Wupaki Pueblo, AZ. On the way to the Grand Canyon, right out of Flagstaff. Nikon n90s, 24mm. Fujichrome Velvia 100. NIK
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Reserved Parking for Bird
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Wupatki National Monument, Arizona
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Wokoki Pueblo in evening light at Wupatki National Monument outside of Flagstaff, Arizona. 27 March 2023.
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Box Canyon Pueblo in Wupatki National Monument, Arizona.
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Wupatki
Wupatki ou Wupatki National Monument est un site pueblo ancestral qui contient plus de 800 ruines anciennes. Il est situé dans le centre-nord de l'État américain de l'Arizona, à environ 50 km au nord-est de la ville actuelle de Flagstaff, à 282 km au nord de Phoenix et à 16 km au nord-est du Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument. Wupatki Pueblo, la plus grande structure, était autrefois le foyer d'environ 85-150 personnes qui construisirent également deux structures kiva, un terrain de jeu de balle et d'autres bâtiments, tous construits entre 1100-1200. Wupatki Pueblo reflète une confluence de styles artistiques et architecturaux; la région fut le site d'une intense interaction interculturelle entre différentes cultures autochtones américaines. Les peuples indigènes abandonnèrent Wupatki Pueblo et ses hameaux voisins vers 1275 dans des circonstances mystérieuses. Le lieutenant américain Lorenzo Sitgreaves redécouvrit et documenta le pueblo Wupatki et d'autres ruines en 1851, alors qu'il cherchait une route terrestre appropriée entre le Nouveau-Mexique et la Californie. Wupatki est actuellement un monument national américain, et le Service des parcs nationaux des États-Unis supervise les ruines du site depuis qu'il a été enregistré pour la première fois en 1924 par le président américain Calvin Coolidge.
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Sunday, April 23, 2023: Our last stop for the day was Wupatki National Monument in Arizona. It was interesting to see and climb pueblos preserved from a thousand years ago.
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The Night Sky This Week Wafact
The planets Jupiter (L), Venus (C) and Mercury (R) are seen in an unusual conjunction setting over … [+] the Wupatki pueblo ruin on May 24, 2013 at Wupatki National Monument north of Flagstaff, Arizona. AFP PHOTO/Stan HONDA (Photo credit should read STAN HONDA/AFP via Getty Images)
AFP via Getty Images
Each Monday I pick out the northern hemisphere’s celestial highlights (mid-northern latitudes)…
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Culto a la kachina
El culto a la kachina (también "katsina") hace referencia a las prácticas religiosas específicas centradas en la kachina, que es una entidad espiritual y mensajera divina de la cultura Pueblo, así como de las tribus hopi, zuni, tewa y keresan del actual suroeste de Estados Unidos. El culto a la kachina surgió en circunstancias misteriosas en el suroeste desértico tras un período de profunda agitación social, cultural y religiosa a finales del siglo XIV o principios del XV, tras el abandono de centros como el Cañón Chaco, Mesa Verde, Wupatki y el Cañón de Chelly. Los orígenes exactos del culto a la kachina siguen siendo objeto de acalorados debates académicos. A pesar de la llegada de los conquistadores españoles y los misioneros cristianos a la región en el siglo XVI, los pueblos hopi y zuñi fueron capaces de mantener sus libertades temporales y religiosas, garantizando la supervivencia y el florecimiento del culto a la kachina hasta los tiempos modernos.
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Wupatki and Wukoki Pueblo’s in Wupatki National Monument. Commanding views of the surrounding areas. #nationalparkgeek #roadtrip #roadtrippers (at Wupatki National Monument) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdtk67oPxaY/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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flickr
Wupatki Pueblo II by James Marvin Phelps
Via Flickr:
Wupatki Pueblo II Wupatki National Monument Flagstaff, Arizona October 2021
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Last light falls across the Painted Desert. A window in the Wupatki Pueblo, reveals stories from the past.
Visiting Wupatki National Monument in Arizona leaves one in awe of those who once lived there. The Hopi call these pueblos "The footprints of our ancestors." Though no longer inhabited, these stone homes still hold the history of today’s Pueblo people.
Photo by Brad Sutton. Photo description: A sunset colored sky with clouds sits behind the shadowed remains of an old stone home.
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Trail of the Ancients . Citadel Pueblo by twogiraffe https://flic.kr/p/2iD9vmj Anthony Beyer
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Hey all! Along with this newly (yes, again) edited shot of Wukoki, I come to you with a request. Last night my old computer monitor gave up the ghost, leaving me working from a tiny seven-year-old flatscreen television. It’s inelegant, and to do anything whatsoever with my photos I’ll need a monitor I can trust to portray color nuance and contrast reliably.
I am also, as you may or may not know, currently living in rural Mississippi with my love @derkeethass, where we are both working to keep our rent on an apartment. Unfortunately this means I don’t have any luxury money whatsoever to spend on a replacement monitor of the same caliber as the old one.
You, my followers, are the only place I can turn to for help with this, in the hopes that some of you might be able to send a little good fortune my way. I’ve set up a Ko-Fi page for this reason, if you’re willing to spare a couple bucks, and if you are it would be extremely appreciated. You can find that here -
http://ko-fi.com/kohdiphoto
Of course if you’d rather receive something in return, which I understand completely, my Redbubble shop is always open, where you can find prints of some of my best photos in all kinds of formats and materials. My profit margin there is tiny, but it all adds up, and brings the added benefit of knowing someone is enjoying my work. Also available is the Riven Moitey Dagger shirt I made in October!
Thank you for giving this a look and for considering the plight of a photographer down on his luck, your support in this and for this blog in general is what keeps me excited to share my pictures!
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