21:5321:53, 28 February 2024diffhist−5
Mesa Verde National Park
The places preserved in the park are more than just archeological resources, they are sacred places with important connections to descendant communities.
19:4619:46, 23 February 2023diffhist−2
Whitman massacre
Washington/Oregon was not a state nor territory yet, they were American but the land was not yet a part of a formal United States territory so they wouldn't be called Washingtononians or anything similar.
19:2719:27, 15 May 2022diffhist+11
Huachuca Mountains
I took out the word 'the', in reference to Coronado National Memorial. Correct usage is Coronado National Memorial, not the Coronado National Memorial. Also added "possible entry point" in reference to Francisco Vasquez Coronado's entry into Arizona in 1540, as we do not know the exact location of his entry, and have only speculated that it is nearby, in the San Pedro valley. The article did not previously clarify "possible'. All the information at the Memorial park confirms this assessment.Tag: Visual edit
03:2403:24, 7 November 2021diffhist−76
Keōua Kūʻahuʻula
→Later life: The deadly eruption and the footprints were two separate events. Evidence suggests the footprints were not left by the army Keōua. The footprints of men, women, and children found indicate that those who left them represented a common distribution of people who frequented this trade route.
21:5321:53, 28 February 2024diffhist−5
Mesa Verde National Park
The places preserved in the park are more than just archeological resources, they are sacred places with important connections to descendant communities.
19:4619:46, 23 February 2023diffhist−2
Whitman massacre
Washington/Oregon was not a state nor territory yet, they were American but the land was not yet a part of a formal United States territory so they wouldn't be called Washingtononians or anything similar.
19:2719:27, 15 May 2022diffhist+11
Huachuca Mountains
I took out the word 'the', in reference to Coronado National Memorial. Correct usage is Coronado National Memorial, not the Coronado National Memorial. Also added "possible entry point" in reference to Francisco Vasquez Coronado's entry into Arizona in 1540, as we do not know the exact location of his entry, and have only speculated that it is nearby, in the San Pedro valley. The article did not previously clarify "possible'. All the information at the Memorial park confirms this assessment.Tag: Visual edit
03:2403:24, 7 November 2021diffhist−76
Keōua Kūʻahuʻula
→Later life: The deadly eruption and the footprints were two separate events. Evidence suggests the footprints were not left by the army Keōua. The footprints of men, women, and children found indicate that those who left them represented a common distribution of people who frequented this trade route.