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Ancient history gets new digs

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013 12:54 AM
A statue in front of the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center depicts an ancestral Puebloan climbing up a cliff face using hand and toe holds while carrying a bundle of wood for fuel. The sculpture, titled "The Ancient Ones," was created by Edward J. Fraughton and was a gift from the Mesa Verde Foundation.
Tara Travis, curator of Mesa Verde National Park’s collection of artifacts, said the collection holds some three million objects, including this piece of petrified wood that was unpacked recently at the new visitors center. in addition to archaeological artifacts, the collection includes natural and park history items and traditonal garb from the 26 modern-day tribes who are descendants of the ancestral Puebloans.
Tara Travis, curator of Mesa Verde National Park’s collection of artifacts, said the faces on the figures portraying everyday activities of the ancestral Puebloans in the park’s new visitor center were modeled after their living descendants. Jim Eaot from the Zuni Pueblo was the source of this face.
A visitor to the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center at the park's entrance pauses to admire the view from the Rotunda, which frames Park Point.
Bill Strong of Lynchburg, Va., who said he has been on the road visiting national parks since April 12, pauses next to Joe Cajera Jr.'s sculpture "In the Moment," to check his email on Wednesday at the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center. The sculpture, depicting a storyteller, was a gift from the Mesa Verde Foundation.
Park Ranger Matt Huebner gives a family who stopped by the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center some ideas about what to visit in the park .
"The Ancient Ones," a sculpture by Edward J. Fraughton located in front of the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center depicts an ancestral Puebloan climbing a cliff carrying a bundle of wood. The sculpture was a gift from the Mesa Verde Foundation.
Displays inside the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center describe the Ancestral Puebloans, who began living on the mesa some 1,500 years ago.
An interactive, three-dimensional map at the new visitors center at Mesa Verde National Park educates visitors on various aspects of the park, including the animal and plant life there, the ancestral Puebloans and the effects of wildfires. To the left is a metal map of the park to give the visually impaired a sense of its topography.
“We wanted to put people back into the landscape,” said Tara Travis, curator of Mesa Verde’s collection of artifacts, when talking about the displays at the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center. The faces of the figures performing the everyday tasks of ancestral Puebloans were modeled from their descendants in modern day Native American tribes.
Tara Travis, curator of Mesa Verde National Park’s collection of artifacts, said the park’s new visitor center will house some three million objects in this repository, which includes cabinets with microclimates to preserve the more fragile items.
Gov. John Hickenlooper is scheduled to attend the grand opening of the new Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Centeron Thursday.

No more artifacts moldering in the “Tin Shed.” No more storing archives in nooks and crannies. No more driving a long, narrow, winding road to learn what Mesa Verde National Park has to offer.

After decades of fundraising and lobbying, and five months after a “soft” opening, the Mesa Verde Visitor and Research Center will hold its grand opening Thursday morning.

“What we hope to accomplish is to help people plan their trip to the park, to excite them and give them lots of questions that they have to visit the park to answer,” said Mesa Verde collection curator Tara Travis. “Before, especially for people who got here later in the day, they had to drive all the way up to the park to see what’s here.”

The 23,620-square-foot building is divided into two sections: the 7,364-square-foot Visitor Center and the 16,256-square-foot Research Center.

The original government estimate for the project was $22 million, but the final cost was $16.5 million. Money came from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, a line item on the National Park Service budget and a number of foundations and individual donors, including the Mesa Verde Foundation, which purchased the land on which the center sits.

The design took into account the many purposes the building must serve.

On the Visitor Center side, that means interactive exhibits, an information desk, a Mesa Verde Association store with a much-needed merchandise warehouse, a conference room for use by community organizations, windows into the artifact repository and processing rooms where the public can learn more about that side of archaeology, and a place to purchase tickets for tours of Cliff Palace, Balcony House and Long House.

“No more waiting in the sun to buy tickets,” Travis said with a smile, “and people don’t have to get up to the park at the crack of dawn to get them.”

Former Chief of Interpretation Tessy Shirakawa, and current Supervisory Ranger Rose Marie Salazar worked hard to make the information accessible and accurate.

“We have a map and a model of Spruce Tree House for the visually impaired so they can feel the topography,” Travis said. “The dioramas built by the Civilian Conservation Corps at the Chapin Mesa Museum have been so popular, we had to find a way that was sensitive and appropriate to do what they did, put the people in the landscape, because that’s the only thing that’s missing at Mesa Verde.”

Their solution was to create life-size mannequins of ancestral Puebloans performing common tasks such as farming and grinding corn on metates. They used faces created from masks of the ancestral Puebloans’ living descendants, members of 26 modern Native American tribes who call New Mexico and Arizona home.

The Research Center side is just as diverse. There are designated spaces for a library, park archives, an isolation room to make sure new additions to the collection aren’t bringing insect infestations or other contaminants into the repository, a processing room and storage — lots of storage — for the 3 million artifacts, countless maps, traditional garb and other items from modern-day tribal descendants, natural specimens in the collection, including fossils, and five freezers for photo negatives.

A BIG JOB

When Travis was hired as the new curator in 2010, her predecessor, Carolyn Landes, had laid some groundwork. But Travis’ first job was a big one.

“I have friends who say they would rather do anything than pack for three years,” she said. “And then, to top it off, last summer, my husband and I bought a house after living in park housing, so we had to move our personal stuff, too.”

Fragile artifacts require special packing. The National Park Service conservator identified numerous items in the collection that were so fragile, staff and volunteers had to be specially trained, Travis said.

Each individual item, particularly the ceramics, requires slow and methodical packing, including foam in the bottom of boxes, stuffed “snakes” to rest it on, acid-free archival tissue and lots of bubble wrap. The budget for packing materials alone is about $6,000, and that’s with borrowing from other National Park Service museums and reusing materials as the packing and unpacking continues in stages.

“We’ve been so lucky in our volunteers,” Travis said. “We have one Iraq war veteran who builds models, so he knows how to use an Exacto knife and glue gun to build storage supports, and another volunteer who drove over from Durango. He had an archaeological background, and his father owned a moving company, so he’s been great at logistics.”

Perhaps the happiest volunteer has been Trina Lindig, who lives in Mancos.

“When she was a kid, her parents excavated a lot of these artifacts in the Wetherill Mesa Archaeological Project,” Travis said. “Now she’s seeing them again as an adult.”

Travis hopes to have the final items, including the “perishables” such as textiles and sandals, moved by fall.

The move also has provided an opportunity to conduct a complete inventory of the massive collection because it is simply too big to do more than a random sample every year, Travis said.

“It had been moved twice because of threat of fire, but they weren’t able to do much then, obviously,” she said. “That’s one of the great things of moving the collection off the mesa, to reduce the threat of fire.”

ANCESTRAL PUEBLOANS

AND FERRARIS

What do a people who lived hundreds of years ago and one of the most coveted cars today have in common?

“I did some research and only found a few other museums that use geothermal energy for power,” Travis said. “They include us and the Ferrari Museum in Modena, Italy, which makes sense, because they have all those big garages to heat and cool.”

In March, the Visitor and Research Center received a Platinum rating for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) from the U.S. Green Building Council, the highest rating possible. Fourteen geothermal wells warm the building through coils in the floor during the winter and cool it with chill bars in the summer. Two arrays of photovoltaic solar panels and a micro-hydroturbine provide additional energy, and a number of other features maximize energy efficiency.

“For artifact storage, we have such stringent requirements for climate control,” Travis said. “This will provide both consistent power and lower energy bills.”

Visitors at the grand opening may not get to see all the energy-efficiency features, but they will get a rare chance to actually go into the repository and archives. Travis hopes people will take the opportunity to come out and see the newest addition to the landscape of Southwest Colorado.

abutler@durangoherald.com

Did you know?

In addition to displays, artifacts and maps, the Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center is full of interesting facts about the park.
It’s not actually a mesa (flat) but a cuesta, with a 7 percent grade.
That grade makes it warmer, so the growing season for corn and other crops for the ancestral Puebloans on top was 20 days longer than in the valleys surrounding it.
More than 5,000 archaeological sites from distinct periods between A.D. 500 and 1300 have been identified in the park.
About 600 cliff dwellings have been discovered, dating from about A.D. 1220 to 1300.
About 75 percent of the park has burned in wildfires since its establishment as a national park by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. Fire destroys, but it also has helped archaeologists discover more sites and artifacts.
During the summer monsoon season, Mesa Verde can receive up to 100 lightning strikes in a 24-hour period.
The park is home to more than 200 species of birds, five amphibians, 16 reptiles and 74 mammals. Seep springs in certain areas provide a moist microclimate that allows moss, ferns and orchids to thrive.
In 1978, Mesa Verde was designated as a World Heritage Site by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, one of the original 12 sites in the world to be so designated. More than 960 sites now are acknowledged on the list.
More than 572,000 people visited the park in 2011, creating an estimated $43.4 million in local economic benefit.

If you go

The grand opening of the Mesa Verde National Park Visitor and Research Center will take place at 10 a.m. Thursday. The center is off U.S. Highway 160 before the entrance to the park. Gov. John Hickenlooper will be among the dignitaries in attendance and will sign Senate Bill 13-270, Wildfire Preparedness and Emergency Response Funds, at the close of the ceremony. Entrance fees to the park will be waived Thursday to celebrate the occasion.
The archive and collection areas will be open for public viewing from 1 to 4 p.m. Thursday and 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and Memorial Day.
During the next week, the park is sponsoring activities related to the Indian Arts and Culture Festival. All will take place at the Visitor and Research Center unless otherwise noted. Events include:
7 p.m. Friday: Concert by the Four Corners Community Band at Morefield Amphitheater.
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday: Indian Arts and Culture Festival.
10:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. SATURDAY: Rug auction at the Morefield Store Patio.
10 a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m. Saturday and May 26: Pueblo Indian dances.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 26: Indian Arts and Culture Festival.
For more information, call 529-4465 or visit www.nps.gov/meve.

5 Images

Park Point is visible from a window in the rotunda of the new Mesa Verde Visitor and Research Center, which will hold its grand opening Thursday. The center is situated with views from every side, including a sweeping view of the La Plata Mountains from the entrance.
Bill Strong from Lynchburg, Va., takes a moment to enjoy “In the Moment,” Joe Cajera Jr.’s sculpture of a storyteller that sits in the rotunda of the new Mesa Verde Visitor and Research Center. Strong said he’s been on the road since April 12 visiting America’s national parks.
A 20-foot-tall sculpture of an ancestral Puebloan climbing a cliff face elicits admiration and a photo opportunity for visitors from Germany arriving at the new Mesa Verde Visitor and Research Center. The sculpture, called “The Ancient Ones” by Edward J. Fraughton, was one of three purchased for the center by the Mesa Verde Foundation.
An interactive, three-dimensional map at the new Mesa Verde Visitor Center allows guests to see everything from where the main ruins are to the locations of the Civilian Conservation Corps camps from the Depression era and areas that contain old-growth piñon groves. To the left is a metal map that allows visually impaired visitors to get a sense of the park’s topography.
Tara Travis, curator of the Mesa Verde National Park collections, will have spent three solid years packing and moving the collection of about 3 million artifacts when the move to the new Mesa Verde Visitor and Research Center is complete in the fall. The items will be stored in the new repository, which includes cabinets with microclimates to preserve fragile items.
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