Cliff Palace
On the Mesa Top Loop
Drive, Ranger-Guided Tour Only, a fee is required.
[ Cliff Palace Tour ]
[ Cliff Palace's Discovery
]
[ The Anasazi ] [ Fewkes
Canyon ]

Cliff Palace is the *largest* cliff dwelling in North
America!
Open from 8:00 A.M. to sunset, the Cliff Palace Loop drive takes you
past mesa top sites and overlooks to cliff dwellings in the canyon below.
You may visit one of two cliff dwellings by guided tour, Cliff Palace
or Balcony House. These sites can only be reached by a one-hour ranger-guided
tour. You must purchase tickets for tours at the Far View Visitor Center
before going to the site. Rangers begin the Cliff Palace tour from the
overlook at the end of the entrance trail.
Often visitors to the park look at the size of these doorways and wonder
about the size of the people who once lived here. An average man was
about 5'4" to 5'5" (163cm) tall, while an average woman was 5' to 5'1"
(152cm). If you compare them with European people of the same time period,
they would have been about the same size. Compared with today, the Ancestral
Puebloan's average life span was relatively short, due, in part, to
the high infant mortality rate. Most people lived an average of 32-34
years, however some people did live into their 50s and 60s. Approximately
50% of the children died before they reached the age of 5.
Sandstone, mortar and wooden beams were the three primary construction
materials. The Ancestral Puebloans shaped each sandstone block using
harder stones collected from nearby river beds. The mortar between the
blocks is a mixture of local soil, water and ash. Fitted in the mortar
are tiny pieces of stone called "chinking". Chinking stones fill in
the gaps within the mortar and added structural stability to the walls.
Over the surface of many walls, the people placed a thin coating of
paint, called plaster, the first things to erode with time.