MORGAN.) SECOND PUEBLO ALSO OF STONE. 185 
means of a canal, and passed in several smaller streams through their gar- 
dens. The men now engage in the work of cultivation. This is a sure 
sign of progress. 
Off the south wing of the building, and without it, are the remains of 
an additional building, large enough for twenty or thirty rooms on the 
ground, some part of which were, doubtless, carried up two or more stories 
high; but it is a mass of indistinet ruins, about which little can be said 
except that some of the rooms were unusually large. ‘This may have been 
the first building constructed, and the one occupied while the stone pueblo 
was being built. 
This outline plan is submitted with some hesitation, because the sketch 
from which it is taken was made in haste, and with no expectation of using it. 
It is but an approximation. Near the pueblo last described, and about five 
hundred feet northeast- 200! 
erly therefrom, isanother 
pueblo in two sections, 
Fig. 43, with a space 
about fifteen feet wide _ 
between them. They z 
00) 
may have been, and pro- 
bably were, connected 
and inhabited as one 
structure. Some of the 
: -) c Case Fic. 43.—Outline of a Stone Pueblo an Animas River. 
walls are still standing, 
and a number of the rooms in the ground story are well preserved, the 
ceilings still remaining in place. Although the structure is chiefly of 
stone like the last, some of the walls are of cobblestone and adobe 
mortar. The largest section seems to have had an open court in the 
center in the form of a parallelogram. This feature increased the 
difficulty of understanding the original form of the house and the 
arrangement of the rooms. The walls of the first, of parts of the second, 
and occasionally of parts of the third story, are still standing in places. 
Many of the rooms are small, as the measurements of the following 
rooms in the second story of the smallest building of the two will show: 
