018 The Chaco Sessions, Stirring the Chacoan Pot with Canals & World Trees

2024 ж. 12 Мам.
602 Рет қаралды

In the early 1970's a group of archaeologists began extensive research in the Greater Chaco Landscape in northern New Mexico. These investigations were mainly government funded; therefore the work was detailed and extensive. John Stein and Rich Friedman, along with a host of others including Dr. Stephen Lekson, Dabney Ford, Richard Loose, Hopi Elder Philip Tuwaletstiwa, Anna Sofaer, and Scott Andrae were among the top researchers during this era. Their work has become epic, even to this day. This set of short videos features John Stein and Rich Friedman describing in their own humble words, discoveries themselves, and others made that are still solid, in fact and theory as the initial discoveries.
One modern young researcher that is again leading the way to new discoveries in the Chaco Landscape and joining John and Rich is Dr. Robert Weiner. Rob has teamed up with many Anglo and Native Peoples familiar with Chaco Canyon’s true ancient history to help tell a clear and accurate story of Chaco Canyons story. The truth about Chaco Canyon remains persistent and real through this group of elite researchers, both Native and Anglo. This series of short videos will tell what we feel is the most accurate research history of Chaco Canyon than has been rendered thus far.

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  • Nice Work & Video 👍

    @VINTERIUM..EXPLORIUM.1@VINTERIUM..EXPLORIUM.19 күн бұрын
  • Nice animation of the Lidar road at Mesa Verde

    @retrogrademotionpictures4985@retrogrademotionpictures498515 күн бұрын
  • Very interesting video! I went through Chaco Canyon with a Navajo guide and I have watched and read quite a bit about Chaco from the Navajo point of view -- suffice it to say that their explanation of what Chaco - "Place of Crying" - is really about is quite different from any anglo source I've heard or read.

    @bbaNMDesertHwy57@bbaNMDesertHwy5713 күн бұрын
  • New drop!! Exciting - what is the thesis for this one? There is no irrigation signs here so how did they do agriculture? Or it means that this place was something different than what was interpreted? It’s pretty inside with these 3 like they are speaking as if everyone would get it , but hard to read between the lines what they are exactly saying (for a non scholar like myself). And the tree? Thats another riff that is pretty inside

    @maxwellgarcesguitar@maxwellgarcesguitar15 күн бұрын
    • Yeah. I tend to be a bit Chacocentric with this dialogue. Thanks for the comment. I’ll try to annotate the subsequent episodes a bit more to explain things in more detail. There has been an ongoing debate for years concerning the existence of ancient canals in Chaco canyon (see Gwinn Vivian). Personally, and for no other reason than my geology background, the fact that these guys know what they’re talking about, and some common sense, I doubt there were canals in Chaco Canyon. As far as the tree in Pueblo Bonito goes, read Dr. Christopher Guiterman’s excellent paper on the subject. Hope this helps!

      @combridge1@combridge115 күн бұрын
    • @@combridge1 thank you! I Understand the concepts of course with canals and the world tree it was just unclear what the significance was as it relates to this site. The absence of canals here and the possibility of a world tree at Chaco. Thanks for the info 👌🏼

      @maxwellgarcesguitar@maxwellgarcesguitar15 күн бұрын
    • @@combridge1 Where would you find Dr. Guiterman's paper? Was it published in an Archeology magazine?

      @bbaNMDesertHwy57@bbaNMDesertHwy5713 күн бұрын
    • @@bbaNMDesertHwy57 go to : chris-guiterman.rbind.io/files/Guiterman%20et%20al.%202020_AmAnt_Chuska%20Origins%20for%20JPB-99.pdf

      @combridge1@combridge113 күн бұрын
  • If they have a Starbucks would they have Chaco Latte?

    @goodeye6373@goodeye637314 күн бұрын
    • Bwahahahaha!!!

      @combridge1@combridge113 күн бұрын
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