Figures
3.1. Hopitutskwa as imagined as a pilgrimage route
3.2. Hopi Reservation in relation to Black Mesa, Glen Canyon, and US Highway 160
3.3. Hopi project participants and anthropologists at Glen Canyon
3.4. Toko’navi (Navajo Mountain)
3.5. Pictograph at ancient site in GLCA
3.7. Sample of places with Hopi names on Highway 160
4.1. British Honduras in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
4.2. Valentín Tosh and Ementerio Cantún of San José Nuevo
4.3. Fragment of incendiary rocket
4.5. Ceramics from San Pedro Siris
5.1. War Relocation Authority camps
5.2. Amache showing internee landscaping
5.5. Excavation crew chief and former internee volunteer talk
6.4. Architectural complex at Cholula
7.2. Census document from Kaua in 1841
8.2. Cieneguilla seen from San Juan
8.3. Map of location-based names
8.4. The first plane that landed in Cieneguilla
8.5. Map of Cieneguilla and San Juan Quiahije
8.6. Map of San Juan Quiahije, Cieneguilla, and Juquila
9.1. Map of the Norte Chico region
9.5. Photo of U-shaped layout of Caballete
9.6. Pageant at Fortress of Paramonga
10.1. Tropical forest at Taperinha
10.2. Floodplain and floodplain forest, Monte Alegre
10.3. Santarem period cultural black soil
10.4. Cavern of the painted rock
10.5. Paleo-Indian camp layer, Cavern of the Painted Rock
10.7. Cultural Forest, Marajó Island