Showing posts with label cliff dwellings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cliff dwellings. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

T is for Thunderclouds

I have an ongoing love affair with clouds...I'm often seen gazing at the heavens to catch the inexorable ebb and flow of movement across the sky.


On a road trip several years ago, my husband and I seemed to drift from one storm to another, no matter how far we travelled or how many states we crossed.
Mesa Verde, Colorado

 Awed by the power and beauty, I took shot after shot.

 These are some of the results....

 Monument Valley, Utah



Bryce Canyon, Utah

Antelope Canyon, Arizona

A fairly typical November day here in Vancouver








And after the storm come rainbows. 



I captured this one arcing over the River Lagan in my birth city of Belfast, Northern Ireland.



For more takes on the letter "T", do drop by ABC Wednesday and enjoy the view...





http://abcwednesday-mrsnesbitt.blogspot.ca/

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Mesa Verde Windows and Doors ...and Signs, Signs


.
A U.S. National Park and Unesco World Heritage Site, Colorado's
Mesa Verde National Park was created at the turn of the twentieth century to safeguard the ancient cliff dwellings found in the park.
.
Cliff Palace.

.
The ruined homes and villages are all that remain of a thriving community built late in the 12th century by the Anasazi, and inexplicably abandoned a relatively short time later.


.
These Ancestral Pueblo people were subsistence farmers, growing corn crops on the mesa tops to fill their many storerooms and supplement the meat that hunting provided. 
.
Anasazi women were famous for their intricate basket weaving, and Anasazi pottery is still highly prized. As no written record were left, these artifacts and ruins provide the only clues we have to the history of this civilization whose descendants still inhabit this part of the world.
.
Kivas at Balcony House
 .
.
The largest of these dwelling,
Cliff Palace, became known in
1888, when two cowboys spotted
the ruins from the top of the
mesa, while searching
for stray cattle. 
.
.
In these years before
archaeology took it's place in 
the world of science, they
marshalled family and
friends,and began exploration
of the site, indiscriminately
 knocking down walls and
roofs in search of the
countless artifacts which
they swiftly
removed and sold.

More vandalism followed as word of the discovery got out, and curio seekers flocked to plunder what they could. Floors were dug up, and kivas were destroyed. While camping on the site to facilitate the removal of souvenirs, looters used roof posts as firewood to such an extent that not a single roof remains intact.


.
Add to this misuse the
considerable
erosion caused by weather
 and time, and it is
apparent that the cliff
dwellings are visibly and
irreparably compromised. 
.


 .
Mesa Verde occupies 52,000 acres of the Colorado Plateau. The climate is semi-arid, and the park has unfortunaelty experienced a number of wildfires in recent years. Juniper seedlings are returning, and oak trees have begun to resprout, but it will take decades for the forest to regenerate itself.
.
 A recent post made clear my delight in the storm that thundered into the park on the day we visited.  If you missed them, check out the stormy skies that entranced me...

 
.
I'm linking these photos to Mary t's meme,'WindowViews and Doors Too'. To see more views from around the world, click on the link below...
.
.
I'm also linking to Lesley's 'Signs, Signs', always a fun meme to visit...
.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Colorado Skies





On a recent trip to the U.S., we drove to Colorado to visit Mesa Verde National Park.




The park was wonderful...we had a grand day exploring the cliff dwellings and soaking up the history of this ancient site.

.

As it came time to leave the park, storms clouds formed and rain began to fall on the plain below us. I could not tear myself away from the beautiful skies that resulted.

These are a few of my favourites from that evening...

.

I’m linking this post to ‘Looking At The Sky Friday’, graciously hosted by CrAzY Working Mom at the link below. Do stop by for skies that will inspire!


.