PetroglyphNPS
PetroglyphNPS
  • Видео 14
  • Просмотров 125 612
El Morro National Monument
Follow Youth In Park Rangers Margaret, Drew and Brigitte as they travel to El Morro National Monument. Imagine the comfort and refreshment of finding water after days of dusty travel. A reliable waterhole hidden at the base of a sandstone bluff made El Morro (the headland) a popular campsite for hundreds of years. Here, Ancestral Puebloans, Spanish and American travelers carved over 2,000 signatures, dates, messages, and petroglyphs. We invite you to make El Morro a stopping point on your travels.
Просмотров: 9 429

Видео

Chaco Culture National Historical Park
Просмотров 23 тыс.11 лет назад
Follow Youth In Park Rangers Margaret, Drew and Brigitte as they visit Chaco Culture National Historical Park! Today the massive buildings of the ancestral Pueblo peoples still testify to the organizational and engineering abilities not seen anywhere else in the American Southwest. For a deeper contact with the canyon that was central to thousands of people between 850 and 1250 A.D., come and e...
Aztec Ruins National Monument
Просмотров 7 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Youth In Park Rangers Brigitte, Margaret, and Drew as they visit Aztec Ruins National Monument Pueblo people describe this site as part of their migration journey. Today you can follow their ancient passageways to a distant time. Explore a 900-year old Ancestral Pueblo Great House of over 400 masonry rooms. Look up and see original timbers holding up the roof. Search for the fingerprints o...
Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument
Просмотров 18 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Youth in Parks Rangers Brigitte, Margaret, and Drew as they travel to Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument. Explore the world of ancestors of Puebloan people who lived in the Mogollon area over 700 years ago. Enter the village they built within five of the natural caves of Cliff Dweller Canyon. Become inspired by the remaining architecture. Admire the spectacular views from inside these ...
Carlsbad Caverns National Park
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Brigitte, Margaret, and Drew as they travel to Carlsbad Caverns National Park. Rocky slopes and canyons, cactus, grass, thorny shrubs, and the occasional tree, who could guess at the hidden treasures deep underground? Beneath this rugged land are more than 117 known caves - all formed when sulfuric acid dissolved the surrounding limestone.
Fort Union National Monument
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.11 лет назад
Follow Youth In Park Rangers Margaret, Drew and Brigitte as they visit Fort Union National Monument and the Santa Fe National Historical Trail! Exposed to the wind, within a sweeping valley of short grass prairie, amid the swales of the Santa Fe Trail, lie the territorial-style adobe ruins of the largest 19th century military fort in the region. For forty years, 1851-1891, Fort Union functioned...
Capulin Volcano National Monument
Просмотров 6 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Youth In Parks Rangers Drew, Margaret and Brigitte as they visit Capulin Volcano National Monument! Come view a dramatic landscape-a unique place of mountains, plains, and sky. Born of fire and forces continually reshaping the earth's surface, Capulin Volcano provides access to nature's most awe-inspiring work.
Bandelier National Monument
Просмотров 24 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Youth in Park Rangers Margaret, Drew and Brigitte as they visit Bandelier National Monument. Bandelier National Monument protects over 33,000 acres of rugged but beautiful canyon and mesa country as well as evidence of a human presence here going back over 11,000 years. Petroglyphs, dwellings carved into the soft rock cliffs, and standing masonry walls pay tribute to the early days of a cu...
Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.11 лет назад
Join Park Rangers Drew, Margaret and Brigitte as they visit Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument. Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument, located in central New Mexico comprises 3 units: Abó, Quarai, and Gran Quivira with elevations ranging from 6100 to 6600 above sea level. Walking the interpretive trail through the missions and pueblos, sight seeing at the three historic sites, visit ...
El Malpais National Monument
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.12 лет назад
The primeval black basalt terrain of El Malpais was created by volcanic forces over the past million years. Molten lava spread out over the high desert from dozens of eruptions to create cinder cones, shield volcanos, collapses, trenches, caves, and other eerie formations. This stark landscape preserves one of the best continuous geologic records of volcanism on the planet. The National Park Se...
Pecos National Historical Park
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.12 лет назад
In the midst of piñon, juniper, and pine woodlands in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains 25 miles southeast of Santa Fe, the remains of an Indian pueblo stand as a meaningful reminder of the people who once prevailed in this area. Long before the arrival of Spanish explorers, long before it was called "Pecos," this pueblo village was the locus of trade between people of the Rio Grande Valley and hu...
White Sands National Monument
Просмотров 68112 лет назад
Rising from the heart of the Tularosa Basin is one of the world's great natural wonders - the glistening white sands of New Mexico. Here, dunes have engulfed 275 square miles of desert creating the world's largest gypsum dunefield. White Sands National Monument preserves this dunefield, along with the plants and animals that have adapted to this constantly changing environment.
The Albuquerque Volcanoes
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.12 лет назад
Known locally as the Albuquerque Volcanoes or the Three Sisters, they are a classic and rare example of a fissure eruption. In fissure eruptions magma rises along thin cracks in the Earth's crust unlike most volcanoes in which magma rises through a vertical central vent. Here the fissure is over 5 miles (8km) long. Very long cracks like these may result in a row of aligned eruption craters-all ...
Ancient Puebloan Petroglyphs
Просмотров 20 тыс.12 лет назад
Petroglyph National Monument, located in Albuquerque, NM, protects a variety of cultural and natural resources including volcanoes, archeological sites and an estimated 24,000 carved images. Many of the images are recognizable as animals, people, brands and crosses; others are more complex. These images are inseparable from the cultural landscape, the spirits of the people who created and who a...

Комментарии

  • @donnaschoen1015
    @donnaschoen1015 3 дня назад

    Visited there in 1972 and there was no park rangers there at all ! There was no building for any ranger station! Just signs to mark the way! When we went there was absolutely nobody else there but us! All the way up the mountain to the dwellings and all the way back down -not another car was seen and no other humans besides us! And we didn’t have to pay - not sure if you have to pay to go to see the dwellings now? And I bet there are a lot of people that visit every day ! I think back now and wonder if it was the twilight zone the day we visited!? Lol 😂

  • @ryannbriggs2980
    @ryannbriggs2980 4 месяца назад

    The first guy sounds acoustic

  • @user-ld4dp8bq1d
    @user-ld4dp8bq1d 11 месяцев назад

    The wheel glyph, at the end of this video, is a calendar, because it has 30 spokes. It keeps tracks of the month based on a 30-day rough month. That's very basic understanding of the month system. There is a cross in the middle, which indicates the two equinoxes and the two solstices. It's inside a sphere, which indicates the year cycle. On the inner year circle, you could place a marker to know what month it is. Solstice, two months, Equinox, two months, Solstice, two month, Equinox, two months. You place a marker on each day, on the outer rim of the wheel, at the end of a spoke, to know which day of the month it is. When you complete a 30 day cycle, you move the year marker one quarter of a position, forward, from the last position it was in. This is a calendar, for the year, the seasons, the months, and the days.

  • @joechavez5356
    @joechavez5356 Год назад

    why why U white people tell about these ruin's That u don't know nothing about these people . Our elders are the ones that knew these people . U all don't know nothing about us Natives .

  • @michaelkhoo5846
    @michaelkhoo5846 Год назад

    Great job! I will be using this in class!

  • @roberthawthorne8396
    @roberthawthorne8396 Год назад

    They represent electrified plasma phenomenon in the sky from a solar flare. Compare the Three Legged Crow stone motif to the First Fire Cherokee creation story.

  • @deansing2405
    @deansing2405 2 года назад

    rex you do interesting interviews and i think you need to interview brother panic ...he will blow your mind and he talks about spirituality from a place of knowing ..he doesnt think something he knows what it is and if you want to know talk to him or watch his channel..

  • @pedrorubencastanedacruz4549
    @pedrorubencastanedacruz4549 2 года назад

    Sitio prehispánico mexicano, robado por los gringos...

  • @ashkii9508
    @ashkii9508 2 года назад

    Lol old stones that these rangers rebuild when they knock over see fresh mud here and there.

  • @stonedangel8173
    @stonedangel8173 2 года назад

    These are considered sacred ground to the Pueblo People and they do not want people hiking to the tops yet you state “trails allow visitors to hike to the top of these volcanoes”? Don’t hike to the top of these volcanoes please. Respect the local culture or don’t go here.

  • @chrispile3878
    @chrispile3878 2 года назад

    Been there right after a big snow. I was the only visitor that day - every footprint was mine!

  • @7CAJONEZ
    @7CAJONEZ 2 года назад

    They are not sacred to any Indians, only to tree hugging earth muffins who decided they are. A desolate dump where rock was mined and crushed for landscaping gravel. Awful ugly desolate. We drove motorcycles and dunebuggies all over them. I drove to the top of the northern most, on a cold day you can see steam from the rocks. Now its banned like everything demoncrap earth worshippers do. They actually have a "park ranger" to keep you off.....your tax dollars at work. The petroglyphs are a joke, meaningless grafitti left by Indian teenagers. NW of there are stone towers near the Rio Puerco that were studied by archaeologist who discovered evidence for cannibalism, book named Mancorn. NE is Santa Fe where arrogant ignorant self righteous demoncraps have ruined NM.

    • @colonypainting711
      @colonypainting711 2 года назад

      Wow! How depressing. I grew up there and when my brothers and I were kids we hiked those volcanoes a lot. There was never park rangers or anyone else to disturb our peace. Grew up around a lot of indians and never once heard of the volcanoes being sacred to anyone except maybe adventurous kids. Are the stone towers you refered to the toadstool hoodoos west of Rio Rancho? I never had the opportunity to see those. I did however come across some stone pillars just north of stagecoach canyon in the hills before you get to Madrid. Hopefully, when I return I won't run into too much demoncrap.

  • @mariannageoffrey9533
    @mariannageoffrey9533 3 года назад

    this is what I miss in santa fe when we stayed at santafe-vacationrentals.com/santa-fe-cabin-rentals/ cabin rentals in new mexico, I wish we can visit it again this year and explore it more.

  • @acemoore7204
    @acemoore7204 3 года назад

    Are there many snakes around there?

  • @mikeday62
    @mikeday62 3 года назад

    I was reading an interesting petrogliff, and it appeared to me to be saying "send us raincoats and donuts". It seems the ancient ones were more advanced than previously believed. 🍩 🍩

  • @Blueoriontiger
    @Blueoriontiger 3 года назад

    I see Brigitte has a 2nd job when not working in Overwatch.

  • @janjohannessmith7033
    @janjohannessmith7033 3 года назад

    Because your observations are so superficial they miss the conveyanceof the significance of these relics that being that the ancients met with their creators regularly and ritualistic ceremony. That we have never experienced including the narrator

  • @katharinecarmichael7759
    @katharinecarmichael7759 3 года назад

    WRONG IT IS NOT DEAD!! Tell the Truth!! I know. I live here

  • @MynameisLeoP
    @MynameisLeoP 3 года назад

    POV:This is one of the 5 options you had to choose from Ms.Mcalls class.

  • @birmingham0613
    @birmingham0613 3 года назад

    What a shame visitors are no longer allowed to ride bicycles across the vast expanse.NPS seems interested only in accommodating the hordes of immigrants from California,giving them 96 miles of trail to walk their dogs.Under their new business model,they will probably start charging admission before long.What a disrace.

  • @TheDeanHaemel
    @TheDeanHaemel 3 года назад

    The Government (NPS idiots) need to get out of this place. Just getting there is dangerous because the roads are so bad. It’s so poorly managed they can’t even maintain a climate control system so they can display artifacts. Artifacts that lasted 1000’s of years in the desert can not be displayed because these morons can’t get it right. That’s right, NO ARTIFACTS. These fools are wasting taxpayer money by the dump truck load. Why are they being paid? They do nothing.

  • @emmemagnolia
    @emmemagnolia 3 года назад

    Puebloans still inhabit the region

  • @Shawnsrobloxworld
    @Shawnsrobloxworld 3 года назад

    Too bad the Yankees stole all the artifacts years ago!

  • @juliusmorgan2292
    @juliusmorgan2292 4 года назад

    the reason anasazi ruins are so well preserved when the billyghanaz found it is.... we navajos stayed away from them because they were places of death.

  • @bigman5161
    @bigman5161 4 года назад

    I Loved this place. My friend and I visited this place 2 days ago. And, it is mind blowing. No Words... Just Tears...!

  • @blackspruceknittingpodcast
    @blackspruceknittingpodcast 4 года назад

    Wonderful guides, great video

  • @davidleepaynter
    @davidleepaynter 4 года назад

    They are acient graffiti. When you have no other thing to do to pass time, one most found something to do.

  • @Chicanoking
    @Chicanoking 4 года назад

    Lets go yellowstone. Create your domino efdect🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋

  • @Chicanoking
    @Chicanoking 4 года назад

    I hope they erupt some day and kill everyone in that shit hole city

  • @Smilo-the-Sabertooth
    @Smilo-the-Sabertooth 4 года назад

    I was there on the Labor day Holiday. I did a little walk through video and uploaded it. It was really cool. Nice video. 👍👍👍

  • @samspence9740
    @samspence9740 5 лет назад

    Gila cwiff dwellings😂

  • @pontiacaztec917
    @pontiacaztec917 5 лет назад

    Yeah remember people of turtle island dream smoke dream catchers your aura from your feet to top head clean air with good medicine wheel cycle of timeless life enlitement for mother earth

  • @gladyssabogal6318
    @gladyssabogal6318 6 лет назад

    fantastic video

  • @Alan62651
    @Alan62651 6 лет назад

    Perhaps the images are more than what we think of as "art." The geometric shapes are found in rock are world-wide, and plasma physicists say the are the shapes one would see in the atmosphere during a massive CME event - one that might create major upheaval. Are the ancients just leaving historical records of the solar events that destroyed their civilizations?

  • @TravelsWithPhil
    @TravelsWithPhil 6 лет назад

    My Gila Cliff video - ruclips.net/video/xsEpjr_eZZo/видео.html

  • @dennismahaney8296
    @dennismahaney8296 6 лет назад

    RANGERS BEST JOB IN THE WORLD MY NEXT LIFE I WILL BE RANGER

  • @jatinbansal2384
    @jatinbansal2384 7 лет назад

    fascinating

  • @drizzant23
    @drizzant23 7 лет назад

    I disagree with this open access. Its not honoring the sacred. People don't need to going into the ruins and even touching them. The National Park system exploits. I hope the Pueblo tribes take consideration into changing this.

  • @VOLTAIRES_5
    @VOLTAIRES_5 7 лет назад

    are the Gila Cliffs open this New Years weekend?

  • @jonmanjeot
    @jonmanjeot 8 лет назад

    Hello, I couldn't find any other way To contact. I love to explore and to photograph national parks. I work with photos, video, and more. I would love to help rebrand your parks image.

  • @jonmanjeot
    @jonmanjeot 8 лет назад

    Hello, I couldn't find any other way To contact. I love to explore and to photograph national parks. I work with photos, video, and more. I would love to help rebrand your parks image.

  • @darrellchavez5299
    @darrellchavez5299 8 лет назад

    Cool!

  • @ArsalanAzarmi1253
    @ArsalanAzarmi1253 8 лет назад

    исследование истории: так коллекции воспоминание о вечной памяти, видение за зрение, и т.д.

  • @ellenedwards5748
    @ellenedwards5748 8 лет назад

    Petroglyph national monument in Albuquerque very nice : visitor center is new , helpful , the trail nice and neat , we enjoyed the hike in finding and seeing many etching images by ancient Pueblo natives , beautiful and sacred place . Appreciate this monument so we can learn more about our native Americans culture

  • @calvincrowe5906
    @calvincrowe5906 9 лет назад

    Ogham in every site

  • @calvincrowe5906
    @calvincrowe5906 9 лет назад

    It's all ogham

  • @calvincrowe5906
    @calvincrowe5906 9 лет назад

    And the other 5% is ogham

  • @aliyourbrother1
    @aliyourbrother1 9 лет назад

    Star maps

  • @indignant99
    @indignant99 10 лет назад

    Drew.... you have a bad writer; and you're a bad pronouncer. RESS-PIT, not ree-spite. Also, one *SLAKES* his thirst, not "slacken."

  • @SalvaTerraChants
    @SalvaTerraChants 11 лет назад

    A very helpful introduction to Aztec Ruins National Monument! We invite you to see our video, "Hidden Things," which features the Aztec Ruins