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Agate House Pueblo
34.8050° N, -109.8611° E
About
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. 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.
Historical Timeline
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Initial construction and occupation
c. 900
Occupation continues through
c. 1200
Civilian Conservation Corps reconstruction
1933–1934
Archaeological Features
Unique architectural and cultural elements found at this historical site
Domestic and Habitation Structures
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