Mesa Verde National Park By Michael Korfhage, Joel Anderson, 2014


© 2024 Anderson Design Group, Inc. All rights reserved. It is a Federal Copyright offense to reproduce this image without permission.

Mesa Verde National Park offers adventure through nature and a history lesson all in one. The 52,000 acre park was first designated in 1906 to protect more than 5,000 known archaeological sites. The park is best known for its preserved cliff dwellings, archaeological proof that the Ancestral Puebloan people made the cliffs their homes as far back as 600 BC. Today, half a million people visit the park each year to learn about the archaeological sites and to literally look through the windows of time itself. Anderson Design Group honored the park in its own, early-1900s travel art illustration of one of the many cliff dwellings found within Mesa Verde's protected borders. To learn more about conservation efforts taken to preserve these sites for future generations, click on over to the Mesa Verde Foundation.

Sign up for our weekly email and get 10% off your first order.