Pagosa Springs History and Culture:
Chimney Rock Ruins
by Norm Vance, reprinted from The
Anasazi Illustrated
Photo courtesy of
www.chimneyrockco.org.
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Chimney Rock is a large stone prominence near
Pagosa Springs, in Southwest Colorado, with two rock spires that
extend into the sky. Such spires were and are important to many
tribes of American Indians. The Anasazi, or Ancestral Puebloans
as their descendents, the Pueblo Indians, call them, lived around
the base of the prominence for many centuries and then built a
pueblo structure on the prominence 700 feet above the valley floor.
This prominence and pueblo is now the Chimney Rock Archeological
Area.
The Anasazi developed from earlier people who populated the general
southwest area for a minimum of 10,000 years. The early
people were nomadic hunters and gathers. They lived on what archaeologists
term a “seasonal round” meaning they followed the
game animal herds to the high mountains in the summer and down
to lower lands in the winter.
The knowledge of farming moved into the southwest from
Mexico. The Anasazi are identified as beginning when tribes began
farming more than being nomadic. When they adopted
farming and a sedentary lifestyle they developed housing. At first
they lived in small pit houses (a covered hole in the ground)
and later developed large above ground pueblos of many rooms and
two or more floor levels.
At about 1000 years ago the various tribes organized into a more
complex culture and rapidly developed an organized system of food
sharing and social order based in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. Here
they built spectacular pueblos enclosed by walls, with hundreds
of rooms and central plazas covering acres. They also developed
a vast road system to connect Chaco with outlying pueblo cities,
a communication system and a government to manage the entire society.
So quick and vibrant was this development that the archaeologist
named it “The Chaco Phenomenon.”
The Chimney Rock Pueblo was the northeastern most pueblo
of the Chaco Canyon culture. It was a special place and
had an interesting purpose for the people of the Chaco culture.
Ancient Astronomers
The Anasazi were avid observers of the brilliant night sky of
the elevated Colorado Plateau they lived on. They learned
to time events throughout the year according to when a star, a
star constellation, or the sun or moon rose or sat on the horizon.
They also learned to build observatories that served the same
function. At these observatories, at important times of the year,
a beam of sun or moon light passed through a window in a pueblo
room or a natural open space in a rock and landed on a design
pecked or painted on a wall. These observatories were found across
the Anasazi homeland.
The sun is the most obvious, but all objects in the sky rise
and set at different places on the horizon according to the time
of year. They rise and set more southerly during winter and more
northerly in summer. If it is remembered, for example, that the
sun rises over a distant landmark on the horizon on the longest
day of the year and rises over another landmark on the shortest
day, the times of summer and winter solstices are known.
When the sun rises over a landmark half way between the landmarks
for the shortest and longest days the equinoxes are charted. The
equinoxes are close to planting and harvesting times and, for
the Indians, a time of important ceremony. It took many
years of observing and making marks in stone to define these dates.
The Chimney Rock moon rise event shows us how carefully and detailed
the Anasazi observed the sky. Charting yearly sunrises and
sunsets is relatively easy. Think how much observing had
to be done to recognize and predict an event that happens only
once every 18 years.
The earth has a slight and slow wobble to its spin. This
wobble causes the moon to rise a little farther north and a little
farther south on the horizon over a period of 18 years.
This movement of the moonrise over landmarks on the horizon appears
to slow and then stop for a few rises before the movement starts
going the other way. The point at which it appears to stop is
called a lunar standstill.
The
first Anasazi, the Basketmakers, and early Puebloans lived around
Chimney Rock for hundreds of years before the pueblo and kiva
were built on the ridge above the valley floor. They probably
climbed to the top of the rock for its spectacular view and because
rock spires were special places. At some point in time it
was noticed that the full moon rose between the two spires as
seen from the narrow ridge just west of the spires. Maybe
they already knew about this long variation in the moon’s
movement or they may have discovered it at Chimney Rock, but they
came to realize the moon only rose between the spires every 18
years. This was at the time of the northern lunar standstill.
This moon rise event became known by the people at Chaco Canyon
and across the area. A group of men from the Taos Pueblo area
moved to Chimney Rock and built the pueblo and several smaller
buildings on the high ridge. The early Anasazi pithouse
developed into a larger below ground chamber used mostly for ceremonial
purposes. Such a “kiva” chamber was included in a
position so that a persons standing on the roof had a perfect
view of the moon rise. The pueblo was built before one standstill
moon rise and improved with new construction just before the next
two lunar standstills.
In Chaco Canyon there is an observatory near the top of a tall
rock formation named Fajada Butte. At the top of the butte three
large stone slabs rest south of and a few feet in front of a rock
wall. The Anasazi noticed that a beam of sunlight fell between
the stone slabs onto the rock wall. The beam cast an elongated
triangle shape and is called a “sun dagger” because
it looks like a knife blade. The Anasazi, probably priest or shaman,
pecked a spiral design into the stone wall so that the sun dagger
would fall on certain places on the spiral at the times of solstices
and equinoxes. There was also a place in the design that
shows when the lunar standstill was due.
It is speculated that astronomers at Chaco Canyon noticed when
the moonrise was getting near. They told the tribal leaders,
who sent off a team of men, a few years in advance, to make the
pueblo ready. When the time came word was passed or perhaps
a message was sent over the light signal communication system
and people came from across the area to experience the moon rise
and ceremony. We cannot know the true meaning and significance
of this event but it was obviously important.
The art work shows an imaginary ceremony as the moon rises.
The ceremony likely began days before, culminating in a ceremony
in the Kiva and ascension from the Kiva for the moon rise. During
the year of the lunar standstill there are several moon rises
between the spires before the moon moves to far south. Several
ceremonies may have taken place during the year.
After a few cycles of the moonrise event the entire Anasazi nation
and Chaco culture fell into a deep depression following the start
of a serious drought. Most of the people moved, forming new pueblos
and ultimately locating south on the Rio Grande River. They would
never return to their homeland.
Know A Little More
This is a chance to learn a bit of how archeologists work. Archeologists
long ago determined that as trees grow they develop growth rings,
seen when the tree is cut. They grow one ring per year and by
counting the rings the tree's age is determined. These rings vary
in width according to the amount of water the tree absorbs during
that year. A dry year causes slow growth so that year's ring is
narrow while a wet year causes a thick ring. They were able to
tell when long droughts occurred and when there were years of
adequate or extra moisture. They overlapped dry and wet
periods from young trees with old trees and developed a chart
from the present backwards over a long period of time. When they
compare the rings from a tree taken from a pueblo roof with the
chart they can determine the year that tree was cut. By using
tree ring dating they compared the construction periods, when
roofing and other support timbers were cut and installed with
the moon rise events. There was a match; the trees were cut a
short time before each lunar standstill.
They deduced that Taos men came to build the first pueblo and
later to improve the structures because the construction methods
are like those used in the Taos area. They deduced that
only men came from Taos because the artifacts of regular living
didn't change - the men from Taos were supported by the families
living at Chimney Rock. If entire Taos families had come,
pottery styles and other items from Taos would have been found.
None were.
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