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Mesa Verde National ParkView of Cliff Palace tour
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Mesa Verde National Park
History & Culture
 

On June 29, 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt established Mesa Verde National Park to "preserve the works of man," the first national park of its kind. Today, the continued preservation of both cultural and natural resources is the focus of the park's research and resource management staff.

For cultural information on Mesa Verde's cliff dwellings and mesa top sites, click on Places.

For information about the Ancestral Puebloans who lived at Mesa Verde, go to People.

Balcony House
Visiting Cliff Dwellings
for information on visiting the cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde
more...
Ancestral Puebloan black-on-white mug
Artifact Gallery
links to artifact gallery activity
more...
Cliff Palace in the snow  

Did You Know?
Cliff Palace is the largest cliff dwelling at Mesa Verde National Park. It has 150 rooms, plus an additional 75 open areas. Twenty-one of the rooms are kivas, and 25 to 30 rooms have residential features. The number of Ancestral Puebloans living in Cliff Palace at any one time was 100 to 120.

Last Updated: September 13, 2007 at 18:21 EST