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Aerial view of Pueblo Bonito, the largest great house at Chaco Canyon

Chaco Canyon

850 CE – 1150 CE
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Interest

Pre-ColumbianHigh MedievalAncestral Puebloan

Pueblo Bonito size

650+ rooms, 40 kivas, 5 stories, D-shaped plan

Road network

400+ km of 9-m-wide straight roads connecting outlier sites

Peak period

850–1150 CE; abandoned by c. 1150 CE

Astronomical alignment

Solstice/equinox alignments in kiva doorways and the Sun Dagger site

UNESCO

World Heritage Site since 1987

Territory covered

~60,000 km² of road-connected Ancestral Puebloan sites

Chaco Canyon is where Ancestral Puebloan civilization built on the largest scale.”

Overview

Chaco Canyon cuts through the San Juan Basin of northwestern New Mexico, an arid plateau at 1,900 m elevation surrounded by desert. Between approximately 850 and 1150 CE it functioned as the political, ceremonial, and redistribution center of a culture archaeologists call the Ancestral Puebloans — the ancestors of the modern Pueblo peoples of Arizona and New Mexico.

The canyon contains twelve major 'great houses' — monumental masonry structures of five or more stories, containing hundreds of rooms and multiple kivas (circular ceremonial chambers). Pueblo Bonito, the largest, was planned from the outset as a single integrated structure: a D-shaped building, 162 m across, containing approximately 650 rooms arranged in a rising crescent of masonry terraces, 2–5 stories high, with 40 circular kivas including two great kivas over 20 m in diameter. It was constructed over roughly 300 years (850–1150 CE) and was the largest building in North America until the 19th century. Chetro Ketl, Pueblo del Arroyo, and the other great houses follow similar architectural principles: massive core-and-veneer sandstone masonry, a D- or C-shaped plan, regular room arrangements, and elaborate kivas.

What makes Chaco exceptional beyond its architecture is its relationship to the wider landscape. More than 400 km of prehistoric roads radiate from the canyon to outlier great houses across a 60,000 km² territory, connecting communities as far as 150 km away. These roads — 9 m wide, dead-straight, often cut into bedrock — served as communication and redistribution channels for turquoise, ceramics, and food.

The solar and lunar alignments built into Chacoan architecture are among the most precisely documented in prehistoric North America. The main facade of Pueblo Bonito faces due south; great kiva doorways are aligned with solstice sunrises; the Sun Dagger site on Fajada Butte uses a slotted rock to cast a dagger of light on spiral petroglyphs at solstices and equinoxes. The canyon was largely abandoned by 1150 CE, possibly due to drought, social fragmentation, or the shift of power to new regional centers.

Why It Matters

Chaco Canyon is where Ancestral Puebloan civilization built on the largest scale. The great houses are not merely large — they are precisely planned, astronomically aligned, and connected to a continent-spanning road network. Understanding Chaco means reconsidering what North American civilizations were before European contact: complex, centralized, architecturally ambitious, and capable of organizing labor and materials across vast distances. The turquoise trade evidence at Chaco — hundreds of thousands of worked turquoise pieces from mines in New Mexico and Colorado — shows an economic network of a scale not seen again in the American Southwest until after Spanish colonization. Modern Pueblo peoples maintain direct oral and cultural connections to Chaco, making the site simultaneously an archaeological record and a living ancestral homeland.

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Evidence & Interpretation

Distinguishing what is well-established from what remains debated.

Well-Established Facts

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  • Tree-ring dating (dendrochronology) from Pueblo Bonito's roof timbers provides one of the most precise construction chronologies in North American archaeology: building began c. 850 CE and continued in discrete phases to c. 1130 CE, with a major expansion between 1020 and 1050 CE.
  • Isotopic analysis of macaw bones found at Chaco shows the birds were imported from breeding facilities in northern Mexico, confirming a long-distance exchange network extending more than 1,000 km south.
  • Over 200,000 worked turquoise pieces — beads, pendants, inlay — have been recovered from Chaco; isotopic source-matching links them to mines at Cerrillos (60 km south of Santa Fe) and other sources across the Colorado Plateau.

Debated Interpretations

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  • Whether Chaco functioned as a ceremonial pilgrimage center (receiving periodic influxes of visitors from outlier communities), a permanent political capital (with a ruling elite resident year-round), or primarily a storage and redistribution node for the basin's agricultural surplus is actively debated.

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Location

Sources

  • In Search of Chaco: New Approaches to an Archaeological EnigmaDavid Grant Noble (ed.) (2004)
  • Chaco's Northern Prodigies: Salmon, Aztec, and the Ascendancy of the Middle San JuanPaul Reed (ed.) (2008)
  • Chaco Culture NHP — National Park ServiceLink

Research Papers

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