. Bulletin. Ethnology. * i) % s 7^ ' •'' I'/ \ I • f . Figure 61.—Petroglyphs, site 117, Johnson Canyon. which is so dissected with deep, narrow canyons that it is almost im- possible to traverse it. The side canyons entering the upper 15 or 20 miles of Glen Canyon are fairly broad and contain a relative abund- ance of Pueblo sites, but below this they come in as box canyons which are flooded and filled with quicksand during high water in the Colo- rado, and which are too narrow through several miles of their lower reaches to have permitted any kind of settlement. Undoubtedly. Please note
. Bulletin. Ethnology. * i) % s 7^ ' •'' I'/ \ I • f . Figure 61.—Petroglyphs, site 117, Johnson Canyon. which is so dissected with deep, narrow canyons that it is almost im- possible to traverse it. The side canyons entering the upper 15 or 20 miles of Glen Canyon are fairly broad and contain a relative abund- ance of Pueblo sites, but below this they come in as box canyons which are flooded and filled with quicksand during high water in the Colo- rado, and which are too narrow through several miles of their lower reaches to have permitted any kind of settlement. Undoubtedly. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington : G. P. O.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectethnolo, bookyear1901