NM True TV - Pecos National Historical Park
The ruins of this centuries-old cultural crossroads help visitors, such as the NM True Crew, get a better understanding for New Mexico’s diverse and rich history. All of the cultures that have helped shape the modern day New Mexico seemed to be drawn to this beautiful mountain area at one time or another. From a key trading location dating back a millennium to a key battleground in America’s Civil War, this spot on the map might hold as much significance as any other in the country.
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Pecos National Historical Park
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 hunting tribes of the buffalo plains. (Courtesy nps.gov/peco)
Pecos National Historical Park - New Mexico
Southeast of Santa Fe, New Mexico are the remains of what was once the largest Indian pueblo in the Southwest. Pecos Pueblo dominated a major trading route between the farming Pueblo Indians and Great Plains' hunters.
Music 1: “Rain On Lake Erie” by Purple-Planet
Pecos National Historical Park, New Mexico
Pecos National Historical Park is a National Historical Park in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It is located about 17 miles (27 km) east of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Pecos National Historical Park is composed of several noncontiguous units. The main unit of the park preserves the ruins of Pecos Pueblo. The main unit also protects the remains of Mission Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles de Porciúncula de los Pecos, a Spanish mission near the pueblo built in the early 17th century. A 1.25-mile (2 km) self-guiding trail begins at the nearby visitor center and winds through the ruins of Pecos Pueblo and the mission church.
Pecos National Historic Park, Santa Fe, New Mexico (HD) - 2009
One of the many visits we made during our Summer 2009 trip from TX to LA, LA to Thailand to Cambodia back to Thailand, to LA and LA to Vancouver then back to TX!
Pecos Man Camp 1450 Lodging, LLC. | Phase #2, VIP lodging in Pecos, TX
Pecos Man Camp Limited Availability, 1450 Lodging, LLC., phase #2 VIP lodging. Not your ordinary Man Camp - Direct TV + Sports channel, 24hr Fitness Center, Free laundry and Ice, Covered BBQ Area, and more. 4k drone Texas.
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Pecos National Park | 10,000 years of history
Pecos - A cultural crossroads. For over 10,000 years this landscape has been the backdrop for Pueblo and Plains Indians, Spanish conquerors and missionaries, Mexican and Anglo armies, and settlers traveling the Santa Fe Trail. Deserted since 1838, all that remains of this vibrant pueblo are remains of the foundations, a few kivas and the Franciscan mission.
SAR Field Trip: Pecos Pueblo at the Beginning
Pecos Pueblo at the Beginning
Field Trip. Friday, April 5, 2013, 8:00 am--4:00 pm
Pecos Pueblo is one of the most historically significant sites in New Mexico. As the largest and easternmost of the Pueblo villages, by 1540 it was home to at least 2,000 inhabitants.
In 1915, Dr. A. V. Kidder, the acknowledged dean of Southwest archaeology, began a ten-year project at Pecos Pueblo. The intensive excavations were the first in the United States explicitly designed to demonstrate the value of scientific techniques for exploring the past. Kidder's archaeology at Pecos and surrounding sites has long been the lens through which archaeologists and historians understand the long history of Rio Grande Pueblo peoples.
Join Judy Reed and Pecos National Historical Park volunteer Rudy Busé, who is Kidder's grandson; and National Park Service curator Heather Young in a full-day exploration of villages ancestral to Pecos Pueblo. We will hike off-trail to visit both the Rowe Ruin and the Forked Lightning Pueblo—two pueblos that are not usually open to the public. We will also go behind the scenes to see the magnificent artifact collections at Pecos National Historical Park. Throughout the day, we will discuss the stories of how people came together at Pecos.
Video recording and editing by SAR volunteer John Sadd.
Permian Lodging-Pecos, TX Location
Take a virtual tour with Permian Lodging of our Pecos, TX location! Our Pecos, TX location is our newest facility.
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Chaco | Chaco Culture National Historical Park
Chaco | Chaco Culture National Historical Park
Chaco Culture National Historical Park is a United States National Historical Park hosting the densest and most exceptional concentration of pueblos in the American Southwest.
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Pecos-Barstow-Toyah ISD Bond Video
Informational Video about the November 5th 2019 Bond Election
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Pecos River Bridge.Comstock,Texas
walking with levi,river overlook
Planet Pecos
Master plan design for Planet Pecos in Pecos, TX.
Designed by D1 Architect
Rio Pecos Cowles Ponds Trout Fishing Public Access
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Prehistoric Indians of the Lower Pecos Region, Seminole Canyon, Tx
Hi guys. Ken here. I'm in the Lower Pecos region of Texas, that is the Southwest corner of the state. It's somewhat remote here, but the area has attracted people for over 11,000 years. Join me in the adventure to find out why. The area is like an immortal storyteller. Vast canyons were etched in limestone over 70 million years ago, after a time when warm shallow seas covered the area. These canyons remember both human habitation and several geological and climatic changes. The area is bounded by three rivers: the Pecos to the West, the Devils to the East, and the Rio Grande to the South. The rivers probably attracted the area's earliest human inhabitants. Nearly 12,000 years ago, nomadic hunters entered the Lower Pecos region. They enjoyed abundant food, including rabbit, mammoth and bison. Herds of camels, horses and elephants roamed the rich fertile land. These peole took shelter in the canyons.
Although the area is drier than it was in prehistoric times, many of the same plants still grow here today. Melinda, a Rock Art Foundation guide, explained that bulbs from selected plants (Lechuguill and Soto) were harvested and put into bake ovens. They've found remnants of bake ovens when excavating the site we're going in. They would bake them for several days and eat them when they came out -- kind of like an artichoke.
I walked into several rock shelters during my week long visit to the Lower Pecos. Here, I'm at the Fate Bell Shelter, in Seminole Canyon. About 4,000 years ago people lived here, designating different areas for sleeping, cooking, and other activities. They slept on woven mats on the ground. Over a period of 4 to 6 thousand years, the walls were extensively decorated with pictographs. Several different styles were used, representing their beliefs and what was important to their lives. The oldest style, the Pecos River style, is the oldest religious art form in Texas (and possibly the Americas). We can only imagine the preparations involved in production of major pictographs, some of which are over 30 feet across.
In many shelters, designs were also carved into rocks. This rectangle is an interesting example. It is exactly oriented north-east-south-west. Wonder how they did that?
Melinda pointed to a hollowed-out section of a rock and explained that food and paint may have been ground in depressions such as these. She continued: In some of the other shelters, these may depressions are very long -- as long as my arm.
Selected sections of some shelters were used for toilets. Yes, I am holding human poop, thousands of years old!
Graffiti from recent historic times may also be seen in rock shelters. For example, this is from the railroad construction eara, circa 1884. Remnants of the roadbed for the Southern Pacific Railroad may also be seen. It was constructed in 1882 and abandoned 1892. Here is their bake oven.
In spite of the harsh environment, there are many photo opportunities for wildflowers and wildlife.
The Lower Pecos region is our portal to the past. Preservation is a growing concern. Valuable sites are now threatened due to human activity. Some archeologists believe that our children may be the last generation to see this rock art, due to their rapid rate of deterioration. What happens to these ancient treasures, depends on our decisions.
We had no written language to leave you word of our people, but we had art, primitive to you, historical to use, to tell you of our world. Jim Zintgraff.
For additional information see: Seminole Cayon State Park website: and The Rock Art Foundation: Also read Life in a Rock Shelter, Prehistoric Indians of the Lower Pecos by G. Elaine Acker, 1996, Hendrick-Long Publishing Co.
Filmed by Ken Kramm, March 2011 at Seminole Canyon State Park and Historic Site, Amistad National Recreation Area and the White Shaman Shelter. Creative Commons Music, The Freesound Project, sandyrb Native Drum Loop.
Pecos River Cliff House Spring 2018 Promo Video
The Pecos River Cliff House, 30 minutes outside of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Enjoy Fishing, Hiking, Exploring, Swimming, Canoeing, Kayaking, Relaxing, Breathtaking Views and NEW FOR 2018, Off Roading in the National Forest with our Monster Jeep.
Pecos National Historical Park | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Pecos National Historical Park
00:00:46 1 Features
00:01:07 1.1 Pecos Pueblo
00:03:04 1.2 Forked Lightning Ranch
00:04:08 1.3 Old Santa Fe Trail
00:04:29 1.4 Glorieta Pass Battlefield
00:05:13 2 Administrative history
00:06:00 3 See also
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SUMMARY
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Pecos National Historical Park is a United States National Historical Park in San Miguel and Santa Fe Counties, New Mexico. The park, operated by the National Park Service, encompasses thousands of acres of landscape infused with historical elements from prehistoric archaeological ruins to 19th-century ranches, to a battlefield of the American Civil War. Its largest single feature is Pecos Pueblo, a Native American community abandoned in historic times. First a state monument in 1935, it was made Pecos National Monument in 1965, and greatly enlarged and renamed in 1990. Two sites within the park, the pueblo and the Glorieta Pass Battlefield, are National Historic Landmarks.
New Mexico 2012
While Dana took a school trip to Washington, DC, Jules and I headed for The Land of Enchantment for time at the ancestral pueblo sites, in the mountains, and (of course) eating chile. Mostly scenery, this video details time at Pecos National Historic Monument, on the La Luz trail in the Sandias outside Albuquerque, and at Chaco Culture National Historic Park.
Pecos River Terrero Bridge Trout Fly Fishing Public Access
Tererro is an unincorporated community located in San Miguel County, New Mexico. The community is located on New Mexico State Road 63 11.6 miles north of Pecos, NM. Tererro has a post office and General Store.
A convenience store, 14 miles up the Pecos Canyon from the town of Pecos New Mexico, in the Santa Fe National Forest. They sell groceries, camping, & fishing supplies, and have incredible hummingbird watching!
The Pecos River originates in 20 miles northeast of Santa Fe, New Mexico and flows into Texas, emptying into the Rio Grande at Lake Amistad. Its headwaters are on the eastern slope of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range in Mora County north of Pecos, NM, at an elevation of over 12,000 feet feet.
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Pecos Valley History Ep 1
First Episode of my Pecos Valley History series.