Citations:Second Mesa

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English citations of Second Mesa

  • 2023 April 2, Arlyssa Becenti, “It's in the water: Hopi Marine veteran takes a chance and opens his dream coffee shop”, in The Arizona Republic[1]:
    Underneath Second Mesa is the N-aquifer, the most pristine and crucial water source for Hopi, which Peabody Coal pumped millions of gallons of to use for its coal slurry.
  • 2019, Aaron Levin, “The Heart of the Hopi”, in American Indian[2], volume 20, number 3:
    Hopi villages are located at the southwest ends of three highlands—called the First, Second and Third Mesas—that run down from the Colorado Plateau in northeastern Arizona.
  • 1963, Frank Waters & Oswald White Bear Fredericks, Book of the Hopi, New York City: Ballantine Books, published 1978, →ISBN, page xv:
    Their village of Oraibi is indisputably the oldest continuously occupied settlement in the United States. It and most of the other villages cling to six-hundred-foot-high escarpments of three rocky mesas rising abruptly out of the desert: Hano, Sichomovi, and Walpi on First Mesa; Mishongnovi, Shipaulovi, and Shongopovi on Second Mesa; Hotevilla, Bakavi, and Oraibi on Third Mesa; and Moencopi lying fifty miles ot the west.