Okay, so what's behind Door Number Four?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rick Quinn
Here's one for you (or for anyone else who would care to chime in):
Where are these two old duffs sitting?
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...oads/Aztec.jpg
The trees are cottonwoods in their autumn finery. There aren't more than a handful of places that this could be!
More clues on request
Rick
In the interest of fairness, here's a second photo from the same place:
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...Doorways-1.jpg
There are even fewer possibilities in this case!
No relation to the Aztecs in Mexico
Quote:
Originally Posted by
landmariner
The door ways path scene could have been Aztec Ruins National Monument, but unlikely the cottonwoods pic.
Landmariner, you are correct: this is Aztec Ruins National Monument, just outside of Farmington, New Mexico. And never say never on those cottonwoods! If you're there at the right time of year, late October, or thereabouts the cottonwoods add quite a lot to the experience!
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...ads/Aztec3.jpg
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...AztecTrees.jpg
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...AztecRuins.jpg
Aztec Ruins dates to about 1100 AD, and was built by the Anazazi, or, more correctly, the Ancestral Pueblo People. The largest building here had as many as 400 rooms when it was in use. This next picture, below, shows the remains of a Kiva, a round building sunk partway beneath the ground. This is a traditional ceremonial space, and it's a common feature of Ancestral Pueblo sites.
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...oads/Kiva1.jpg
Back in the 1930'S, the archaeologists who were excavating the site took an unusual step and reconstructed the Great Kiva at Aztec Ruins, creating a silent, circular room, 40 feet in diameter, lit by soft beams of sunlight slanting down through small rectangular windows that ring the building at ground level. The Great Kiva, as it stands today, has the air and solemnity of an empty cathedral; when you enter this space, your natural inclination will be to speak in hushed tones--or not at all...
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...loads/Kiva.jpg
(Portions of the above description were lifted from Arizona and New Mexico: 25 Scenic Side Trips. Aztec Ruins, as well as the Bisti Badlands, feature prominently in Scenic Side Trip #17
Rick