Showing posts with label Canyon of the Ancients NM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canyon of the Ancients NM. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Walls of Escalante Pueblo

Walls
This image was taken from the other side of the pueblo, looking back in the direction I took the image in my last post from. The light that day was perfect. The large fluffy clouds not only added some interest to the sky but also filtered the sun light just right to really make all the details in this image pop. The details and the relationship between the walls and overgrown grasses and shrubs was my main focus for this image so even though the colors popped quite nicely in the perfect light as well, I converted this one to black and white. That way, the colors couldn't dominate the details.

And that's it from Escalante Pueblo and the Anasazi Heritage Center. I'm currently working on finishing the processing on my Mesa Verde photos and can't wait to start sharing them!

OK, one more image from Escalante Pueblo:
A 2 row, many-many image panoramic of Escalante Pueblo

Monday, January 24, 2011

Escalante Pueblo Vertical Panorama

The remains of Escalante Pueblo overlook the surrounding area.
This four frame panorama of Escalante Pueblo helps show what made this hill top location a perfect location for a village. The hill itself isn't large enough to be self contained (no arable land or water source) but both are readily available nearby. The reservoir visible in the distance (upper left, just below the horizon) is a modern construction, however it would not have been built where there wasn't already a sizable water source. If you look closely, there are modern buildings in the distance (to the right of the reservoir). Many of these are farms and ranches, indicating good arable land.

Additionally, many scholars theorize that the downfall of the Ancestral Puebloan civilization was accompanied with violent warfare between neighbors fighting over dwindling resources in a drought. A hill top location would have made it much easier to defend and detect incoming threats.

And let's not discount the view. It's easy to imagine that even eight hundred years ago, people would have appreciated a view as amazing as this one.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Anasazi Heritage Center & the Escalante Pueblo

Time to move on from my Sand Canyon Trail images. There's still plenty more to see in the gallery, and it's not that the rest aren't worth a write up, it's just that I want to move on to other parts from my Colorado trip, so be sure to check out the gallery for other Sand Canyon images.

Layers
My hike along Sand Canyon Trail didn't take as long as I had planned for, so rather than sitting around, I drove up the road a little ways to the Anasazi Heritage Center (that's a link to their site, click here for my image of the center) in nearby Dolores, Colorado. If you're ever in the area, and have an interest in the Ancestral Puebloans, stop by this museum. It only takes a $3 donation to get in, is one of the best museums for the Ancestral Puebloans around and has a couple small pueblo ruins on the grounds.

The smaller of the two pueblos, Dominguez Pueblo, sits right out front of the museum but isn't extraordinarily interesting on its own. I'm not sure I even took a photo of it. If I did, it wasn't interesting enough when I reviewed it at home to save it from the trash bin. Escalante Pueblo on the other hand, is a bit more interesting. A half mile trail of switchbacks leads from the Anasazi Heritage Center uphill to Escalante Pueblo and offers 360 degree views of the surrounding area, but I'll get into that more with the next image.

This image has been my desktop background at work for a while now. There's just something pleasing to me about it. The more I look at it, the more I enjoy the layers within it, the scrub bush in the foreground, the v-shape of the walls, curve of the hill and the brilliant blue cloud filled sky. Definitely a favorite from the trip (I'm pretty picky about my desktop backgrounds, so the fact that this one has lasted so long is proof that I like it)!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Sand Canyon Trail | Saddlehorn Hamlet in Color

A close up and panoramic view of Saddlehorn Pueblo
Another panoramic image of Saddlehorn Pueblo. This time I got up close and took 6 images horizontally then stitched them together in Photoshop. There's some noticeable distortion from being so close to the structure when taking this image but I like it anyway! The walls were a bit straighter in person than they appear here, but I like the feeling that they're coming out to meet you.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Sand Canyon Trail | Saddlehorn Hamlet B&W

Saddlehorn Hamlet in Black & White
This pueblo is known as Saddlehorn Hamlet and it's the next major stop along the Sand Canyon Trail after the Unnamed Ruin. As you can probably guess, the pueblo got its name from the unique rock formation above it. This area is composed mostly of sandstone, which makes for some really cool shapes in the rocks. The soft, porous nature of the sandstone in the area made these somewhat iconic alcoves possible for the Ancestral Puebloans to build their homes in.

This image started out as 6 individual frames that were "stitched" together in Photoshop and made for an enormous vertical image. However the sky and immediate foreground were largely uninteresting, so I opted to go with the square crop on it and lose those areas.

I've got a couple more images from Sand Canyon to come, then it's on to the Mesa Verde images!!!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Sand Canyon Trail | Unnamed Ruin

As the new year begins, I again have to acknowledge that I've let my blog sort of wither away. As the homepage for my site, it's just not acceptable to go nearly 2 full months without a new post. Yes, it was an extremely busy 2 months (there was a new promotion at work and an engagement to my wonderful gal, Kristen just to name a couple big things), but still. That said, I've got a few things planned for my site to make sure it doesn't keep up like this! Stay tuned for updates! In the meantime, I probably won't write quite as much about each image, not that I was particularly verbose about many, but hopefully just a few words will be easier to spit out and get the images coming faster!



A small unnamed ruin along Sand Canyon Trail
Considering the size of this small ruin, I took an absolute ton of photos of it. More can be seen in my Sand Canyon gallery and there are several others on my hard drive. Maybe it's because I found it so early on along the trail. I wasn't tired or overheated yet so I took my time and played around.

This sign is a good reminder to all when visiting ruins of this type, especially in a less developed, less preserved area such as Sand Canyon. These structures are 800+ years old and have withstood the elements without maintenance for much of that time. Even if you're "just going to take a quick photo" or you're "not going to touch anything," please, keep your distance. One wrong move and this structure that has survived for centuries could be gone in an instant.

Future generations thank you for your caution!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Sand Canyon Trail | Castle Rock Pueblo

A lone standing wall is all that remains of Castle Rock Pueblo.
From the Sand Canyon South Trailhead parking lot, where my little Kia was parked in this image, the trail leads you up a sloping stretch of slickrock and around a sandstone butte known as Battle Rock. That's Battle Rock in the upper right corner of the image of my car in the parking lot and it can also be seen in this image along with the BLM sign for Canyon of the Ancients. As the trail rounds Battle Rock, a spur leads you to the day's first ruins.

All that remains of this once sprawling village known as Castle Rock Pueblo is this lone standing wall. The surrounding ground is littered with cut stones that once made 40 above ground rooms, 9 towers, a D-shaped building and at least 16 kivas. At its height, between 1250 and 1280 AD, the pueblo even included rooms and structures built on the sides and top of the butte. The Crow Canyon Archeological Center in Cortez has an interesting article on the oral history of Castle Rock Pueblo, along with a series of photographs from an 1874 survey of the pueblo showing the remains of structures on the butte. See Figure 1 and Figure 2 to see the additional ruins. Figure 3 and Figure 4 are also interesting but don't show additional ruins.

Also, the first 3 images in the Traces of the Ancient World: Details gallery are close up views of the Ancestral Pueblo stonework from this last remaining part of Castle Rock Pueblo.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Off Roading: Kia Style

My Kia Spectra at the Sand Canyon South trail head.
Following breakfast and a quick photo walk around the property on my first morning at Kelly Place, I hopped into my car and made my way over to the Sand Canyon South trail head for a morning of hiking.

The trail head is less than a mile up the road from Kelly Place and so close that I drove right past it as I wasn't expecting it so soon. In fact, I was looking at some interesting butte formations on the opposite side of the road, wondering if there we ruins over there as well. It appeared to be private land on that side of the road, but in all honesty, it would be somewhat hard to believe that there wasn't something ancient over there. The whole Four Corners area is so loaded with Ancestral Puebloan ruins (as well as those from other cultures) that I've heard "you can't throw a stone in any direction without hitting something." Often times it may be a small relatively uninteresting structure, but they are everywhere!

After a slight detour up the road and back, I arrived at the Sand Canyon trail head and while this photo insinuates a rough ride in, this parking area is right off the main road. At most, my little Kia only had to survive about 20 feet of driving on solid bedrock to arrive at this location.

The Sand Canyon Trail is part of Canyon of the Ancients National Monument, one of the country's newest National Parks, which was designated to preserve and protect the highest concentration of archaeological sites in the United States. Over 6,000 distinct structures have been identified within the 164,000 acres of the monument and Sand Canyon contains a number of well preserved cliff dwellings. Spurs in the trail take you right to the base of a handful of these dwellings and many others can be seen in alcoves on the other, inaccessible, side of the canyon.

Images of the dwellings to come shortly...