CHACO CULTURE
National Historical Park
Casa Riconada Trail Guide
Welcome to Casa Rinconada
To use this trail guide, follow the numbered stops along the trail which correspond to the numbered items in the text. Exploring the small house sites and the great kiva of Casa Rinconada will enable you to recognize several unique characteristics of these structures.
The trail through the small house sites and Casa Rinconada is 0.5 mile long. This trail is steep in places with loose gravel on the slopes, and when it is wet, it is slippery. The trail leads to the trailheads for Tsin Kletzin and the South Mesa Loop. These are back-country hiking trails that require permits, which can be obtained at the visitor center or from a park ranger.
The archaeological resources in Chaco Culture National Historical Park are fragile, irreplaceable, and a significant part of our nation's cultural heritage. The park received international recognition for the prehistoric cultural resources it contains when it was designated a World Heritage Site in 1987. You can help protect and preserve this part of our nation's cultural heritage by following these basic rules: Stay on the designated trails. Do not walk, climb, stand, sit, or lean on the walls. Do not deface, add to, or alter the rock carvings and paintings. Do not collect pottery or other artifacts anywhere in the park. If we all take responsibility for these resources, they will be here for the education and enjoyment of future generations.
Kivas are viewed as places of spiritual significance among many of the American Indians that live in the Southwest. Please be respectful of their beliefs and do not leave anything in the great kiva of Casa Rinconada.
For your safety, do not climb canyon walls, or onto the mesas except where designated by a trail. Children should remain with the guardian responsible for their safety.
Pets are not allowed in the ruins.
Chaco Canyon is known for its large-scale, multi-storied
masonry buildings that were planned and constructed over a
thousand years ago by the people archaeologists call
Anasazi. These large buildings, like Pueblo Bonito and
Chetro Ketl, are commonly referred to as great houses, but
they were not the earliest or the only structures to be
built at Chaco Canyon.
Humans occupied the Chaco Canyon area for at least 8,000
years. At first, the people were hunters and gatherers who
made use of wild plants and animals available in the
area. They lived in temporary campsites as they moved to
seasonal food source areas. With the exception of stone
tools, animal bones, and heat-cracked rock from
their fires, very little remains at these PaleoIndian and
Archaic sites.
By 1000 B.C., these people were cultivating varieties of
beans, corn, and squash which they used in addition to wild
plant foods. Initially these were secondary food sources,
but their use increased through time and by around A.D. 400,
they became dietary staples. This increase in agricultural production led to a more sedentary way of life and as the population grew, small villages were built.
These same basic developments were occurring throughout the
Four Corners region of the Colorado Plateau. Beginning
around the middle of the ninth century, and continuing
through the eleventh, changes took place that set Chaco
apart from other areas. The Chaco region was unique because
the sites being built were immense, some covering up to three
acres. Roomblocks were extensive and multistoried.
A distinctive core-and-veneer masonry was developed adding to structure size and stability. Roadways, stairways, and ramps were constructed, connecting sites together within the canyon and beyond. Almost everything built shows evidence of advance planning.
Large sites like Pueblo Bonito and Chetro Ketl were probably used for public functions, serving community rather than household needs. Construction of these great houses began around A.D. 850.
Other structures built during this period included small pueblos or small house sites and large round subterranean structures called great kivas.
1 PLANTS Here in the bottomlands of the canyon, the vegetative cover is mixed shrub-grassland. Concentrations of four-wing saltbush and stands of black greasewood are interspersed with Indian rice grass and galleta grass, all of which are characteristic of this ecosystem.
Some of these plants, especially the grasses, were used for food by the early inhabitants. Other plants, like black greasewood, were used for firewood.
2 ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELDWORKThe University of New Mexico conducted archaeological field schools in Chaco Canyon from 1936 through 1947. During the fieldwork, several small house sites were partially or completely excavated. The three small house sites along this trail were excavated during this period. They have been left open, but virtually every mound in this area conceals another site, which has been either excavated and backfilled, or left unexcavated.
Architectural styles are quite different between small houses and great houses. Small houses are generally one-story, while great houses are multi-story. Great houses are frequently built in a D or C shape and contain plazas that are customarily enclosed. Small house sites are frequently built over earlier sites, and rooms were built as they were needed. Great houses were pre-planned, and substantial foundations were laid before the walls were built. Masonry techniques also differ. In cross-section, the walls of small house sites are built of wall-wide sandstone slabs laid one upon another in generous quantities of mortar. These single-width walls differ from the core-and-veneer masonry of great houses.
3 Bc 50 SITEThis site is known as Bc 50, and the Navajo name for it is Tseh So, which translates as rock crystal. (The site designation of Bc does not relate to the original construction date, but refers to the University of New Mexico's site numbering system.)
During the course of the field school excavations, it was found that the Chaco Anasazi built in different ways. Sometimes they built over the remains of old buildings; other sites were abandoned; and other sites were renovated or incorporated into later structures. There are several earlier structures beneath this site. These walls are from one of the later periods of occupation, dating to some time after A.D. 1050.
Archaeologists once believed the small house sites were built before the great houses across the canyon. Evidence supporting this interpretation included the complexity of great houses, compared to the more simple design of small houses. However,tree-ring studies and the distribution of pottery have demonstrated that small houses and great houses were contemporaneous. They date to the same time period, and the same pottery types have been found at both sites.
At this point, take the side trail to the east to visit another small house site or continue on the path and rejoin the trail at stop 8.
4 TWO PUEBLO GROUPS?Under the direction of Clyde Kluckhohn, the University of New Mexico field school students excavated this site in 1936-37. Kluckhohn was very interested in explaining the differences between small houses and great houses in the canyon. He believed the architectural differences in construction indicated occupation by two distinct Pueblo Indian groups with contrasting cultural traditions. Kluckhohn was not able to prove his theory through the excavation of Bc 51, but his theoretical model hasn't been discarded. Explaining the difference between great houses and small houses, and what each signified to the culture, continues to be a question of debate among archaeologists.
Beneath this pueblo, there is an earlier structure fronted by pithouses. Trash deposits, particularly broken pottery, show that the site was occupied for several hundred years.
5 FILL & BACKFILL The field school completely or partially excavated nineteen rooms and six kivas at this site. When it was occupied, only a few rooms were used at a time. One of the ways that archaeologists determine when and how rooms were used is by examining the contents of the fill. The fill that was removed from many of these rooms contained trash. This indicates to archaeologists that these rooms were not being used for habitation. Fill that consists of blown sand, roof debris, and occasional trash on the floor surface indicates a room was being used just before it was abandoned.
Since the time of excavation over sixty years ago, the walls of this small house have been deteriorating at an alarming rate. Spring winds, summer rains, and the freezing temperatures of winter have taken their toll. One effective preservation measure is to refill the rooms. In an attempt to preserve this site, rooms with inadequate drainage and severely deteriorated walls have been filled with earth.
6 KEYHOLE KIVA The features of this kiva have been obscured since backfilling. However, there is a large recess on the south side that provides this structure with a unique shape and its name.
This is a keyhole kiva, and they are typically found farther north in the San Juan River drainage and Mesa Verde region of southern Colorado and Utah. Their presence here in Chaco Canyon supports the theory that ideas were being exchanged between the people of Chaco and northern population centers.
There are several other keyhole kivas in the small house sites
that can be seen along this trail. Features of keyhole kivas
include: a ventilator tunnel and shaft in the southern recess,
a firepit and deflector, a masonry bench encircling the kiva
interior, and masonry pilasters. Pilasters formed the support
for the kiva roof.
Wall murals were discovered in two of the six kivas that were
excavated in Bc 51.
White gypsum and red and blue pigments were
used to apply the designs that included representations of human
figures and a humpbacked flute player. After excavation, these
kivas were completely backfilled to preserve them.
7 BURIAL CUSTOMS During the excavation of these three small house sites, approximately 130 burials were found. Although complete vessels, sherds, and shell bracelets were recovered with some of these burials, most contained very few artifacts. Adults were often laid on twilled grass mats, and infants were sometimes wrapped entirely in mats. These burials differ from those at the great houses. Pueblo Bonito has been extensively excavated and serves well as a comparison. At Pueblo Bonito, some of the multiple burials were accompanied by enormous quantities of worked shell, and an abundance of turquoise in the form of beads, bracelets, and pendants. This difference in burial customs might reflect Anasazi social organization.
8 SITE PLACEMENT One of the more intriguing questions about the sites in Chaco Canyon is their placement in the landscape. Placement may have been determined by the view, the natural terrain, environmental factors like prevailing winds and solar exposure, the relationship between sites, and/or the relationship of the site to an astronomical event. Casa Rinconada is built on a natural hillside within a large community of small houses; the view from these small houses includes the great houses of Pueblo del Arroyo, Pueblo Bonito, Chetro Ketl, and Pueblo Alto; and on summer solstice, sunlight passes through three stone slabs on top of Fajada Butte and creates a dagger of light through a spiral petroglyph. Other examples of significant site placement can be found throughout the canyon.
9 ANASAZI COMMUNITIES This small house ruin is Bc 59, which had at least twenty rooms and five kivas. The exposed walls are the most recent house built at this location. The deep kiva provides an excellent illustration of reuse and renovation of a site through time.
The small house sites in this rincon or box canyon were part of a dense settlement of approximately fifty sites that were clustered around South Gap, the major break between the mesas to the southwest. (This gap can be seen from across the canyon.) A similar community flourished at Fajada Gap, four miles to the east. Each of these natural gaps was a route for prehistoric roads entering the canyon.
Chaco would have resembled many other Anasazi communities in the San Juan Basin area if only small houses had been built. However, here in Chaco, a centralized regional community system emerged. The principles that ordered the system were probably a combination of economic, socio-political, and religious entities. The level of organization achieved by the culture enabled the people to build magnificent, massive structures, like the great houses, and other structures such as Casa Rinconada. The architectural features characteristic of Chaco can be seen at sites far beyond the confines of the canyon walls. Outlying great house communities have been located as far away as southwestern Colorado, southeastern Utah, and northeastern Arizona.
10 TSIN KLETZIN This is the trail to Tsin Kletzin, which is an unexcavated great house on the mesa top. Before reaching the next stop, the ruins trail crosses the trailhead to South Gap Overlook and Mesa Trail Junction. Permits are required for these back-country trails and can be obtained at the visitor center or from a park ranger.
To the right, the ruins trail continues, leading to
the great kiva of Casa Rinconada.
11 GREAT KIVA FEATURES There are dozens of small kivas associated with the great houses and small sites here in Chaco, and there are varying interpretations of these round rooms. Some scholars believe they were only used as ceremonial chambers, citing as evidence the modern pueblos use of these structures. Others contend they were used in a more routine manner, citing as evidence the large number of round rooms that are found in the great house sites. Whether or not their use was restricted, small kivas were an important architectural feature in Anasazi structures and are still important components of modern pueblos.
Great kivas are found in nearly every major Anasazi community from about AD. 900 to 1200, with some appearing as early as A.D. 500. There are unexcavated great kivas in the plazas of great houses here in the canyon, and at most of the great house communities beyond it. Other great kivas are placed centrally to small house communities like Casa Rinconada, while others are built outside the plazas of great houses like those of Penasco Blanco. The formality of architectural design, labor investment, size, and the central position of great kivas strongly suggest they served as ceremonial chambers. They created a ritual setting that served the needs of the entire community.
Casa Rinconada is the largest known great kiva in the canyon As with other great kivas, it has a standard set of features that are described below. Aside from these standard features, Casa Rinconada includes some unique characteristics. Like other great kivas, the internal alignment of the features are set on a north-south axis. Those of Casa Rinconada are within one degree of true north, and when this axis is extended, it connects with the great houses of Tsin Kletzin and Pueblo Alto. This precise orientation of features and alignments is seen throughout the canyon and is repeated in the road networks and at outlying great house communities.
A. Seating Pits: These circular masonry-lined pits
housed the four upright timbers that supported the
roof. When they were excavated, one of these pits contained
a portion of a timber that was almost 2 feet in
diameter. These massive upright timbers stood on a stack of
two to four carefully shaped sandstone discs that were
layered in the pits about three feet below the floor
level. These discs are estimated to have weighed a half-ton
each and helped to prevent settling of the kiva roof (similar
discs can be seen at the great kiva of Chetro Ketl). After
the timber was set in the pit, the space between it and the
masonry wall was filled with rubble for support.
B. Niches: There are a total of thirty-four wall niches
in Casa Rinconada. Twenty-eight of them are uniform in size
and evenly divided in number by the north-south axis of the
kiva. The six lower niches, two on the east side and four on
the west, do not reflect an obvious pattern. One of these
lower niches appears to function as a calendrical marker. At
sunrise on summer solstice, sunlight passes through the
opening just to the east of the north entrance and fills a
niche on the west side. There are problems with this
interpretation; there may have been a room beyond the opening
that might have blocked the sunlight, and the opening is
partially reconstructed and may not be an accurate
representation of the original. Although it is uncertain
whether or not this particular alignment represents a solstice
marker, there are astronomical alignments in Chaco that have
been verified. This knowledge of astronomy seems to have been
an integral part of the construction at Chaco.
C. Benches: Encircling masonry benches are common
features of great kivas. The obvious interpretation of these
benches is that they served as seats, but this is only an
assumption. In some modern pueblos, kiva benches are reserved
for spirits, and people sit in assigned areas on the
floor. Notice the different masonry style in the lower,
secondary bench along the east side of Casa Rinconada. The
secondary bench was added after original construction, and the
stonework is characteristic of later sites in the northern
perimeter of the San Juan Basin. This suggests that Casa
Rinconada was used during the later occupation of the canyon.
D. Floor Vaults: Raised floor vaults are usually found in
pairs and oriented north-south. These were found open and empty,
but others have been found filled with clean sand. Upon
excavation, others have included remnants of a cover made of
planks, poles, or willow matting. In at least one modern instance
a similar structure is used as a foot drum, echoing loudly as
dancers dance on it. Some researchers suggest that floor vaults
may have been used to germinate seedlings, citing the modern day
Hopis use of similar kiva vaults. Other scholars believe the
vaults may represent concepts of the Anasazi world view.
E. Raised Firebox: Raised masonry fireboxes are
characteristic features of great kivas. They are always located
just south of the center of the room on the main north-south
axis of the kiva, resting upon or extending into the
floor. Nearly all great kivas have a fire screen, located to
the south of the firebox and aligned with it. When Casa
Rinconada was excavated, a single low wall was found just south
of the firebox. The wall consisted of large stones set with
abundant mortar. Very little remained of this wall, but its
placement and curvature suggested it was the fire screen.
F. Antechambers: A direct entry through a north
antechamber is a standard feature in great kivas, but at Casa
Rinconada there are both northern and southern entryways. This
great kiva is also atypical in that there is a unique entry
beneath the steps of the north entryway. The lower entryway
consists of a stone-lined trench that is associated with upright
stone slabs arranged in a spiral on the kiva floor. These may
have been the foundation for closely-spaced upright poles that
would have formed a screen. The rooms built against the north
side may have been used to store objects associated with kiva
rituals, or as a place to prepare for them. Exit the kiva
through the north entryway.
Before taking the return trail back to the parking lot, look
across the canyon to the mesa above Pueblo Bonito. Rising
from the mesa top are the walls of New Alto, and stretching out
in the bottomlands are the great houses of Pueblo del Arroyo,
Pueblo Bonito, and Chetro Ketl. These great houses and others
are linked, and several of the great houses have significant
alignments between them that are more than
coincidental. Together, these structures form the core of the
Chaco Anasazi world; a world that extended far beyond the
canyon, and one that continues to captivate and stimulate the
imagination.
Construction Dates for Chacoan Dwellings
Pueblo Bonito............850 - 1145
Una Vida.................850 - 1095
Peñasco Blanco...........900 - 1125
Hungo Pavi..............1000 - 1080
Chetro Ketl.............1005 - 1105
Pueblo Alto.............1020 - 1145
CASA RINCONADA..........1070 - 1110
Pueblo del Arroyo.......1070 - 1105
Casa Chiquita...........1100 - 1130
New Alto................1100 - 1130
Kin Kletso..............1100 - 1130
Wijiji..................1105 - 1120
Tsin Kletzin............1105 - 1120
Read More About It!
Hayes, Alden C., David M. Brugge, and W. James
Judge. Archaeological Surveys of Chaco
Canyon. University of New Mexico Press, 1987.
Malville, J. McKim, and Claudia Putnam. Prehistoric
Astronomy in the Southwest. Johnson Books, Boulder, 1989.
Lekson, Stephen H. Great Pueblo Architecture of Chaco
Canyon. University of New Mexico Press, 1986.
Truell, Marcia Newren, and Peter J. McKenna. Small Site
Architecture of Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. Reports of the
Chaco Center, No. 18D, Division of Cultural Research, National
Park Service, Santa Fe, 1986.
Vivian, Gordon, and Paul Reiter. The Great Kivas of Chaco
Canyon and Their Relationships. The School of American
Research, Santa Fe, 1960.
Last Updated:Friday, 17-Jul-1998 14:57:28 Eastern Daylight Time
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