anasazi), for 10,000 years,
and continues to be a
landscape used by humans today.
Historic uses of the Monument
include recreation, hunting,
livestock grazing and
energy development.
Credit NPS
CONTACT THE PARK
Monument Manager:
Marietta Eaton
Anasazi Heritage Center
970-882-5600
Anazazi Heritage
Center
Lowry Pueblo
Hovenweep
National
Monument
Sand Canyon
Trailhead
Music By
trac 1
Artist NOWË
Song Summer Stories
soundcloud.com/nowemusic
trac 2
Artist NOWË
Song Just Some Melodies
soundcloud.com/nowemusic
trac 3
Artist NOWË
Song Under The Sun
soundcloud.com/nowemusic
trac 4
Artist NOWË
Song Save Us
soundcloud.com/nowemusic
a looknavigator film
produced by
looknavigator
© 2019
looknavigator
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
2.26.19
Thank You
America for our
National Park
Service
credit
NPS
National Park
Service
credit NPS photos
State of Colorado, Utah USA
BLM, BOR
U.S. Department of the Interior
The Bureau of Land Management
THANK YOU
LOOKNAVIGATOR
Taos Pueblo Native American UNESCO Site Tour
Taos Pueblo is a sovereign Pueblo Indian community located in Taos County in northern New Mexico with a population of approximately 2,500. The Red Willow People have continuously inhabited Taos Pueblo for over 1000 years, and it is the only living community to be listed in the Registry of National Historic Landmarks and recognized by the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as a World Heritage Site.
Parques: Parque Nacional de Mesa Verde (Cortez, Colorado - EUA)
Passeio pelo Parque Nacional de Mesa Verde em Cortez, Colorado.
O Parque Nacional de Mesa Verde foi criado em 1906 para preservar e interpretar o patrimônio arqueológico do povo Pueblo Ancestral, que fez dele a sua casa por mais de 700 anos, de 600 a 1300 EC. Hoje, o parque protege quase 5.000 sítios arqueológicos conhecidos, incluindo 600 habitações em penhascos. Esses sites são alguns dos mais notáveis e mais bem preservados dos Estados Unidos.
Lessons learned from the Pueblo Indians of the Mesa Verde Region: Mark Varien at TEDxSonomaCounty
Mark Varien currently serves as the executive vice president of the newly established Crow Canyon Research Institute in Cortez, Colorado. Formed as a new initiative in 2014, the Crow Canyon Research Institute seeks to create an institution without walls, breaking down disciplinary barriers and enabling social scientists―archaeologists, economists, geographers, sociologists, and evolutionary psychologists, to name a few―to accomplish two broad objectives: create more detailed, inclusive, and multivocal histories of the many cultural groups who have lived in the greater Southwest, and then compare those histories to others from around the world to better understand how and why cultures change, and to discern how the world came to be the way it is today.
Mark has conducted archaeology throughout the western United States, in Central America, and in the South Pacific. But the primary focus of his research is the Southwest United States. His work in the Mesa Verde region of southwestern Colorado began in 1979 and continues to the present. He joined the staff at Crow Canyon in 1987, where he served as a research archaeologist (1987−1997), director of research (1997−2007), vice president of programs (2007--2010), Research and Education Chair (2010--2014). Crow Canyon is an internationally renowned institution with a three-part mission: to increase knowledge of the human experience through archaeological research, to conduct that research in the context of public education programs, and to design and deliver those research and education programs in partnership with American Indians.
crowcanyon.org
About TEDx, x = independently organized event
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
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#USA #Nouveau-Mexique Pueblo des indiens Anasazi réserve de Taos
( merci de noter la vidéo ) , ABONNEZ-VOUS pour suivre l'évolution de mes vidéos sur YouTube,cordialement Claude Aven
Situé dans la vallée d'un petit affluent du Rio Grande, ce centre de peuplement indien pueblo, constitué d'habitations et de centres cérémoniels en adobe, est représentatif de la permanence de la culture d'un groupe d'Indiens Pueblo d'aujourd'hui. C'est l'un des groupes d'établissements établis à la fin du XIIIe siècle et au début du XIVe siècle dans la vallée du Rio Grande et ses affluents qui ont survécu jusqu'à nos jours. Il constitue une étape importante de l'histoire de la vie urbaine, communautaire et culturelle et du développement de cette région. Pueblo de Taos est semblable aux établissements des Anasazi dans la région des Four Corners, ou d'anciens Pueblo dans des endroits comme Chaco Canyon et Mesa Verde, et maintient une culture florissante dotée d'une culture vivante. (Thank you note video) Located in the valley of a small tributary of the Rio Grande, the center stand Indian pueblo, consisting of dwellings and ceremonial centers in adobe, is representative of the permanence of the culture of a group Pueblo Indians of today. This is one of the institutions established in the late thirteenth century and early fourteenth century in the valley of the Rio Grande and its tributaries that have survived to the present day groups. It is an important step in the history of urban, community and cultural life and development of this region. Taos Pueblo is similar institutions of the Anasazi in the Four Corners area, or ancient Pueblo in places like Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde, and maintains a thriving culture with a vibrant culture.
Remapping A Place: How One Tribe's Art Reconnects Them To Their Land | Short Film Showcase
Jim Enote, a traditional Zuni farmer and director of the A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center, is working with Zuni artists to create maps that bring an indigenous voice and perspective back to the land, countering Western notions of place and geography and challenging the arbitrary borders imposed on the Zuni world.
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The Short Film Showcase spotlights exceptional short videos created by filmmakers from around the web and selected by National Geographic editors. We look for work that affirms National Geographic's belief in the power of science, exploration, and storytelling to change the world. The filmmakers created the content presented, and the opinions expressed are their own, not those of National Geographic Partners.
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Archeology suggests that the A:shiwi (Zuni) have been farming in the Zuni River valley of western New Mexico since at least A.D. 700. After their lands were colonized by the Spanish in the sixteenth century and later claimed by the United States, indigenous peoples of the Colorado Plateau were left in a deeply familiar territory of unfamiliar names. Google Maps shows Jim’s farm bordering Indian Service Route 2, but that’s not how he sees his land. “To assume that people would look at the earth only from a vantage point that is above and looking straight down doesn’t consider the humanity of living on the landscape.” The Zuni maps, says Jim, contain something very important: a different way of looking and knowing.
Zuni maps draw deeply on shared experiences of place. They depict petroglyph carvings, images from prayers and songs, colorful stacks of pottery, arroyos and mesas. They are an opportunity for the Zuni to reclaim a deep understanding of a shared cultural tradition, rooted in ancestral lands, told again in a familiar language. These maps are critical to constructing a bridge between the traditional and modern worlds, connecting the old ways with the new.
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Remapping A Place: How One Tribe's Art Reconnects Them To Their Land | Short Film Showcase
National Geographic
District 60~Land On SouthSide Of Pueblo Colorado!!!
Things That Make You Go HHHmmmmm!
Life as Migration: The Mesa Verde Pueblo People
Co-sponsored by New World Archaeology Council
Explore the Mesa Verde region of Colorado, first settled by a mix of immigrants and natives, and inhabited by the Pueblo people for 700 years. Learn about the migration episodes which were a constant factor in the formation of the Pueblo society, and how the final migration left the region depopulated by about A.D. 1300.
Mark Varien, Ph.D. is the vice president of programs at the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. He has conducted research in Guatemala, New Zealand, Australia, and throughout the western United States. He earned a Ph.D. from Arizona State University and won a Society for American Archaeology award for the best dissertation in archaeology in the United States. From 1997 to 2007, he served as director of research at Crow Canyon. The author of many books and articles, his primary research focus is the Pueblo occupation of the Mesa Verde region.
Salmon Ruins New Mexico USA Aztec Pueblo Chaco Canyon Four Corners San Juan Music
SALMON RUINS
Our Story Begins around AD 1064,
but it doesn't stop there.
Some of the earliest dates determined
at Salmon Pueblo indicate presence of
a settlement as early as AD 1064,
when the first small group of rooms
was established and, perhaps,
the pueblo cornerstones
marked out by the people
of the Chaco Culture group.
Building the majority of Salmon Pueblo
between 1088 and 1092, the Chaco
inhabitants lived here for about
20 years before moving to the newly
constructed, nearby Aztec Pueblo.
It is believed that the flooding potential
of the San Juan River encouraged the
inhabitants to move and leave
the Salmon Pueblo abandoned.
In AD 1160,
a gathering of various cultural groups
from around the region found their
way to reoccupy the pueblo.
This blending of regional groups
is called the San Juan Occupation.
Because of the dominant pottery styles
found during excavations, the
San Juan Occupation was formally
called the Mesa Verde Occupation,
but the name was modified when
modern testing showed that the
various regional pottery styles were
being made with local clays.
The use of what had, until new testing,
appeared to be the decorated ceramics of
trade-wares, were actually made with
local clay resources, which indicated
that the craftsmen (pottery makers)
were from other culture groups,
but were making their
pottery at Salmon Pueblo.
Around 1250, the San Juan Occupation
also abandoned the pueblo.
With evidence of ceremonial closure
of the kivas, it is still difficult to say with
certainty why this second group left.
Whatever the reason, the pueblo
remained unbothered until
the opening of the region
to homesteading in 1876.
CONTACT
Salmon Ruins Museum
P. O. Box 125
Bloomfield, New Mexico 87413
sreducation@sisna.com
505-632-2013
Music By
trac 1
Artist Aakash Gandhi
Song Falling Snow
youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
trac 2
Artist MBB
Song Island
soundcloud.com/mbbofficial
trac 3
Atrist MBB
Song Take It Easy
soundcloud.com/mbbofficial
trac 4
Artist MBB
Song Arrival
soundcloud.com/mbbofficial
trac 5
Artist The 126ers
Song End of Summer
youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
a looknavigator film
produced by
looknavigator
© 2019
looknavigator
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
5.17.19
Thank You
America for our
National and State
Park Service
credits
Salmon Ruins
San Juan County New Mexico
salmon ruins photos
Bureau of Land Management
State of New Mexico USA
Bloomfield, New Mexico
Northwest New Mexico site stewards
Anasazi Heritage Center
Salmon Ruins Museum
THANK YOU
LOOKNAVIGATOR
Trail of Highways™ Anasazi Heritage Center Dolores, Colorado, Co Hwy 184 5 12 15 sq 1
Trail of Highways™
Anasazi Heritage Center
Dolores, Colorado
Co. Hwy 184 5.12.2015
This is the first of 5 videos of the Heritage Center and the Interpretive Trail.
Well worth the drive to get there. The history and artifacts are incredible. We have 5 short video’s here taking you through the Center and the interpretive trail. We will also be following up with video’s of the Canyons of the Ancients and 6 different ruins.
On June 9, 2000, a presidential proclamation set aside 164,000 acres of rugged desert canyons and high mesas for preservation as Canyons of the Ancients National Monument. The Anasazi Heritage Center is the gateway to this significant archaeological landscape, and was completed in 1984 as part of the Dolores Archaeological Program. Nearly 1,600 archaeological sites—hunting camps, granaries, households, villages, etc.—have yielded artifacts, some of which are on display at the museum today. Owned and operated by the Bureau of Land Management, the Anasazi Heritage Center also provides information on a number of sites that have benefited from SHF grants. Nearly $1.5 million dollars has been awarded for approximately 24 projects to various non-profit organizations to conduct research, stabilization, and interpretation involving archaeological resources in the Canyon of the Ancients. The goal of the Heritage Center is to increase awareness of archaeology and cultural resources, as well as the Ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi) and other peoples of the Four Corners region.
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#AnasaziHeritageCenter #RoadTrek #CanyonsoftheAncients #RoadTrekTV
Colorado Experience: Western American Art
The famous Oscar Wilde saying Life imitates art more than art imitates life hold little truth in Colorado. With the magnificent mountains and bucolic landscapes located across the state, artists and pioneers could not help but replicate the sights before them. From the documentary art of early expeditions, to the celebratory art of the iconic bronco busting cowboy, discover the backstory of 250 years of Western American Art.
Pueblo Voices: Connections to the Land & to the Ancestors
Pueblo Indians' historical perspectives are shaped by their deep cultural heritage, kept alive through oral tradition. Archaeologists' understanding of Pueblo history derives primarily from the application of the scientific method. In this series of videos, Pueblo people and archaeologists discuss aspects of Pueblo history and culture from their different—but often complementary—perspectives.
2017 Colorado State Fair Parade
This broadcast of the 2017 Colorado State Fair Parade is brought to you by Pueblo Community College's Center for New Media and sponsored by the Pueblo County Health Department.
Pueblo I Site Excavated to Preserve Record
Archaeologists with the Colorado Department of Transportation have wrapped up excavation of a small Pueblo I village that is in the path of the Farmington Hill realignment project. Local Indian tribal experts assisted on the research project.
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Rise of the Phoenix - Chicano Education in Pueblo, Colorado
History Day 2015 Documentary Entry