Not an Aztec to be Found in Aztec, New Mexico
On Thursday, May 22, 2008, I departed Chaco Cultural Historical Park
 and headed northeast, towards the nearest paved road outside the park. 
 Last fall, when I traveled the same dirt road, I was careless about the
 “washboard” effect that the passage of many vehicles had created along 
the road.  During that trip, I lost a full-length mirror from an inside 
door of my coach and almost shot the microwave oven out to it secured 
place in an upper cabinet.  This year I slowed to a walking pace 
whenever I hit a rough patch, of which there were many.
As I arrived at the Aztec Ruins, the rainy weather 
that had followed me all the way from Chaco Canyon, 65 miles to the 
south again threatened my tour of the ruins.  Luckily, the rain held off
 just long enough for me to make my personal inspection of these 
well-preserved structures, some of which retain their original roof 
structures, even after 800 years of abandonment.  
What we now call the Aztec Ruins were constructed 
beginning around 1100 CE, which was around the time that Chaco Canyon 
began its decline.  Not ironically, Aztec lies almost due north of 
Chaco, one to two weeks away by foot travel.  Another interesting fact 
is that Aztec Ruins have many similarities in size, layout and apparent 
function to the crown jewel of Chaco Canyon, the  	Pueblo Bonito Ruin.  One of the mysteries of the Four Corners  region
 is why the more southerly ancestral Puebloan Chaco culture declined, 
even as the new development at Aztec expanded on its concepts and 
thrived.
region
 is why the more southerly ancestral Puebloan Chaco culture declined, 
even as the new development at Aztec expanded on its concepts and 
thrived. 
As I prepared to depart for  	Durango, Colorado,
 the young woman at the front desk at Aztec Ruins told me that it had 
snowed in Durango and that the highway department had closed the highway between Durango and Silverton, Colorado.  Consulting my maps, I decided that I would avoid the high country altogether and head for the remote Hovenweep National  Monument,
 just north of the little town of Aneth, in southeastern Utah.  With 
luck and good weather, I could make it to Hovenweep before nightfall.
Monument,
 just north of the little town of Aneth, in southeastern Utah.  With 
luck and good weather, I could make it to Hovenweep before nightfall.
Traveling north on Highway 491 (formerly the devilish Highway 666), I turned southwest at its intersection with Highway 160,
 a location dominated by another of the southwest's "Chimney Rock" 
locations, this one towering to an elevation of 5761 feet.  At the 
turnoff is the most picturesque former gas station in the entire Four 
Corners region.   With
 its long overhang and stark horizontal lines, this architectural relic 
gives a lonely and serene look to the grand geographical features that 
abound, including a long view back to Ship Rock and its thorny peaks, to
 the east.
With
 its long overhang and stark horizontal lines, this architectural relic 
gives a lonely and serene look to the grand geographical features that 
abound, including a long view back to Ship Rock and its thorny peaks, to
 the east.
By James McGillis at 05:58 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link
