Ancestral Puebloan

An·ces·tral Puebloan

 (ăn-sĕs′trəl)
adj.
Of or relating to a Native American culture flourishing in southern Colorado and Utah and northern New Mexico and Arizona from about ad 100, whose descendants are considered to include the present-day Pueblo peoples. Ancestral Puebloan culture includes an early Basket Maker phase and a later Pueblo phase marked by the construction of cliff dwellings and by expert artisanship in weaving and pottery.
n.
A member of a people sharing this culture.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
The center also houses the "Native Peoples of Illinois" exhibit, detailing historical information on the early inhabitants of Illinois and the "It Was Only a New World to Columbus" display, featuring stone tools and Ancestral Puebloan pottery pieces.
Hooked onto a rope slung around a tree, National Park Service rock climber Dave Mealey walked backward off a cliff above Spruce Tree House, one of the best-preserved Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde National Park.
of Pennsylvania Museum) have combined their efforts here to write a scholarly history of Basketmaker II and III (Ancestral Puebloan) woven fiber sandals.
Mesa Verde, meaning "green table' in Spanish, was established as the first cultural park in the National Park System to preserve the cliff dwellings of the 13 centuries-old ancestral Puebloan culture.
Famed for its perfectly restored Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings and thousands of archaeological sites, Mesa Verde lies about 50 miles beyond Four Corners Monument.
We'll explore side canyons of the Escalante River, seek out Ancestral Puebloan petroglyphs, and climb surrounding mesas for desert views stretching for miles.
Prouty will talk about the archaeoastronomy of Assyria, Egypt, Sub-Sahara Africa, Japan, Peru, and the Ancestral Puebloan cultures of the American Southwest.
The Yellowhorse family helps you set up your campsite inside the Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park in Arizona and then takes you on a tour of local protected sites, including Ancestral Puebloan ruins and petroglyphs.
And then there's its link to the ancestral Puebloan dwellings preserved at Bandelier: Ancestors of today's Jemez tribe built sacred sites on 11,254-foot Redondo Peak, the highest point on the crater's rim.