
Trail of the Ancients - Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, Utah
Posted by:
Big B Bob
N 37° 00.222 W 110° 05.034
12S E 581507 N 4095675
Quick Description: Journey to the Past on the Trail of the Ancients.
Location: Utah, United States
Date Posted: 11/14/2009 3:49:19 PM
Waymark Code: WM7NN6
Views: 2
Long Description:From America's Byways:
The Trail of the Ancients in Colorado and Utah takes you back to
a time long before the United States existed, long before Spaniards
came north from what is today Central America. Amazingly, some
regions of the Colorado Plateau remain today much as they must have
been in the 13th and 14th Centuries. Arid and mostly uninhabited,
the terrain along the byway conceals secrets of bygone populations,
vibrant people who came and went like snow in warm spring sunshine
or tumbleweeds at the front of a desert storm. The byway travels
through some of our country's most beautiful yet austere country,
and it lends itself to contemplation and rejuvenation as well as
recreational adventures.
The native people knew how to choose a neighborhood. Their
"backyard" is diverse and breathtaking. Monument Valley in Utah was
John Ford and John Wayne's favorite movie location. As John Wayne
said, "This is where God put the West." Monument Valley is the West
at its finest, with huge vistas, marvelous sunsets, bright red and
orange sandstone of any shade Georgia O'Keefe or Henry Matisse
could ever desire. The individual is dwarfed in the shadow of such
natural grandeur. It is here that Native Americans have survived
and thrived in centuries past, where it rains just a handful of
inches a year, where the ecosystem is fragile and fierce.
Monument Valley is home to the Navajo people. The park visitor
center highlights their lifestyle, history, and traditions. The
landscape of the valley is overwhelming in both beauty and size:
fragile, sandstone pinnacles are matched only by the mesas and
broad vistas in the valley. Some of the rock formations can be
easily viewed from US-163, but to view others one must travel off
the road with a Navajo guide.