MESA VERDE, Colo. (CBS4) – If Mesa Verde National Park is on your list of places to visit this year, good news. The park has announced extended morning hours in the Wetherill Mesa area and access to ...
Managers at Mesa Verde National Park closed the park on Friday as a winter storm dropped snow on southwestern Colorado. Officials with the National Park Service shared a photo on social media showing ...
Long before Colorado was occupied by white settlers, Spanish emigres or the Utes, and hundreds of years before Columbus sailed the ocean blue, the Four Corners region was home to an Indigenous people ...
I’ve long been a fan of US national parks and camping within them, while my wife has steadily become a fan of luxury resorts and upscale lodging. We found that central and western Colorado has plenty ...
Park Ranger John on MSN

Epic Guide to Mesa Verde National Park

Mesa Verde National Park in southwestern Colorado protects and preserves the cultural heritage of 26 tribes of Ancestral ...
In December 1888, Colorado cowboys discovered a remarkable archaeological site at Mesa Verde, revealing a silent city of stone built by a peaceful Indian civilization centuries before Columbus. This ...
TOWAOC • Some say the first people of the canyons never left. Not really. You don't see them, the Ancestral Puebloans who made homes in the cliffs some 1,400 years ago. "But you can feel them," says ...
Built in 1967 and opened to the public in 1970, the Far View Visitor Center at Mesa Verde National Park told the story of the Ancestral Pueblo people for more than four decades. Now the building, ...
The park’s 547,325 visitors spent an estimated $55.4 million in surrounding communities, including Cortez and Durango, the park said Friday in a news release. A peer-review analysis determined that ...
TOWAOC, Colo. - Some say the first people of the canyons never left. Not really. You don't see them, the Ancestral Puebloans who made homes in the cliffs some 1,400 years ago. "But you can feel them," ...
TOWAOC, Colo. – Some say the first people of the canyons never left. Not really. You don’t see them, the Ancestral Puebloans who made homes in the cliffs some 1,400 years ago. “But you can feel them,” ...