Saturday, September 15, 2012

Hovenweep CO

Hovenweep National Monument is located on land in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah, between Cortez, Colorado and Blanding, Utah on the Cajon Mesa of the Great Sage Plain. Shallow tributaries run through the wide and deep canyons into the San Juan River.[3]
Although the Hovenweep National Monument is largely known for the six village groups of the Ancient Pueblo, or Anasazi, people, there is evidence of hunter-gatherers from 8,000 to 6,000 B.C. until about AD 200. Then a succession of early puebloan cultures settled in the area and remained until the AD 1300s.
Hovenweep became a National Monument in 1923 and is administered by the National Park Service.


Hovenweep is relatively small. But the ruins are interesting. You can walk around the site and down to the individual ruins.

Walls were made of stone and made to last for thousands of years. Some of the sites were high on the hills while others were nestled down on the side of the valley.

Typical of the site ruins.



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