Back to Show
In the America's with David Yetman
Ancient peoples of the Colorado Plateau
Season 10
Episode 1002
More than a thousand years before the arrival of Europeans in the southwestern U.S. native peoples were establishing their occupation of the Colorado Plateau, learning how to live in a climate where winters were bitter and summers torrid. And they left behind proof of their scientific and technological accomplishments in plain sight—with a little assistance from contemporary archaeologists.
Support Provided By
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
The Butantan Institute in São Paulo houses venomous creatures that protect human lives.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
The arrival of crowds and developers threaten unusual features of Baja California.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Native cultures view snakes as spiritually significant elements of nature.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Our largest national park has become an important natural laboratory.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
The once-great Colorado River faces a dried-out future as more rely on its resources.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Phantom Ranch, accessible only by trail, is the Grand Canyon's sole permanent settlement.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Boating through the Grand Canyon provides a setting for reflection on the Colorado River.
26:46
One of the world's greatest cities deals with falling water tables and sinking earth.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Explore the never-ending race to survive climate changes in the Galapagos Islands.
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Travel along the 500-mile-long Blue Ridge Parkway, part of our national park system.