Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Taos Pueblo' has mentioned 'Adobe' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Taos Pueblo's most prominent architectural feature is a multi-storied residential complex of reddish-brown adobe, built on either side of the Rio Pueblo.
Residential adobe complex, and Taos Mountain pictured on an old postcard, circa 1930-1945.
At the time of the Spaniards' initial contact, Hernando de Alvarado described the pueblo as having adobe houses built very close together and stacked five or six stories high.
[8] Prior to the arrival of Coronado, all Taos Pueblo walls were constructed using balls of adobe (clay) about the size of a 'soft ball', Coronado introduced the technique of the formed mud brick, this technique revolutionized adobe construction in the new world.
Coronado also changed the roof structure, to use 2" to 4" inch aspen saplings branches installed at a right angle to the Engelmann Spruce vigas, then 2" to 3" inches of adobe plaster was applied, topped off with up to half a meter of loose soil ( about 18" inches thick ) for insulation and structural strength.
It is made of adobe walls that are often several feet thick.
[19] The fund aims to hire more workers, especially those who are trained in traditional construction techniques for conservation work, as well as workshop assistants who help pueblo homeowners with maintenance of traditional adobe homes.
By the end of the conservation efforts, twenty-one adobe houses are expected to be restored.
This Pueblo Indian settlement in northern New Mexico, consisting of ceremonial buildings and facilities, and multi-storey adobe dwellings built in terraced tiers, exemplifies the living culture of a group of present-day Pueblo Indian people at Taos Pueblo.
The property includes the walled village with two multi-storey adobe structures, seven kivas (underground ceremonial chambers), the ruins of a previous pueblo, four middens, a track for traditional foot-races, the ruins of the first church built in the 1600s and the present-day San Geronimo Catholic Church.
The two main adobe complexes retain their traditional three-dimensional layout.
Adobe requires regular maintenance through periodic replastering, which is undertaken as needed by tribal members using traditional materials and methods.