Bandelier National Monument
Historic Site· Santa Fe, Taos & the High Desert

Bandelier National Monument

Good forOutdoor loversHistory buffs

The volcanic tuff of Frijoles Canyon was carved into homes and ceremonial spaces by Ancestral Puebloans who lived here from roughly 1150 to 1600 CE — then relocated to pueblos near the Rio Grande that have been occupied ever since. Designated a national monument in 1916 and named for Swiss-American anthropologist Adolph Bandelier, the park protects more than 33,000 acres of canyon and mesa country, along with the largest unaltered collection of Civilian Conservation Corps-built structures in any national park — themselves a National Historic Landmark.

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2 historical photographs.
Bandelier National Monument — historical photo
Bandelier National Monument — historical photo

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