1. Archeologists say the site is a campground of Spanish explorer Francisco Vasquez Coronado. 2. As I continued, Comanche Peak, a landmark used by Indians and early Spanish explorers, appeared on the left. 3. According to legend, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon spent a lot of time schlepping around the Florida jungles looking for a fountain whose waters bestowed eternal youth. 4. Early Spanish explorers wrote about them in South America, and Chinese legends tell of them, too. 5. For the most part, Spanish explorers gave northern Arizona a pass, leaving the Yavapai and Pima Indians in peace. 6. Historians point out that Indians and early Spanish explorers were swimming in the heavenly springs hundreds of years before that. 7. It dates from dim ages past when Indians alternated between telling Spanish explorers about gold and about monsters. 8. It did not disappear in Western Europe until late in the Middle Ages, and was still present in the Western Hemisphere when the early Spanish explorers arrived. 9. Like its namesake, intrepid Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza this zoysia is a juggernaut among turfs, according to Cockerham. 10. Like Spanish explorers who were lured by the promise of gold, they went south of the border in search of riches. |