| Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters - 1876 - 636 Seiten
...largest known building is called the " Palace." It stands near the River Chacamas? on a terraced pyrmidal foundation, forty feet high and three hundred and...at the base. The edifice itself is two hundred and twenty- eight feet long, one hundred and eighty wide, and t sventy-five feet high. It faces the east,... | |
| Wisconsin State Agricultural Society - 1878 - 512 Seiten
...largest known building is called the " Palace." It stands near the river Chacamas, on a terraced pyrmidal foundation, forty feet high and three hundred and...doorways on each side, with eleven at the ends. It is built of hewn stone laid in mortar of the best quality. It has four interior courts, the largest... | |
| Wisconsin State Agricultural Society - 1878 - 514 Seiten
...largest known building is called the " Palace." It stands near the river Chacamas, on a terraced pyrmidal foundation, forty feet high and three hundred and...doorways on each side, with eleven at the ends. It is built of hewn stone laid in mortar of the best quality. It has four interior courts, the largest... | |
| Alexander Dwight Anderson - 1884 - 170 Seiten
..."are the first which awakened attention to the existence of ancient and unknown cities in America." 1 The principal building, called the Palace, is thus...laid with admirable precision in mortar, which seems to have been of the best quality. A corridor nine feet wide, and roofed by a pointed arch, went round... | |
| 1884 - 902 Seiten
...visited and described fourteen edifices admirably built of hewed stone. The largest known building is two hundred and twenty-eight feet long, one hundred and eighty wide, and twenty-five feet high, built entirely of hewed stone, laid with admirable precision in excellent mortar, and it stood on a... | |
| Edward Thomas MacCarthy - 1920 - 436 Seiten
...feet long, by 260 feet broad at the base. The edifice itself is 228 feet long, 180 feet wide, and 25 feet high. It faces the east, and has fourteen doorways...laid with admirable precision in mortar, which seems to have been of the best quality. A corridor nine feet wide, and roofed by a pointed arch, went round... | |
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