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2007 Update
NEW MEXICO- Road project presses through petroglyph park Source: KRQE News 13 ALBUQUERQUE -- Drivers on Albuquerque's West Side can see future relief from traffic congestion: the Paseo del Norte extension is halfway done. The scenery near Paseo del Norte and Golf Course NW changes everyday. New traffic lights are going up, and soon drivers will no longer have to turn at Golf Course. They'll be able to go straight on Paseo. There was a legal battle over moving the petroglyphs and extending Paseo del Norte through the Petroglyph National Monument. Although the city of Albuquerque won the battle, several groups including the Sierra Club have filed an appeal. It's expected to take up to two years before the state appeals court hears the case. Urgent Letters Needed before November 2004 to prevent Petroglyph National Monument Petroglyph National Monument
and its sacred significance to Pueblo Indians
and Hispanic Land Grant Heirs In 1990 Congress formed Petroglyph National Monument located on the western edge of Albuquerque, New Mexico. The monument is an impressive 7,100 acres filled with an estimated 17,000 Indian petroglyphs dating principally from 1350 - 1680 A.D. Hundreds of archaeological sites span the centuries from Paleo-Indian (approximately 12,000 B.C.) to the present. A diverse community of desert plants and over one hundred different species of birds also enrich the monument. This unique monument is critically endangered by suburban encroachment, including plans to build four-lane and six-lane highways through the park. The dramatic seventeen-mile escarpment of volcanic rock forming the monument is a landscape of historic and contemporary significance to the area's Pueblo Indians and Atrisco land grant heirs. Pueblo ancestors covered thousands of black volcanic rocks spilling down from the Mesa with elaborate pecked or incised carvings. "This was a place where Pueblo ancestors wrote down the visions and experiences they felt." Images of shieldbearers, flute-players, horned serpents, star-beings, birds and numerous masks grace the faces of boulders, hardened lava-flow coughed up by long-dormant volcanoes. Even though the glyphs are centuries old, Indians from all the Pueblos recognize the site as sacred, still visiting shrines within the monument to perform seasonal ceremonies. Pueblo leaders, knowing their sacred places within Petroglyph National Monument are threatened, have gone public talking about the hallowed ground. According to Armadeo Shije, of Zia Pueblo, the escarpment area is considered a shipap or sacred center, "central to the great protector mountains of Sandia, Mount Taylor, Jemez, Manzano and Santa Fe. It is the center of great spiritual powers." The petroglyph fields are considered to be" ...the nerve center of the Pueblo culture, religion, and tradition...." The petroglyphs also play a central role in the spirit world which is the destination of the deceased. "...the entire monument area was referred to as "the volcanoes"...the location of spirit trails...traveled by spirits of the dead. The petroglyphs on the escarpment, the volcanoes, and the spirit trails are interrelated, forming a communication nexus to the spirit world that can be used by living persons to help their prayers and medicine...be more powerful." Bill Weahkee, Executive Director of the Sandoval Pueblos, described the importance of the petroglyph fields to the spirit world: "Many things have been buried there over the centuries. These things should not be disturbed in any way as many of these items were placed there to accompany the deceased on his or her journey to the next world. The genuine and mostly ancient petroglyphs are an inherent part of the rituals used to signal the spirit world that one is on this journey." Despite the environmental, cultural and sacred significance of the Petroglyph National Monument, there are grave problems with its preservation. The monument is unfortunately known as one of the most endangered National Monuments in the Park System. It is located to the west of Albuquerque, directly in the path of the city's most explosive growth area. An even greater threat to Petroglyph National Monument is the plan to cut a six-lane freeway, Paseo del Norte, and four-lane arterial road, Unser Boulevard, through the monument. The Paseo roadway, strongly advocated by Albuquerque's Mayor Chavez, would create a 2100 foot long cut-and-fill freeway ramp. By the year 2010 it is estimated that each day the ramp extending over the monument would carry 21,000 vehicles, including large trucks. This traffic would slice northward through the Peidras Marcadas Alcove and the Sand Escarpment areas of the park, two of the finest areas left in the monument. Polly Schaafsma states, "Modern cultural artifacts such as highways with their associated fencing, graffiti, trash, and signs --to say nothing of the traffic, noise, exhaust fumes, and visual impacts --destroy completely the setting as well as the purpose of the monument. People visit rock art sites for a variety of reasons, and these sites fulfill a number of basic needs for members of contemporary society. The majority of visitors are not archaeologists, but they are people seeking a sense of place outside the ordinary context of the urban world." Although alternatives to the freeway have been proposed by the National Park Service, Pueblo Indians, the Sierra Club, and the Friends of the Albuquerque Petroglyphs, politicians are poised to pursue the road's development. It is expected that following November's elections, congressional legislation may be introduced to authorize the construction of Paseo del Norte through Petroglyph National Monument. Constructing a major roadway through a National Monument sets an ominous precedent for future development in other National Monuments and parks. In the case of Petroglyph National Monument the road will not only spoil an open-space at the edge of urban sprawl, it will devastate Pueblo Indian culture, which has already lost too many sacred sites to development projects. Additional photos from Leonard Becker:
A slightly different version of this article appeared in Site Saver newsletter, Summer 1996 eddition. |
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