Agate House Pueblo Explained

Agate House Pueblo
Nearest City:Holbrook, Arizona
Coordinates:34.805°N -109.8611°W
Added:October 06, 1975
Refnum:75000170

Agate House is a partially reconstructed Puebloan building in Petrified Forest National Park, built almost entirely of petrified wood. The eight-room pueblo has been dated to approximately the year 900 and occupied through 1200, of the Pueblo II and Pueblo III periods. The agatized wood was laid in a clay mortar, in lieu of the more usual sandstone-and-mortar masonry of the area.[1]

The ruins of Agate House were reconstructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933-34 under the direction of C.B. Cosgrove Jr. of the New Mexico Laboratory of Anthropology. Room 7 was fully reconstructed with a new roof. Room 2's walls were rebuilt to a height of five feet, but not roofed, and the remaining walls were rebuilt to a height of two or three feet.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Agate House. 2008-11-26. Petrified Forest National Park. National Park Service.
  2. Web site: Agate House. 2008-11-26. List of Classified Structures. National Park Service. 2008-11-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20110521202906/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=AZ&PARK=PEFO&STRUCTURE=&SORT=&RECORDNO=4. 2011-05-21. dead.