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Home > New Mexico > Crownpoint%25252Bvicinity > Upper Kin Klizhin, Kin Klizhin Wash, Crownpoint, McKinley County, NM



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Item Title
Upper Kin Klizhin, Kin Klizhin Wash, Crownpoint, McKinley County, NM

Location
Kin Klizhin Wash, Crownpoint%25252Bvicinity, NM

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Created/Published
Documentation compiled after 1933.

Notes
Survey number HABS NM-181
Unprocessed field note material exists for this structure (N576).
Significance: The upper Kin Klizhin community centers on a rectangular sandstone structure associated with the Anasazi culture which flourished one thousand years ago in the Four Corners region of the American Southwest. The people who constructed this structure were part of a complex cultural system that integrated smaller remote "outlying" farming communities such as Upper Kin Klizhin with a concentration of larger pueblos in Chaco Canyon. Features associated with the large public structures in the canyon and in the outlying communities are distinctive core and veneer masonry walls, blocked-in kivas, great kivas, road segments, earth works such as berms and mounds, and smaller house sites. Public structures such as Upper Kin Klizhin integrated the community on both social and religious levels while the great structures at Chaco Canyon integrated much of the Four Corners region. It is believed that large pilgrimages to Chaco Canyon from the outlying communities were made for social and religious events. By 1100 A.D. the center of the Anasazi culture dispersed and shifted north to the San Juan, Animas, and La Plata Rivers, and most of the sites, including Upper Kin Klizhin were abandoned. An analysis of the remaining core-and-veneer walls and adjacent masonry rubble at Upper Kin Klizhin suggests that the original strucure was three stories in height, contained 20 rooms, and included a tower kiva. Upper Kin Klizhin was strategically located as the first Chacoan structure on a major road leading south from Chaco Canyon. Archeologists have speculated that the structure served as a way-station along this road as well as providing a social and religious center for a nearby cluster of small Anasazi house sites. Late Pueblo II - early Pueblo III ceramic fragments indicate that the site was occupied between 1000-1100 A.D.

Subjects
Building Deterioration
Archaeology
Indians Of North America


Related Names
Anasazi Indians
Wardell, Coye, Field Team
Gauper, Robert, Field Team
Gaudy, Peggy, Field Team
Lyon, Robert, Photographer
Barbee, William C., Delineator


Collection
Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)

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