By executive order, President Calvin Coolidge created the Wupatki National Monument in central Arizona, on December 9, 1924. The monument stands out for its exceptionally high density of archeological sites created by Native Americans of the desert Southwest.
The Wupatki region has been inhabited by Native Americans for at least 10,000 years. Over the centuries, various Indian groups occupied the area, with fluctuations in population depending on specific climatic conditions. The most recent major colonization occurred after the 10 Century, when the Sunset Crater volcano, a few miles southwest of the monument, erupted and coated the entire region with layers of volcanic ash. The ash nourished the soil and held water, improving the conditions for agriculture. The low plains of the region were dotted with settlements of Native Americans, known primarily as the Sinagua people.
The Sinagua built large structures from stable red sandstone rock, held together firmly by mortar. Consequently, they were able to build multi-story settlements with as many as 100 rooms. The Indians abandoned the structures around 1250, for unknown reasons, but presumably because less favorable climate caused failure of local agriculture.

The monument was designated “…to preserve and protect thousands of archeological sites scattered across the stunning landscape of the Painted Desert and the grassland prairies….” A survey during the 1980s catalogued an estimated 2700 archeological sites in Wupatki, and several thousand more exist in nearby areas. Some are the large structures for which the monument is well known, but other are distributed throughout the monument’s 56 square miles (about 35,000 acres). The museum contains nearly 500,000 catalogued archeological items, making it a highly significant historical research repository.
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