Tag Archives: Historic site

We saw some interesting petroglyphs just outside Alburqueque

We’re here in Alburqueque, NM for a visit, and we found an area with lot of petroglyphs very close to the city.  It’s the Petroglyph National Monument.  The areas with the petroglyphs are based around some volcanos where the volcanic rock spilled down the hillsides in huge chunks and the ancestral Puebloans found that by scraping off the top layer of black on the rocks it would expose a lighter shade underneath.  This is how they formed the petroglyphs.  Modern Puebloans have reviewed a lot of the petroglyphs but aren’t sure what the meaning of most of them area.  We took a 1-1/2 mile hike through an area with hundreds of petroglyphs and took lots of pictures.  Here are some:

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument

We stayed in the southwestern area of NM for a few days so we could visit the Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument.  WOW!  They built some impressive structures in some large natural caves, what impressed me most was the fact that they were high up on some vertical cliffs. There was a stream at the bottom of the cliffs and lots of useful plants for the natives to use, including lots of wild grapes that we could see where starting to grow (late May).  The cliff dwellings were not inhabited for very long, maybe about 70 years, and carbon dating of some items left indicate they inhabited the caves around 1200AD.  A ranger said that the theory is that they also didn’t inhabit it full-time for those years as there wasn’t as much ‘trash’ or as many dead bodies as would be expected from about 70 years of full-time life.   These cliff dwellings could have been a summer home or possibly a ‘refuge’ in case of emergency.

We hiked the 1-mile loop that took us along the stream through the trees and then up about 175 feet to the dwellings themselves.  We were able to walk through a few which was great!  The area is at about 5,900ft so the hike and the incline felt strenuous to us sea-level folks!

Here are some pictures: