Side Roads
Anasazi Country by Air
by Jim Elder

Pilot Adriel
Heisey
prepares to explore
Anasazi country in
his ultralight.
This past summer we went to Camp Jeep to enjoy the
fellowship with Jeep owners and to try out the new Grand
Cherokee (reported on in the November issue of Jeep Sporting
Destinations).
While there, we met video producer Charlie West and
Outdoor Life Network television host David Sparks. Charlie
is a true adventurer and a history buff with a special
interest in Native American history. And we wanted to try
out the new Jeep.
Adriel Heisey was at Camp Jeep, representing the National
Geographic and sharing his photographic vision and
experience with the Camp Jeepers. For 11 years, Adriel was
the chief pilot for the Navajo Nation, flying medical and
administrative missions in the Four Corners country. In
1991, he began building his own airplane, a "not quite
ultralight" kit.
With this "low and slow" versatile craft, he was able to
combine his photography and his flying, and he completed
assignments for National Geographic, Smithsonian, Natural
History, and Arizona Highways. Heisey knows the Anasazi
country as few men do -- from the air, but close up. Charley
West immediately enlisted Adriel in our destination project.
In hours Adriel could scout the areas it would take weeks to
cover, even in four-wheel-drive vehicles. And he could rig
his plane with video cameras to enrich the Outdoor Life
Network television program.
There are well-known Anasazi sites, visited by thousands
each year --Mesa Verde National Park, Hovenweep National
Monument, Navajo National Monument, and the Anasazi Heritage
Center. They are all worth visiting, but we wanted back
roads, discrete four-wheeling and hiking to sites not on the
tour-bus routes. Adriel suggested Butler Wash, only a few
miles west of Bluff, Utah, but 800 years away.
In Bluff, we met Jim and Luanne Hook, our hosts at the
Recapture Lodge. They came to Bluff 10 years ago to run a
llama tour operation. The country captured them, they
stayed, bought the lodge and Jim became a student of the
Anasazi. The Hooks willingly share what they have learned,
stock maps and books in the lodge lobby, and will even loan
you a pair of binoculars if you forgot to pack them. Jim
Hook agreed with Adriel's choice of Butler Wash as a rich
Jeep Destination.
Good maps, a GPS and local information are essential to
explorations in Butler Wash. The backroads and trails are
perfect for Grand Cherokee and Cherokee adventures. We found
sites few people see, began to unravel some of the
mysteries, and came away with an appreciation and respect
for the Ancient Ones.
For more information, visit these Web sites:
http://seamonkey.ed.asu.edu/
swa/anasazi
www.swcolo.org/Tourism/
Archaeology/
AnasaziHeritageCenter
www.swcolo.org/Tourism/
Archaeology/ANASAZI
www2.educ.ksu.edu/projects/
hovenweep/hovenhome
www.personal.psu.edu/
faculty/g/h/ghb1/
southwest/anasazi
www.so-utah.com
Copyright (c) 1998 Jim Elder. All rights
reserved.
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Searching for the Anasazi
by Jim Elder
"Experts and
amateurs sought answers to two basic questions: What
happened to the Ancient Ones and where did they
go?".
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Anasazi ruins in Butler
Wash.
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In December of 1888 two Colorado ranchers rode onto Mesa
Verde looking for stray cattle. They discovered what we now
call Cliff Palace, the largest cliff dwelling complex in the
United States. This was once the home of the Anasazi, a
people whose lives and deaths are still shrouded in
mystery.
"Anasazi" is the term most often used for these early
Americans. It means the "old enemies," so named by the
later-arriving Navajo. These were the ancestors of the
Puebloan people, primarily the Hopi and Zuni, who prefer to
call them the Ancient Ones.
At its peak, the Anasazi culture and civilization were
highly developed, with specialists in agriculture,
architecture, art, religion, crafts, and even trade and
communication.
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The Four Corners area of the
Southwest features numerous ancient Indian sites,
along with a wide variety of recreational
opportunities.
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Artifacts found in the Four Corners country (where Utah,
Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona meet) prove trade with
cultures as far south as central Mexico, and vice versa. The
mystery of the towers -- a chain of high points reaching
from Utah to Chihuahua in Mexico, were at first ruled out as
signal sites because no evidence of carbon -- signal fires
-- was found. Recently, however, polished copper mirrors
were discovered which were probably used to send messages
over hundreds of miles by flashing codes with reflected
sunlight.
As word spread of the Mesa Verde discovery,
archaeological attention shifted from earlier sites south of
the Four Corners. Cliff, cave and mesa habitation sites,
commonly referred to as cliff dwellings, were found -- and
sometimes carelessly excavated by amateurs -- over a wide
area of the Southwest.
The experts at first thought these ruins, which seem to
have been abandoned by A.D. 1300, must have been the work of
Aztecs. The architecture and the level of civilization
represented by the buildings and the artifacts found were
too advanced to fit the accepted definitions of North
American "Indian" achievement. By 1927, however, it was
accepted that these dwelling sites were not the work of
Aztec peoples. Accurate dating technology ruled out the
Navajo, who did not occupy the area until the 1500s, only a
few decades before the Spanish invasions and
explorations.
It is this 200-year gap that fascinated and frustrated
scientists, and led to the lost tribes myth. Experts and
amateurs sought answers to two basic questions: What
happened to the Ancient Ones and where did they go?
The "what happened" was first thought to be conquest by
Ute and Paiute warriors. That theory fell apart, despite
some evidence of raiding parties and warfare. Disease and
epidemic were later imports, brought by the Spanish, along
with persecution and slavery, but the victims were not in
the Four Corners area.
Drought, a threat to any agricultural society, was
another possible explanation, and periods of drought were
confirmed by geologic records. But the Southwest was and is
a land of marginal rainfall, subject to minor and major
drought cycles since the Ice Age. Archeology and geology
combined to show that the Ancient Ones usually adapted to
climate changes, by minor relocation or changes in farming
methods. In short, there was no one standout answer to the
mystery of why the Anasazi "disappeared" in A.D. 1300.
Then the experts tried a new trail, an obvious one in
hindsight. They began to ask the present-day Pueblo people.
Studies of the arts, crafts, religions and oral history of
the Hopi and Zuni revealed strong ties to the Anasazi.
Petroglyphs and pictographs dating from what was considered
the Anasazi times -- estimated to be 100 B.C. to A.D. 1300
-- contained themes and symbols found in later Puebloan
tradition.
Continuity was discovered in basketmaking and pottery.
And the architecture -- most notably the kiva, a ceremonial
or council chamber -- was solid stone evidence of close ties
between the Ancient Ones and the present Puebloan clans.
Today scientists and hobbyists generally agree that the
Anasazi never actually disappeared. So where did they go?
Logic and science now suggest they never went. Dating the
ruins indicates that the more complex and populated dwelling
sites were abandoned due to a combination of drought and a
need for defense. When times were good, defense was not a
priority. In bad times, most likely drought, raids and
warfare sapped the resources of the people. The results were
simply a decrease in numbers, migration and dispersion.
Present-day Puebloan people have traditionally kept
private the most basic elements of their spiritual
inheritance. Certain subjects, even certain places, are off
limits. Experience with Athapaskan (Navajo), Spanish and
Anglo invaders has taught them caution. But their proud
claim to be the descendants of the Ancient Ones is proving
to be the best answer to the mystery of the Anasazi. For the
Hopi and Zuni, it never was a mystery.
Copyright © 1998 Jim Elder. All
rights reserved.
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