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From the left, the three prominent peaks are Point Lookout, Knife Edge, and Prater Ridge |
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This is Mesa Verde from the northwest; the entrance from US160 is to the left of Point Lookout . The road then winds around Knife Edge in the middle and then up on the mesa proper to the right after passing under Prather Ridge. It is 20 miles from US160 to the museum. The National Park encompasses about 81 square miles including all the ancient cliff dwellings -- about 600, all nestled into "niches" created by the erosion of underlying rock leaving an overhanging "roof".
The literal translation of the name is "green table"; the area pictured above is drier and therefore less "green" but further west where the dwellings and park headquarters are located, there are a lot of trees. Except in the burn zone. The mesa is so large and high it influences the local weather.
There are many more fascinating (to me) details about this Park here.
So essentially we drove up and across this entire picture and even further to the southwest, going up from 6990' to over 8500' then back down to 7000' at the museum. I'll get back to the reason for this later. |

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Looking NE toward Durango |

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Looking back along our route in the "notch" toward Knife Edge and Prater Ridge |

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Point Lookout above the entrance road |

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Looking down Prater Canyon from the North Rim |

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Looking down upper Prater Canyon; the road enters a tunnel under Prater Ridge just beyond where it turns |

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Looking SW across the hills and valleys of Mesa Verde, Shiprock in NM (the "thumb" sticking up) is just visible in the background |
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All the major canyons run toward the south; these pictures don't show clearly but the "mesa" top slopes toward that direction until it eventually merges with the flatter land in the Ute Mountain Reservation. That means this is not a mesa, which would be level, but a "cuesta", Spanish for "slope". Cuestas are very common in Colorado due to the Rocky Mountains rising and tilting the sedimentary rock layers into cuestas. In this particular case, the cuesta tilt was created by the San Juan Mountains rising to the north. The North Rim of Mesa Verde is the "escarpment" created by the Montezuma River.
Anyway, this is why we end up at almost the same altitude as the highway when we arrive at the museum and Spruce House.
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Trees in the '96 fire zone. This fire burned over 4700 acres, the second worst fire in Park history (in '34, over 4600 acres burned). It'll be decades before this is forest again. |

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The road to the museum goes right through this burn. |

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Looking west with Cortez in the valley and Sleeping Ute Mountain in the background |
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The '96 fire burned over 4700 acres, the largest fire in Park history (The '34 fires burned over 4600 acres.) Due to the size of the park and the rugged terrain, fire mitigation is difficult.
And wildfire fighting is generally limited to protecting facilities and protecting the 5000 archaeological sites. These are protected with slurry bombing and by cutting fire lanes around critical areas. There still some reddish staining from the slurry dropped around Spruce House. While the dwellings are rock, wood beams support many of the structures, especially kivas, so there is a real possibility of a cliff dwelling burning.
Sleeping Ute Mountain marks the western end of the Ute Mountain Reservation and lies on the Colorado-Utah border. Traditionally, the Utes believe that when Sleeping Ute awakens, time will end and a new era of history will begin. |

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Sleeping Ute Mountain taken from north of Cortez |

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One of the chandeliers in the museum |

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The museum from Spruce House |

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Spruce House from the trail (which is 1/2 mile going up to the end of the canyon with a 100' elevation drop) just below the museum |

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One of the students climbing down into the kiva |

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Another one going in; everyone went down the hole and some even twice! |

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The woman in red is climbing out if the kiva; this is a family from Japan touring the same time we were. |

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Some of the apartments in Spruce House; the "keyhole" shaped openings are "doors". |

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Closeup of a doorway. You can just step over the high threshold if your legs are long enough but more typically, you lift yourself up by pushing down on the ledges and swinging your legs in. |

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The pit in front of the woman in purple is a ruined kiva; the one tourists can enter is a rebuilt facsimile. All these "bricks" are dressed stone. |
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Spruce House is the third largest cliff dwelling in the Park. Most of the sites are small: 10 rooms or less. Even in the Spruce House niche, there were some small one room places in the low rent district. Like the one in the closeup of the doorway.
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You can see the streaks from water flowing from the ledge above. |

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The San Juans from the Park road as we were leaving. This was our next destination. |









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