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Judd, Neil Merton, 1887-1976
Neil Judd
Neil Merton Judd
(October 27, 1887 – December 19, 1976) was an American
archaeologist
who studied under both
Byron Cummings
and
Edgar Lee Hewett
. He was the long-term curator of archaeology at the
United States National Museum
, part of the
Smithsonian Institution
. He is noted for his discovery and excavation of ruins left by the
Ancestral Pueblo People
(also known as
Anasazi
) of the
Four Corners
area, especially sites located within
Chaco Canyon
, a region located within the now-arid
San Juan Basin
of northwestern
New Mexico
. He headed the first federally backed archeological expeditions sent to Chaco Canyon, excavating the key ruins of
Pueblo Bonito
and Pueblo del Arroyo. He was also a member of the
1909 expedition that publicized Utah's Rainbow Bridge
. __NOTOC__
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The Bureau of American Ethnology ; a partial history
by
Judd, Neil Merton, 1887-1976
Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, 1967
[First edition].
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