Montezuma Castle ×
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This website would like to remind you: Your browser (Apple Safari 4) is out of date. Update your browser for more × security, comfort and the best experience on this site. Photo MEDIA SPOTLIGHT Montezuma Castle High-rising national monument For the complete photos with media resources, visit: http://education.nationalgeographic.com/media/montezuma-castle/ FAST FACTS Montezuma Castle, in central Arizona, became one of the United States' first national monuments in 1906. National monuments, which also include Devils Tower in Wyoming and the Statue of Liberty in New York-New Jersey, are similar to national parks. Montezuma Castle is the remains of a settlement inhabited by the Sinagua people from the early 1100s to around 1425. Although Montezuma Castle National Monument includes a huge natural sinkhole (Montezuma Well), ancient irrigation ditches, and the remains of underground "pit houses" that predate the Sinagua, its most striking feature is the castle itself, above. Montezuma Castle was a cliff dwelling housing about 50 people. Residents of the apartment-style structure used long ladders to reach their high-rise homes. Until 1951, visitors to Montezuma Castle National Monument also used ladders to access the cliff dwelling. However, thousands of tourists trekking through the site began to wear down the delicate adobe structure. Ladders were removed and visitors can no longer directly access the castle. VOCABULARY Term Part of Speech Definition adobe noun building material made of sun-dried clay, sand, and straw and usually shaped into bricks. ancient adjective very old. cliff noun steep wall of rock, earth, or ice. delicate adjective fragile or easily damaged. dwelling noun a place to live. irrigation noun channel dug between a source of water and crops. Also called an irrigation canal. ditch national park noun geographic area protected by the national government of a country. 1 of 2 Sinagua noun people and culture native to the southwestern U.S. who flourished between the 1100s-1400s. sinkhole noun hole formed in a rock or other solid material by the weight or movement of water. For Further Exploration Interactives National Park Service: Montezuma Well National Monument—Virtual Tour of Montezuma Castle Websites National Park Service: Montezuma Castle National Monument Northern Arizona University: The Sinagua © 1996–2015 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved. 2 of 2.