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Frommer's National Parks of the American West - Don Laine [262]

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Inn, 3965 SR A-13(☎ 530/596-3910), for steaks, seafood, and pasta dishes.

Picnic & Camping Supplies


The Manzanita Lake Camper Store (☎ 530/335-7557), at the park's north entrance, is a good place to stock up on groceries, ice, firewood, and basic outdoor gear. It also sells gasoline. At the southern end of the park, you'll find just about everything you need for your outdoor adventure in the old-fashioned general store at Lassen Mineral Lodge, on Calif. 36 in Mineral (see "Where to Stay," above). Just south of Old Station, try the store at Hat Creek Resort, on Calif. 89 (☎ 530/335-7121), where you'll also find a restaurant and an assortment of cabins and motel rooms.

23

MESA VERDE, HOVENWEEP, CHACO & OTHER ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES OF THE FOUR CORNERS REGION

by Don & Barbara Laine

WITH ALMOST 5,000 ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES, MESA VERDE National Park is the largest archaeological preserve in the United States. Among the sites are some of the largest cliff dwellings in the world, as well as mesa-top pueblos, pit houses, and kivas (subterranean rooms used for meetings and religious ceremonies)—all of which were built by the ancestral Puebloans (also called the Anasazi). The sites here tell the story of an 800-year period (A.D. 500–1300) during which these people shifted from a seminomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle to a largely agrarian way of life centered on large communities in cliff dwellings.

Mesa Verde must have looked inviting to the ancestral Puebloans, whose descendants are such modern Pueblo tribes as the Hopi, Zuni, and Acoma. On the mesa's north side, 2,000-foot-high cliffs form a natural barrier to invaders. The mesa slopes gently to the south, and erosion has carved numerous canyons, most of which receive abundant sunlight and have natural overhangs for shelter.

The ancestral Puebloans became especially adept at surviving here. The mesa tops were covered with loess, a red, wind-blown soil good for farming. And although water was scarce, it could seep into the sandstone overhangs where they eventually made their homes. For food, they farmed beans, corn, and squash; raised turkeys; foraged in the pinyon-juniper woodland; and hunted for game such as cottontail rabbits and deer. They wove sandals and clothing from yucca fibers and traded for precious stones and shells, which they used to make jewelry.

To the visitor today, their most impressive accomplishments are the multistory cliff dwellings, which were largely ignored until ranchers Charlie Mason and Richard Wetherill chanced upon them in 1888. Looting of artifacts

followed their discovery until a Denver newspaper reporter's stories aroused national interest in protecting them. In 1906, the 52,000-acre site was declared a national park, the only U.S. national park devoted entirely to the works of humans.

The Cliff Palace, the park's largest and best-known site, is a four-story apartment complex with stepped-back roofs forming courtyards for the dwellings above. Accessible by guided tour only, it is accessible by a quarter-mile downhill path. Its towers, walls, and kivas are all set back beneath the rim of a cliff. Another ranger-led tour takes visitors up a 32-foot ladder to explore the interior of Balcony House. Each of these tours runs only in summer and fall.

Two other important sites—Step House and Long House, both on Wetherill Mesa—are open to visitors in summer only. Rangers lead tours to Spruce Tree House, another of the major cliff-dwelling complexes, only in winter, when other park facilities are closed; during the summer, you can see Spruce Tree House on your own.

For reasons as yet not understood, these cliff homes were only fully occupied for about a century; their residents left around 1300.

Although Mesa Verde is the largest and probably the most impressive archaeological site in the Four Corners region, it is not the only one. In fact, archaeologists say that from about 700 to 1,000 years ago this area teemed with busy communities. Following the discussion of Mesa Verde is a quick look at a few

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