CASA MALPAIS ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK SPRINGERVILLE,
ARIZONA Casa Malpais Pueblo
As You Ascend The Terraces
To Casa Malpais...
You begin your journey into the past, and start to explore a
lost civilization...
The diminutive but strong mountain people who lived here are
called the "Mogollon." This Pueblo IV site exhibits similarities in pottery and
architecture to the Anasazi of the Four Corners region. We know that Casa
Malpais was occupied for about 200 years, and it was mysteriously abandoned
about 1400 A.D.
Casa Malpais, or "House of the Badlands", is surrounded by unusual
beauty on a rim of volcanic rock overlooking the Little Colorado River's Round
Valley. A breathtaking view of the White Mountains lies to the south.
A "living archaeology" program affords opportunities for
participatory education in excavation and laboratory work in the museum. The
museum and field laboratory are open for visitation, and guided tours are
available by contacting the museum. Membership in the local chapter of the Casa
Malpais Archaeology Society enables the member to participate in special
activities. Other activities offered to visitors include special lectures by
site and visiting archaeologists and historians.
Unique and unusual features characterize the site. The Great Kiva,
painstakingly constructed of volcanic rock, is the centerpiece. A steep basalt
staircase set into a crevice of the high red cliff wall leads to the top of the
mesa.
From this vantage point, at an
elevation of over 7,000 feet, you'll experience a dramatic overview of the
entire pueblo. Natural fissures are located throughout the site. Evidence shows
that these fissures were used for religious ceremonies as these people of the
mountains struggled with the complexities of life and death in their harsh
environment.
Casa Malpais, A National Historic Landmark Site, is located on
U.S. Hwy 60 in Springerville, Arizona (population 2000). Within 30 miles of
this photogenic Mountain Valley, you will find great waterskiing, windsurfing,
and petroglyphs at Lyman Lake State Park, excellent
lake and stream
fishing, campsites galore, historical museums,
hundreds of acres of National Forest offering tall
pines and herds of elk and antelope, a
variety of restaurants and
accommodations, and genuinely friendly people.
The
Smithsonian Magazine wrote: "A new door opening in Anthropology."
And from the New York
Times: "Few sites of pre-Columbian life in North America explored in
recent years have aroused so much curiosity and excitment..." Newsweek Magazine said:
"If past digs are any guide, this one could prove invaluable for
understanding the Southwest's Indians." And from the
Dallas Morning News:
"What may have been a prehistoric regional trading center is the
Southwest's hottest archaeological project..."
The first visit to Casa Malpais by a
professional anthropologist was in 1883, when Frank Cushing, an anthropologist
living at Zuni, visited a site at "El Valle Redondo on the Colorado Chiquito",
and was impressed by what he termed "the fissure type pueblo" he found there.
In his journal he sketched dry masonry, bridging fissures, upon which the
pueblo is constructed.
The Hopi and Zuni people claim an affinity to the site, and they
are consulting with the museum and archaeologists to assure that our work is
conducted with sensitivity toward Native American beliefs and customs. Some
aspects of the site are closed to tours due to their sacred nature.
Join the Casa Malpais Archaeology
Society For more information send a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
Casa Malpais Pueblo, P.O. Box 390, Springerville, AZ 85938. Funded in part by a
grant administered by the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office
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