Adam Schallau Photography

Show Navigation
  • Stock Photography
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Search
  • About
  • Credits
  • Contact
  • Cart

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 17 images found }

Loading ()...

  • At Wupatki National Monument in northern Arizona is Wukoki Pueblo, the ruins of a dwelling once occupied by the Sinagua people and first inhabited sometime around 500 AD.
    Wupatki-Wukoki-Pueblo-8087.tif
  • A cliff dwelling of the Ancestral Puebloans, Cedar Mesa, Utah.
    Cedar-Mesa-Ruin-4398.jpg
  • Ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi) cliff dwelling and granaries. Cedar Mesa, Utah.
    Moon-House-Ruin-4379.jpg
  • Spruce Tree House, an Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwelling at Mesa Verde National Park.
    Mesa Verde-Spruce-Tree-6091.jpg
  • Bandelier-4757.jpg
  • A trio of Ancestral Puebloan granaries. Cedar Mesa, Utah.
    Moon-House-Ruin-4368.jpg
  • A visitor to Bandelier National Monument takes in the beauty of New Mexico.
    Bandelier-Person-Kiva-4775.jpg
  • Bandelier-4759.jpg
  • An Anasazi granary. Cedar Mesa, Utah.
    Moon-House-Ruin-4370.jpg
  • An Ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi) tower in southern Utah viewed through a doorway.
    Tower-House-Ruin-4109.jpg
  • The interior of an Ancestral Puebloan ruin, Cedar Mesa, Utah.
    Moon-House-Ruin-4419.jpg
  • Bandelier-4729.jpg
  • Bandelier-4727.jpg
  • Granary and sandstone ceiling at Moon House Ruin, an Ancestral Puebloan site on Utah's Cedar Mesa.
    Moon-House-Ruin-4349.jpg
  • Wukoki Pueblo, an Ancestral Puebloan ruin at Wupatki National Monument in northern Arizona.
    Wupatki-Wukoki-Pueblo-8092.jpg
  • A visitor to Bandelier National Monument in New Mexico climbs a wooden ladder to reach an Anasazi cliff dwelling.
    Bandelier-Person-Ladder-4798.jpg
  • Hopi House on the South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. From the National Park Service website..."The Hopi House (1905) is a large, multi-story building of stone masonry, shaped and built like a Hopi pueblo. When Mary Colter was commissioned in 1904 by the Fred Harvey Company to design an “Indian Arts Building” as the hospitality giant liked to call their souvenir shops, the talented and stubborn architect was eager to accept the challenge. She was one of just a few women in a male-dominated field, and “lady-like” wasn’t in her vocabulary. Neither were the words “traditional European influences.” Colter’s vision extended well beyond that. Inspired by the natural beauty of the Grand Canyon, she wanted to design something that appeared native, natural and timeless.<br />
<br />
Hopi House, modeled after the 10,000 year-old pueblo dwellings of the Hopi village in Old Oraibi, was a radically new experience for tourists. Colter’s attention to detail and human history created a strange and exotic world they could easily and safely enjoy."
    Grand-Canyon-Hopi-House-1993.tif