
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Two young Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico participate in Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Two young Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico participate in Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Hornos, or ovens used to bake bread, are lined up in a row in the Zuni Pueblo in west central New Mexico. In the background is Dowa Yalanne (Corn Mountain) where the Zuni people fled to escape Coronado's expedition in 1540.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: Members of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, perform in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico wear traditional Zuni ceremonial attire and turquoise jewelry at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The beautiful sandstone rock formations near the Zuni Pueblo create colorful landscapes when mixed with the greens and yellows of fall vegetation. Pictured here are Entrada, Dakota and Zuni Sandstones with juniper shrubs and rabbitbrush.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A Native-American teenage boy from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico dances at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Native-American dancers from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico perform at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Native-American dancers from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico perform at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: Members of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, perform in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico wears traditional Zuni turquoise jewelry at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
mobilestock horizontal composition with retro color treatment and lens flare on dirt road. ojito wilderness, new mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico wears Zuni turquoise jewelry at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Pair of rock cairns marking the way along the Zuni-Acoma trail through the El Malpais lava flow near Grants, New Mexico.
Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico, United States - July 11 2009: Zuni Mission of Our Lady of Guadalupe with Graveyard.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: A member of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talks with spectators after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: A member of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talks with family members after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: Members of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, perform in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Native-American dancers from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico perform at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Vintage engraving of housing and weaving and pottery of the Zuni people. The Zuni are a federally recognized Native American tribe, one of the Pueblo peoples. Most live in the Pueblo of Zuni on the Zuni River, a tributary of the Little Colorado River, in western New Mexico. Ferdinand Hirts Geographische Bildertafeln,1886.
Fluorescent pink & deep purple sunset. Zuni, NM
Hornos, or ovens used to bake bread, are lined up in a row in the Zuni Pueblo in west central New Mexico. These two have unusual covers: one is an oven shelf attached to wood and the other is an actual oven door!
Santa Fe, New Mexico: Members of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talk with spectators after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A young Native-American girl from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, wearing her Miss Zuni Princess crown, dances at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: A member of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talks with spectators after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Gallup, United States - November 29, 2014: The sign marking the entrance to Gallup, New Mexico is made of mosaic tile. This high desert city is famous for a number of reasons: it rests along historic Route 66 with several businesses and buildings standing that survive from their heyday, and Gallup is known as headquarters of Native American jewelry markets.
Accurate outline vector map in gray background prepared by a map expert.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A young Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, wearing her Miss Zuni crown, talks with participants at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A young Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, wearing her Miss Zuni crown, participates in a traditional Native dance at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Two Pueblo Indian pots. Wedding vase and smaller vase.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: A member of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talks with spectators after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Native American Pueblo of Zuni, New Mexico. Illustration published in The New Eclectic History of the United States by M. E. Thalheimer (American Book Company; New York, Cincinnati, and Chicago) in 1881 and 1890. Copyright expired; artwork is in Public Domain.
Gallup, United States - November 29, 2014: One of the signs marking the entrance to Gallup, New Mexico is red, white and blue. This high desert city is famous for a number of reasons: it rests along historic Route 66 with several businesses and buildings standing that survive from their heyday, and Gallup is known as headquarters of Native American jewelry markets.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: Two Native-American drummers from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico perform at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A young Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, wearing her Miss Zuni crown, talks with participants at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, NM - October 8, 2018: A Native-American woman from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico wears Zuni turquoise jewelry at Indigenous Peoples Day in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: A member of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico talks with spectators after performing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Santa Fe, New Mexico: Members of a traditional Native-American dance group from Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, perform in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Indigenous Peoples Day, also known as Columbus Day.
Gallup, United States - November 29, 2014: The sign marking the entrance to Gallup, New Mexico is made of mosaic tile, and in the foreground stands a giant Native American ceramic pot. This high desert city is famous for a number of reasons: it rests along historic Route 66 with several businesses and buildings standing that survive from their heyday, and Gallup is known as headquarters of Native American jewelry markets.
Portrait of a Zuni girl. Photograph engraving published 1893. Copyright expired; artwork is in Public Domain.