There is a reference to the title at:
http://www.ellenskitchen.com/recipebox/beanspeas2.html
the Anasazi
Anasazi is a Navajo word for a native american group (not one tribe) that existed in the area before the Navajo and experienced a serious population decline before Europeans arrived. So they existed for many thousands of years. Their descendants are most likely the Hopi, so the culture of the so called Anasazi was probably similar to that of modern day Hopi. So when the Navajo arrived and called them Anasazi they probably called themselves Hopi as they do now.
Cattle Ranches
You would find it in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is located in Jackson Square on Bourbon Street. You just have to for the museum called Ancient Rocks and there it is. You would see all different kinds of Anasazi rocks with drawings on them.
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they called themselves Anasazi
The Anasazi were called the cliff dwellers or Hopi.
Wild "yellowhammer" cattle is a fictional reference in Patrick Smith's book which is called A Land to Remember. There is no breed commonly recognized as yellowhammer.
hotos
A group of cattle is called a herd.
A number of cattle is called a herd of cattle. A number of pigs is called also called a herd.
anasazi
It can be called a ranch or a cattle farm.
A Herd of Cattle is the collective noun you are looking for.
Cattle are not called steers, rather steers are called cattle, when loosely referring to more than one steer or indiscriminate bovine. Steers are cattle because cattle are a collection of bovines that include steers, as well as cows, heifers, bulls and calves. However, cattle can be called steers if these cattle are specifically castrated male bovines, but cattle should not be called steers if they are not specifically and only castrated male bovines.
The cars were called "Cattle Cars". They were called cattle cars because that's what cattle were put into when they had to travel.
A cattle stall is called a crib.