July 20, 2010 - Mesa Verde National Park, CO
Coming east for the past month, we finally ran out of Utah. There we ventured by a multitude of strange rock formations including arches, natural bridges, pinnacles, fins, cliffs, and slot canyons. Traveling to lower elevations we passed through thousands of feet of sediments that comprise the Colorado Plateau. This mass of nearly continuous deposits over the last 500 million years was shoved up some ten thousand feet and is now being furiously washed out by the streams that flow across it. Some layers being harder than others, where a stream finally cuts through a tougher layer, it quickly saws through softer layers underneath leaving towering cliffs with impressive overhangs. Two species of sandstone, the older (and lower) Wingate and the higher, Entrada, are among the most impressive cliff formers. These rocks, really rock!
Throw in faulting and collapses of sections of rock above where salt layers dissolved away, and the landscape becomes a maze of canyons, reefs, and even a "staircase" that a ten thousand foot giant could walk down extending from eleven thousand feet to about six thousand feet.
This is also the region of the Anasasi, an Indian people who lived here for hundreds of years and then moved out at about 1300 A.D. for reasons unknown. These were a people who had not yet moved past stone tools but who established a remarkable architecture, building hundreds of stone cliff dwellings, mostly in alcoves within the canyon walls (Entrada formation). Many of these villages, protected somewhat from the weather, have survived these 700 years and inspire awe of the creators. I am awed by the commute that these people had to make to reach their farmlands on the mesa above the cliffs. Today, we take stairs to get from the flat land above to the dwellings below. These people used tiny notches in the rock faces to climb up and down the canyon wall as much as one hundred meters. That was some comute! I guess they stayed fit or they fell off the wall. Burial would be unnecessary. The deceased would truly be gone.
Our travels have been grand. The weather has finally turned warm, but the nights are mostly cool. Here we have the Rockies only thirty miles away and have turned to exploring them the past couple of days after we tired of the archeology. The wildflowers are now spectacular there. Tomorrow we will take a last high country hike. Today is a chore day.
On Thursday, we turn south into Arizona, stopping first at Canyon de Chelly where we will explore more Indian ruins. Then south into southern Arizona for the Southwest Wings Birding Festival. August is peak birding season in that part of the world. The "monsoons" have begun and the birds should be singing during this late summer "second spring." Migration also begins in August, and so more northern birds will be filtering in to make the birding truly exciting.
Arizona was to be the last major component of our "Wild West 2010" expedition, but after our time there we will start our return home by first turning north and heading to southeastern Colorado. There we hope to meet the Carbones at Great Sand Dunes National Park in mid-August. We have conspired to pick the brain of our family geologist, Emily. She might rather we didn't, but that's tough. We have to make use of our resources.
Now to town for laundry, shopping, post office, and Internet access. This should be posted today.
- woodstrehl's blog
- Login to post comments
Summer Adventures
We had a beautiful early summer in Schenectady with warm weather and fun times working in the garden with family, visiting North Hill gardens with Mark, et al twice, occasionally visiting the Adirondacks and the 'Gunks for day hikes, swimming with the younger family members (Billie, Charlie, and Olivia, and parents,...etc), and now spending a weekend at Cape Cod with Mom and Dad. Today we visited Mom and Dad's new find... a brand new bakery owned by 2 French bakers called PB Boulangerie in Wellfleet. Holy cow! You ALL must go there, unless you are on a strict diet in which case you must stay away! Our office manager, Chris, also told us about it, but it must be visited to be truly appreciated. We had a nice day walking downtown in PTown with Mom, Dad, Anna, Emily, and their friend Rachel. Then we returned to Shady Lane for dinner of scallops and corn native from Cape Cod and pesto pasta and tossed salad with veggies and herbs native from Schenectady. We love seeing Anne and Chuck's pictures on the blog and are looking forward to catching up with them at Great Sand Dunes. We have a brief time when the 4 of us can travel together but we thought we'd give it a try anyway.
Summer Fun
Sounds like TEAM has had fun filled and busy summer. We are excited that we will see you at the Great Sand Dunes!