Geology
The alluvial canyon floor slopes downward
to the northwest at a gentle grade of 30 feet (9.1 m) per mile (6 meters per
kilometer); it is bisected by the Chaco Wash, an arroyo that rarely bears
water. The canyon's main aquifers were too deep to be of use to ancient
Chacoans: only several smaller and shallower sources supported the small
springs that sustained them. Today, aside from occasional storm runoff coursing
through arroyos, substantial surface water—springs, pools, wells—is virtually
nonexistent.
After the Pangaean supercontinent sundered
during the Cretaceous period, the region became part of a shifting transition
zone between a shallow inland sea—the Western Interior Seaway—and a band of
plains and low hills to the west. A sandy and swampy coastline oscillated east
and west, alternately submerging and uncovering the area atop the present
Colorado Plateau that Chaco
Canyon now occupies.
The Chaco Wash flowed across the upper
strata of what is now the 400-foot (120 m) Chacra Mesa, cutting into it and
gouging out a broad canyon over the course of millions of years. The mesa
comprises sandstone and shale formations dating from the Late Cretaceous, which
are of the Mesa Verde formation. The canyon bottomlands were further eroded,
exposing Menefee Shale bedrock; this was subsequently buried under roughly 125
feet (38 m) of sediment. The canyon and mesa lie within the "Chaco
Core"—which is distinct from the wider Chaco Plateau, a flat region of
grassland with infrequent stands of timber. As the Continental Divide is only
15.5 miles (25 km) east of the canyon, geological characteristics and different
patterns of drainage differentiate these two regions both from each other and
from the nearby Chaco Slope, the Gobernador Slope, and the Chuska Valley .
History:
Archaic–Early Basketmakers
The first people in the San Juan Basin
were hunter-gatherers: the Archaic–Early Basketmaker people. These small bands
descended from nomadic Clovis big-game hunters
who arrived in the Southwest around 10,000 BC. More than 70 campsites from this
period, carbon-dated to the period 7000–1500 BC and mostly consisting of stone
chips and other leavings, were found in Atlatl Cave and elsewhere within Chaco
Canyon, with at least one of the sites located on the canyon floor near an
exposed arroyo. The Archaic–Early Basketmaker people were nomadic or
semi-nomadic hunter-gatherers who over time began making baskets to store
gathered plants. By the end of the period, some people cultivated food.
Excavation of their campsites and rock shelters has revealed that they made tools,
gathered wild plants, and killed and processed game. Slab-lined storage cists
indicate a change from a wholly nomadic lifestyle.
Ancestral Puebloans
By 900 BC, Archaic people lived at Atlatl Cave
and like sites. They left little evidence of their presence in Chaco Canyon .
By AD 490, their descendants, of the Late Basketmaker II Era, farmed lands
around Shabik'eshchee Village and other pit-house settlements at Chaco .
A small population of Basketmakers remained
in the Chaco Canyon area. The broad arc of their
cultural elaboration culminated around 800, during the Pueblo I Era, when they
were building crescent-shaped stone complexes, each comprising four to five
residential suites abutting subterranean kivas, large enclosed areas reserved
for rites. Such structures characterize the Early Pueblo People. By 850, the
Ancient Pueblo population—the "Anasazi", from a Ute term adopted by
the Navajo denoting the "ancient ones" or "enemy
ancestors"—had rapidly expanded: groups resided in larger, more densely
populated pueblos. Strong evidence attests to a canyon-wide turquoise
processing and trading industry dating from the 10th century. Around then, the
first section of Pueblo Bonito was built: a curved row of 50 rooms near its
present north wall.
The cohesive Chacoan system began
unravelling around 1140, perhaps triggered by an extreme fifty-year drought
that began in 1130; chronic climatic instability, including a series of severe
droughts, again struck the region between 1250 and 1450. Poor water management
led to arroyo cutting; deforestation was extensive and economically
devastating: timber for construction had to be hauled instead from outlying
mountain ranges such as the Chuska mountains, which are more than 50 miles (80
km) to the west. Outlying communities began to depopulate and, by the end of
the century, the buildings in the central canyon had been neatly sealed and
abandoned.
Some scholars suggest that violence and
warfare, perhaps involving cannibalism, impelled the evacuations. Hints of such
include dismembered bodies—dating from Chacoan times—found at two sites within
the central canyon. Yet Chacoan complexes showed little evidence of being
defended or defensively sited high on cliff faces or atop mesas. Only several
minor sites at Chaco have evidence of the
large-scale burning that would suggest enemy raids. Archaeological and cultural
evidence leads scientists to believe people from this region migrated south,
east, and west into the valleys and drainages of the Little Colorado River, the
Rio Puerco, and the Rio Grande .
Anthropologist Joseph Tainter deals at length with the structure and decline of
Chaco civilization in his 1988 study The
Collapse of Complex Societies.
Athabaskan succession
Numic-speaking peoples, such as the Ute and
Shoshone, were present on the Colorado Plateau beginning in the 12th century.
Nomadic Southern Athabaskan-speaking peoples, such as the Apache and Navajo,
succeeded the Pueblo
people in this region by the 15th century. In the process, they acquired
Chacoan customs and agricultural skills. Ute tribal groups also frequented the
region, primarily during hunting and raiding expeditions. The modern Navajo
Nation lies west of Chaco
Canyon , and many Navajo
live in surrounding areas.
Excavation and protection
The first documented trip through Chaco Canyon
was an 1823 expedition led by New Mexican governor José Antonio Vizcarra when
the area was under Mexican rule. He noted several large ruins in the canyon.
The American trader Josiah Gregg wrote about the ruins of Chaco Canyon ,
referring in 1832 to Pueblo Bonito as "built of fine-grit sandstone".
In 1849, a U.S. Army detachment passed through and surveyed the ruins,
following United States
acquisition of the Southwest with its victory in the Mexican War in 1848. The
canyon was so remote, however, that it was scarcely visited over the next 50
years. After brief reconnaissance work by Smithsonian scholars in the 1870s,
formal archaeological work began in 1896 when a party from the American Museum
of Natural History based in New York
City —the Hyde Exploring Expedition—began excavating
Pueblo Bonito. Spending five summers in the region, they sent over 60,000
artifacts back to New York
and operated a series of trading posts in the area.
In 1901 Richard Wetherill, who had worked
for the Hyde expedition, claimed a homestead of 161 acres (65 ha) that included
Pueblo Bonito, Pueblo del Arroyo, and Chetro Ketl. While investigating
Wetherill's land claim, federal land agent Samuel J. Holsinger detailed the
physical setting of the canyon and the sites, noted prehistoric road segments
and stairways above Chetro Ketl, and documented prehistoric dams and irrigation
systems. His report went unpublished and unheeded. It urged the creation of a
national park to safeguard Chacoan sites.
The next year, Edgar Lee Hewett, president
of New Mexico Normal
University (later renamed New Mexico Highlands University ),
mapped many Chacoan sites. Hewett and others helped enact the Federal
Antiquities Act of 1906, the first U.S.
law to protect relics; it was, in effect, a direct consequence of Wetherill's
controversial activities at Chaco . The Act
also authorized the President to establish national monuments: on March 11,
1907, Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed Chaco
Canyon National
Monument . Wetherill relinquished his land claims.
In 1920, the National Geographic Society
began an archaeological examination of Chaco Canyon
and appointed Neil Judd, then 32, to head the project. After a reconnaissance
trip that year, Judd proposed to excavate Pueblo Bonito, the largest ruin at Chaco . Beginning in 1921, Judd spent seven field seasons
at Chaco . Living and working conditions were
spartan at best. In his memoirs, Judd noted dryly that "Chaco Canyon
has its limitations as a summer resort". By 1925, Judd's excavators had
removed 100,000 short tons of overburden, using a team of "35 or more
Indians, ten white men, and eight or nine horses". Judd's team found only
69 hearths in the ruin, a puzzling discovery as winters are cold at Chaco . Judd sent A. E. Douglass more than 90 specimens
for tree-ring dating, then in its infancy. At that time, Douglass had only a
"floating" chronology. it was not until 1929 that a Judd-led team
found the "missing link". Most of the beams used at Chaco
were cut between 1033 and 1092, the height of construction there.
In 1949, the University
of New Mexico deeded over adjoining
lands to form an expanded Chaco
Canyon National
Monument . In return, the university maintained
scientific research rights to the area. By 1959, the National Park Service had
constructed a park visitor center, staff housing, and campgrounds. As a
historic property of the National Park Service, the National Monument was
listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966. In
1971, researchers Robert Lister and James Judge established the "Chaco Center ,"
a division for cultural research that functioned as a joint project between the
University of New Mexico and the National Park
Service. A number of multi-disciplinary research projects, archaeological
surveys, and limited excavations began during this time. The Chaco Center
extensively surveyed the Chacoan roads, well-constructed and strongly
reinforced thoroughfares radiating from the central canyon.
The richness of the cultural remains at
park sites led to the expansion of the small National Monument into the Chaco
Culture National Historical Park on December 19, 1980, when an additional
13,000 acres (5,300 ha) were added to the protected area. In 1987, the park was
designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. To safeguard Chacoan sites on
adjacent Bureau of Land Management and Navajo Nation lands, the Park Service
developed the multi-agency Chaco Culture Archaeological Protection Site
program. These initiatives have identified more than 2,400 archeological sites
within the current park's boundaries; only a small percentage of these have
been excavated.
Sites
The Chacoans built their complexes along a
9-mile (14 km) stretch of canyon floor, with the walls of some structures
aligned cardinally and others aligned with the 18.6-year cycle of minimum and
maximum moonrise and moonset.
Central canyon
The central portion of the canyon contains
the largest Chacoan complexes. The most studied is Pueblo Bonito. Covering
almost 2 acres (0.81 ha) and comprising at least 650 rooms, it is the largest
great house; in parts of the complex, the structure was four stories high. The
builders' use of core-and-veneer architecture and multi-story construction
necessitated massive masonry walls up to 3 feet (91 cm) thick. Pueblo Bonito is
divided into two sections by a wall precisely aligned to run north-south,
bisecting the central plaza. A great kiva was placed on either side of the
wall, creating a symmetrical pattern common to many Chacoan great houses. The
scale of the complex, upon completion, rivaled that of the Colosseum. Nearby is
Pueblo del Arroyo, which was founded between AD 1050 and 1075 and completed in
the early 12th century; it sits at a drainage outlet known as South Gap.
Casa Rinconada, isolated from the other
central sites, sits to the south side of Chaco
Wash , adjacent to a Chacoan road
leading to a set of steep stairs that reached the top of Chacra Mesa. Its sole
kiva stands alone, with no residential or support structures whatsoever; it did
once have a 39-foot (12 m) passageway leading from the underground kiva to
several above-ground levels. Chetro Ketl, located near Pueblo Bonito, bears the
typical 'D'-shape of many other central complexes. Begun between 1020 and 1050,
its 450–550 rooms shared one great kiva. Experts estimate that it took 29,135
man-hours to erect Chetro Ketl alone; Hewett estimated that it took the wood of
5,000 trees and 50 million stone blocks.
Kin Kletso ("Yellow House") was a
medium-sized complex located 0.5 miles (800 m) west of Pueblo Bonito. It shows
strong evidence of construction and occupation by Pueblo
peoples from the northern San
Juan Basin .
Its rectangular shape and design is related to the Pueblo II cultural group,
rather than the Pueblo III style or its Chacoan variant. It contains 55 rooms,
four ground-floor kivas, and a two-story cylindrical tower that may have
functioned as a kiva or religious center. Evidence of an obsidian-processing
industry was discovered near the village, which was erected between 1125 and
1130.
Pueblo Alto is a great house of 89 rooms
located on a mesa top near the middle of Chaco Canyon ,
0.6 miles (1 km) from Pueblo Bonito; it was begun between AD 1020 and 1050
during a wider building boom throughout the canyon. Its location made the
community visible to most of the inhabitants of the San Juan Basin ;
indeed, it was only 2.3 miles (3.7 km) north of Tsin Kletzin, on the opposite
side of the canyon. The community was the center of a bead- and
turquoise-processing industry that influenced the development of all villages
in the canyon; chert tool production was common. Research at the site conducted
by archaeologist Tom Windes suggests only a handful of families, perhaps as few
as five to twenty, lived in the complex; this may imply that Pueblo Alto served
a primarily non-residential role. Another great house, Nuevo Alto, was built on
the north mesa near Pueblo Alto; it was founded in the late 12th century, a
time when the Chacoan population was declining.
Outliers
Another cluster of great houses lies in Chaco 's northern reaches; among the largest is Casa
Chiquita ("Small House"), a village built in the 1080s, when, in a
period of ample rainfall, Chacoan culture was expanding. Its layout featured a
smaller, squarer profile; it also lacked the open plazas and separate kivas of
its predecessors. Larger, squarer blocks of stone were used in the masonry;
kivas were designed in the northern Mesa Verdean tradition. Two miles down the
canyon is Peñasco Blanco ("White Bluff"), an arc-shaped compound
built atop the canyon's southern rim in five distinct stages between 900 and
1125. A nearby cliff painting (the "Supernova Platograph") may record
the sighting of the SN 1054 supernova on July 5, 1054.
Hungo Pavi, located 1 mi (1.6 km) from Una
Vida, measured 872 feet (266 m) in circumference. Initial probes revealed 72
ground-level rooms, with structures reaching four stories in height; one large
circular kiva has been identified. Kin Nahasbas, built in either the 9th or 10th
century, is sited slightly north of Una Vida, positioned at the foot of the
north mesa. Limited excavation of it has taken place. Tsin Kletzin
("Charcoal Place"), a compound located on the Chacra Mesa and
positioned above Casa Rinconada, is 2.3 miles (3.7 km) due south of Pueblo
Alto, on the opposite side of the canyon. Nearby is Weritos Dam, a massive
earthen structure that scientists believe provided Tsin Kletzin with all of its
domestic water. The dam worked by retaining stormwater runoff in a reservoir.
Massive amounts of silt accumulated during flash floods would have forced the
residents to regularly rebuild the dam and dredge the catchment area.
Deeper in the canyon, Una Vida ("One
Life") is one of the three oldest great houses; construction began around
900. Comprising at least two stories and 124 rooms, it shares an arc or
"D"-shaped design with its contemporaries, Peñasco Blanco and Pueblo
Bonito, but has a unique "dog leg" addition made necessary by
topography. It is located in one of the canyon's major side drainages, near Gallo Wash ,
and was massively expanded after 930. Wijiji ("black greasewood"),
comprising just over one hundred rooms, is the smallest of the great houses.
Built between 1110 and 1115, it was the last Chacoan great house to be
constructed. Somewhat isolated within the narrow wash, it is positioned 1 mi
(1.6 km) from neighboring Una Vida. Directly north are communities even more
remote: Salmon Ruins and Aztec Ruins, sited on the San Juan
and Animas Rivers
near Farmington ,
were built during a thirty-year wet period commencing in 1100. Some 60 miles
(97 km) directly south of Chaco Canyon, on the Great South Road, lies another
cluster of outlying communities. The largest, Kin Nizhoni, stands atop a 7,000-foot
(2,100 m) mesa surrounded by marshy bottomlands.
Casamero Pueblo is located on McKinley
County Road 19, near Tecolote Mesa, a red sandstone mesa. It was connected to
its nearby outlier, Andrews Ranch, by a Chacoan road. Chaco Canyon ,
Aztec Ruins, Salmon Ruins, and Casamero Pueblo are on the Trail of the Ancients
Scenic Byway.
Ruins
Great houses
Immense complexes known as "great
houses" embodied worship at Chaco . The
Chacoans used masonry techniques unique for their time, and their building
constructions lasted decades and even centuries. As architectural forms evolved
and centuries passed, the houses kept several core traits. Most apparent is
their sheer bulk; complexes averaged more than 200 rooms each, and some
enclosed up to 700 rooms. Individual rooms were substantial in size, with
higher ceilings than Anasazi works of preceding periods. They were
well-planned: vast sections or wings erected were finished in a single stage,
rather than in increments. Houses generally faced the south, and plaza areas
were almost always girt with edifices of sealed-off rooms or high walls. Houses
often stood four or five stories tall, with single-story rooms facing the
plaza; room blocks were terraced to allow the tallest sections to compose the
pueblo's rear edifice. Rooms were often organized into suites, with front rooms
larger than rear, interior, and storage rooms or areas.
Ceremonial structures known as kivas were
built in proportion to the number of rooms in a pueblo. One small kiva was
built for roughly every 29 rooms. Nine complexes each hosted an oversized great
kiva, each up to 63 feet (19 m) in diameter. "T"-shaped doorways and
stone lintels marked all Chacoan kivas. Though simple and compound walls were
often used, great houses were primarily constructed of core-and-veneer walls:
two parallel load-bearing walls comprising dressed, flat sandstone blocks bound
in clay mortar were erected. Gaps between walls were packed with rubble,
forming the wall's core. Walls were then covered in a veneer of small sandstone
pieces, which were pressed into a layer of binding mud. These surfacing stones
were often placed in distinctive patterns. The Chacoan structures altogether
required the wood of 200,000 coniferous trees, mostly hauled—on foot—from mountain
ranges up to 70 miles (110 km) away.
The meticulously designed buildings
composing the larger Chacoan complexes did not emerge until around AD 1030. The
Chacoans melded pre-planned architectural designs, astronomical alignments,
geometry, landscaping, and engineering into ancient urban centers of unique
public architecture. Researchers have concluded that the complex may have had a
relatively small residential population, with larger groups assembling only
temporarily for annual ceremonies. Smaller sites, apparently more residential
in character, are scattered near the great houses in and around Chaco . The canyon itself runs along one of the lunar
alignment lines, suggesting the location was originally chosen for its
astronomical significance. If nothing else, this allowed alignment with several
other key structures in the canyon.
Turquoise was very important to the people
of Chaco . Around 200,000 pieces of turquoise
have been excavated from the ruins at Chaco Canyon ,
and workshops for local manufacture of turquoise beads have been found. The
turquoise was used locally for grave goods, burials and ceremonial offerings.
Over 15,000 turquoise beads and pendants accompanied two burials at Pueblo
Bonito.
Around this time, the extended Ancestral
Puebloan (Anasazi) community experienced a population and construction boom.
Throughout the 10th century, Chacoan building techniques spread from the canyon
to neighboring regions. By AD 1115 at least 70 outlying pueblos of Chacoan provenance
had been built within the 25,000 square miles (65,000 km2) composing the San
Juan Basin. Experts speculate the function of these compounds, some large
enough to be considered great houses in their own right. Some suggest they may
have been more than agricultural communities, perhaps functioning as trading
posts or ceremonial sites.
Thirty such outliers spread across 65,000
square miles (170,000 km2) are connected to the central canyon and to one
another by an enigmatic web of six Chacoan road systems. Extending up to 60
miles (97 km) in generally straight routes, they appear to have been
extensively surveyed and engineered. Their depressed and scraped caliche beds
reach 30 feet (9.1 m) wide; earthen berms or rocks, at times composing low
walls, delimit their edges. When necessary, the roads deploy steep stone
stairways and rock ramps to surmount cliffs and other obstacles. Though their
purpose may never be certain, archaeologist Harold Gladwin noted that nearby
Navajo believe that the Anasazi built the roads to transport timber;
archaeologist Neil Judd offered a similar hypothesis.
Archaeoastronomy
Sun Dagger
Two whorl-shaped etchings near the top of
Fajada Butte compose the "Sun Dagger" petroglyph, itself tucked
behind the eponymous rock panels of the "Three-Slab Site". They are
symbolically focal.
It consists of two spirals: one principal
and one ancillary. The latter left-hand spiral captured both spring and fall
equinoxes; its artifice was revealed by a descending spear of light, itself
filtered through the slabs, that shined upon it and split it in two. The former
and larger whorl to its right was lit by the titular "sun dagger",
which bisected it through another interplay of slab and sun. It struck it, brilliantly,
as the summer sun attains its solstice midday peak. The Chacoans were said to
be marking, as artist, "Sun Dagger" discoverer, and leading proponent
Anna Sofaer puts it, "the middle of time". Each turn of the 9.25-turn
large spiral was found to mark one year in the 18.6-year "lunar excursion
cycle" of the rising mid-winter full moon. This record is kept by a
slab-cast lunar shadow whose edge strikes in succession each ring. As the full
"minimum moon" closest to the winter solstice rises, the shadow's
edge precisely strikes the center of the larger spiral; it steps outward year
by year, ring by ring, until it strikes the outermost edge of it during the
full "maximum moon", again in mid-winter.
Fajada Butte bears five other
petroglyphs—including a carving of a "rattlesnake", other spirals,
and a rectangle—that are conspicuously lit by contrasts between sunbeams and
shadows during equinoxes or solstices. Public access to the butte was curtailed
when, in 1989, erosion from modern foot traffic was found to be responsible for
one of the three screening slabs at the "Sun Dagger" site shifting
out of its ancient position; the assemblage of stones has thus lost some of its
former spatial and temporal precision as a solar and lunar calendar. In 1990
the screens were stabilized and placed under observation, but the wayward slab
was not moved back into its original orientation.
Alignments
ome parties have advanced the theory that
at least 12 of the 14 principal Chacoan complexes were sited and aligned in
coordination, and that each was oriented along axes that mirrored the passing
of the Sun and Moon at visually pivotal times. The first great house known to
evince fastidious proportioning and alignment was Casa Rinconada: the twinned
"T"-shaped portals of its 10-metre (33 ft) radius great kiva were
north-south collinear, and axes joining opposing windows passed within 10
centimetres (4 in) of its center. The great houses of Pueblo Bonito and Chetro
Ketl were found by the "Solstice Project" and the U.S. National
Geodetic Survey to be sited along a precisely east-west line, an axis that
captures the passage of the equinox sun. The lines perpendicularly bisecting
their principal walls are aligned north-south, implying a possible intent to
mirror the equinox midday. Pueblo Alto and Tsin Kletsin are also north-south
aligned. These two axes form an inverted cross when viewed from above; its
northbound reach is extended another 35 miles (56 km) past Pueblo Alto by the
ramrod-straight Great North Road, a pilgrimage route that modern-day Pueblo
Indians believe to be an allusion to myths surrounding their arrival from the
distant north.
Two shared-latitude but diametrically
opposed complexes, Pueblo Pintado and Kin Bineola, are located some 15 miles
(24 km) from the core buildings of the central canyon. Each lie on a path from
the central canyon that is collinear with the passage and setting of the full
mid-winter "minimum moon", which recurs every 18.6 years. Two other
complexes that are less distant from Pueblo Bonito, Una Vida and Peñasco
Blanco, share an axis collinear with the passage of the full "maximum
moon". The terms "minimum" and "maximum" refer to the
azimuthal extreme points in the lunar excursion cycle, or the swings in
direction relative to true north that the setting full moon exhibits. It takes
roughly 9.25 years for the rising or setting full moon nearest to winter
solstice to proceed from its maximum azimuthal north, or "maximum extremum",
to its southernmost azimuth, known as "minimum extremum".
Collections
The Chaco Museum Collection is primarily an
archaeological research collection documenting the full range of prehistoric
and historic occupation of Chaco
Canyon , from ca. 2900 BC to
the mid-1900s. The emphasis is on the Anasazi occupation of the Canyon, ca. AD
1 - 1250, the cultural period the park was created to preserve. The museum
collection is divided into two components: objects and archives. The collection
contains over 1 million artifacts and nearly 900,000 archival records.
The Chaco Collection is one of 374
collections in the National Park Service museum system. By law, all cultural
and natural collections from the park must remain the property of the federal
government and be accessioned into the museum collection.
Preservation
The massive stone structures in Chaco are over 1,000 years old and seem timeless and able
to withstand the elements.But like other historic buildings, they require
constant and appropriate care.Wind, summer monsoon rains, snow, and extreme
daily freeze-thaw cycles all take their toll on these fragile architectural
monuments. Deterioration begins with the loss of roof coverings and wall
plaster, then entire roofs collapse, foundations are threatened by pooling
water, and walls begin to crumble.Collapsing elements accumulate around the
bases of the walls.These fallen timbers, stones, and mortar effectively armor
the ground floors of the buildings.The rooms fill in and the structures begin
to stabilize themselves.Eventually, these buildings will turn into mounds of
rubble, and although deterioration continues, it is at a much slower rate, and
the intact structures beneath and within the rubble are effectively preserved.
There are more than 3,000 architectural
structures in the park. At ancient sites such as Chaco ,
it is not appropriate to rebuild, restore, or in any way re-create these
resources by reconstructing missing elements, such as adding roofs or
rebuilding upper stories. If written accounts, blue prints, or other records of
the original construction existed, then reconstruction might be an option, but
none exist for these ancient structures. Therefore, decisions about which
treatments are the most appropriate and effective are based on:
National and international standards for
historic preservation
Condition of the structures
Views and opinions of culturally affiliated
tribes
Scientific research potential
Education and visitor value
Preservation efforts at Chaco
began almost immediately after archaeological excavation of some of the
structures at the turn of the 20th century and into the 1920s. More formal and
comprehensive stabilization began in the late 1930s, when the National Park
Service, in conjunction with the Civilian Conservation Corps Indian Division
(CCC-ID), employed local Navajo men to work at the sites. These crews were
trained in experimental techniques for stabilizing and repairing deteriorating
walls. They learned how to shape replacement building stones and create proper
mortars. Some of the current NPS preservation staff members are 3rd and 4th
generation specialists and are known throughout the region for their unmatched
abilities to evaluate and solve structural problems, repair delicate masonry,
and understand how these buildings survive.
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