My cross country camping trip
East coast to west coast North Glacier NP to South Miami Beach By our "Mini RV"
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Monticello, UT- Mesa Verde National Park- Aztec Ruins National Monument - Farmington, NM 195 miles
9:30 starting today to see the two previously inhabited by Indians.Highway 491 east, turn first 191 highway to 76 miles outside of Mesa Verde National Park (Mesa Verde National Park), to reach the time is 11:15, and the hot weather.
At Mesa Verde, Spanish for "green table," multistoried dwellings fill the cliff-rock alcoves that rise 2,000 feet above Montezuma Valley. Remarkably preserved, the cliff dwellings cluster in canyons that slice the mesa into narrow tablelands. Here, and on the mesa top, archaeologists have located more than 4,800 archaeological sites (including 600 cliff dwellings) dating from about A.D. 550 to 1300.
The sites, from mesa-top pithouses and multistoried dwellings to cliffside villages, document the changes in the lives of a prehistoric people once dubbed the Anasazi. They are now more accurately called the ancestral Puebloans, and modern Pueblo tribes in the Southwest consider themselves descendants of these ancestral people. Some 40 pueblos and cliff dwellings are visible from park roads and overlooks; some of these are open to the public.
Beginning about A.D. 750, the ancestral Puebloans grouped their mesa-top dwellings in pueblos, or villages. About 1200 they moved into recesses in the cliffs. So sheltered, these later villages seem to stand outside of time, aloof to the present.
In 1888 two cowboys tracking stray cattle in a snowstorm stopped on the edge of a steep-walled canyon. Through the flakes they made out traces of walls and towers of a large cliff dwelling across the canyon. Novelist Willa Cather later described the scene: "The falling snowflakes sprinkling the piƱons, gave it a special kind of solemnity. It was more like sculpture than anything else … preserved … like a fly in amber."
Climbing down a makeshift ladder, the excited cowboys explored the honeycombed network of rooms that they named Cliff Palace. Inside, they found stone tools, pottery, and other artifacts in rooms that had been uninhabited for some 600 years.
Why the Mesa Verde people eventually left their homes may never be known. Indeed, they lived in the cliff dwellings for only about the last 75 to 100 years of their occupation of Mesa Verde. Early archaeologists guessed warfare, and the evidence for this seems to concur. Archaeologists also think they may have been victims of their own success. Their productive dry farming allowed the Mesa Verde population to grow perhaps as high as 5,000. Gradually woodlands were cut, wild game hunted out, and soils depleted. Years of drought and poor crops may have been aggravated by village squabbles. By the end of the 13th century the ancestral Puebloans had left the plateau, never to return.
16:00 arrive in New Mexico; looks very soil…
16:30 we came to the Aztec Ruins National Monument (Aztec Ruins National Monument), located 14 miles northeast of Farmington, relatively remote location, few visitors
The Aztec Ruins National Monument preserves ancestral Pueblo structures in north-western New Mexico, located close to the town of Aztec and northeast of Farmington, near the Animas River. Salmon Ruins and Heritage Park, with more ancestral Pueblo structures, lies a short distance to the south, just west of Bloomfield near the San Juan River. The buildings date back to the 11th to 13th centuries, and the misnomer attributing them to the Aztec civilization can be traced back to early American settlers in the mid-19th century. The actual construction was by the ancestral Puebloans, the Anasazi.
17:15 we left the Aztec Ruins National Monument began to rain, stay in Farmington, NM
Monday, July 23, 2012
Grand Junction, CO-Arches National Park- Canyonlands National Park- Dead Horse Point State Park- Monticello, UT
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Grand Junction, CO-Arches National Park- Canyonlands National Park- Dead Horse Point State Park- Monticello, UT
After the trimming of the day, everyone's spirit much better 7:50 departure, when the sun has been very enthusiastic.
We rest one day yesterday. Today we are heading to Arches National Park & Canyonlands National Park.
Arches National Park contains the world's largest concentration of natural stone arches. This National Park is a red, arid desert, punctuated with oddly eroded sandstone forms such as fins, pinnacles, spires, balanced rocks, and arches. The 73,000-acre region has over 2,000 of these "miracles of nature."
Around 12:15pm, Rachel and I starting climb to see Delicate Arch, 3 miles each way, we spent two hours climbing without covering and temperature around 105 F, we made it.
After return to parking place, I decide take the shortcut (unpaved road) to next destination Canyonlands National Park
The Green and Colorado rivers separate Canyonlands into three land districts in addition to the Horseshoe Canyon detached unit. Each destination within Canyonlands offers different opportunities for sightseeing and exploration.
We visited Island in the Sky hundreds of canyon seems to be at the foot of "endless", and then stopped by Deadhorse Point State Park.
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