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Guadalupe Ruins

Guadalupe Ruin, the easternmost Chacoan Outlier, is a single-story masonry pueblo situated on an isolated sandstone mesa rising nearly 200 feet above the valley floor. The top of the mesa is isolated by sheer walls on all sides, with access to the top restricted to a narrow trail. This mesatop location provides an impressive view of dissected canyons, rugged mesas, and volcanic necks along the Rio Puerco Valley. The ruin consists of at least 39 rectangular rooms and 7 semi-subterranean kivas, two of which are stabilized and roofed for public access. Archeological investigations conducted in the 1970s suggest that the site was originally built as a Chacoan Outlier, but was reoccupied in the late 13th century by immigrants from the Mesa Verde area, who remodeled many of the rooms and built a new kiva in their own architectural style.

 

Cabezon Peak (seen in the distance) is a large volcanic plug that is a prominent feature in northwestern New Mexico. It rises to 7,785 feet in elevation

 

Camera Canon EOS 5D Mark III

Exposure 30

Aperture f/2.8

Focal Length 14 mm

ISO Speed 500

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Uploaded on November 16, 2013
Taken on November 9, 2013