MESA GOLONDRINA AND THE CHAMA RIVER CANYON WILDERNESS

in #photography7 years ago

This foreboding place is called the Chama Canyon Wilderness. Mesa De Los Viejos (Plateau of the Old Ones) is on the right side of the image while the Rio Chama (river) runs along the bottom of the canyon and forks into the Rio Gallina at the base of Golondrina Mesa (here in the middle of the image). Please click on the image for the full screen version.

Golondrina Mesa, is full of wonderful wildlife like black bear, elk and mule deer, and the periphery is lined with wonderful ruins of the Gallina culture( or or Largo-Gallina), an obscure culture that existed during the pre-Hispanic period in theAmerican Southwest from approximately 1050 to 1300. 

The Rio Chama is a major tributary of the Rio Grande. For 31 miles, it flows through canyons and designated wilderness. The serpentine twists of the river take it below towering cliffs, heavily wooded canyons, archeological sites, and dinosaur tracks.

This wild and Scenic river is popular among river rafters and canoeists running through six miles of rapids in the Chama Canyon Wilderness.  If you look closely in the lower foreground of this image, along the river you will note there is a radical twisting turn along the river. This is known as the "Screaming Left Hand Turn" for obvious reasons! It contains very rough rapids, especially during heavy rain periods when the river is full and running fast.

This historic river and canyon has been used by humans for nearly 10,000 years, dating from the time when camels and wooly mammoths roamed the southwestern United States. 

The bedrock of Chama Canyon is shale, basalt, tuft, sandstone, granite, quartzite and other types of rocks, some of which formed about 110 million years ago. The walls in Chama Canyon rise 1,500 feet above the river and the canyon rim and sloping uplands are frequently punctuated by steep sandstone and shale outcroppings. 

Down in the canyon are a plethora of geological and historical wonders including high, steep canyon walls and escarpments consisting of rock slides, ledges, pinnacles and ridges and old ruins from the First Nations Ancestral Tribes. 

The Chama Valley contains thick stands of Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir, Pinyon, Juniper, Mountain Mahogany, Currant, Oakbrush and Serviceberry. The raparian area also includes cottonwoods, box alder, willows, hackberry and numerous shrubs that are indigenous to the northcentral New Mexico area. It is teeming with a variety of wildlife including cougars, black bears, elk, mule deer, badgers, bobcats, coyotes, beavers, raccoons, ducks, dippers, spotted sandpipers, Canadian geese, turkey, golden eagles, bald eagles, falcons, hawks, owls, turkey buzzards, brown and rainbow trout, flathead chub, flathead minnows, white suckers, carp, channel catfish, black crappie, longnose dace, and several other species of animals, birds and fish. Various species of rattlesnakes and copperheads are found in the adjacent mountain valleys and canyons. 

There is an exceptionally dark human history to this area which I will cover in a follow up post. 

I lensed this foreboding image while flying from Taos, New Mexico to Winslow, Arizona trying to not get caught in the rapidly developing storm that was forming up all around me. I was captivated by the dramatic colors being created along the canyon clifftops and the river cutting through this harsh and rugged terrain. 

This is from "Where Eagles Fly - The American Wilderness Expedition" my personal project of exploration in the North American Wilderness. 

I am on a mission to raise awareness of our Iconic Natural Heritage Treasures of North America. If you wish to help spread the word and share these images of our amazing planet, please resteemit

Yehaw!!

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Stunning as usual. I appreciate you taking the time to give us all such excellent background information on the locations you photograph.

Upvoted & resteemed.

Samantha I am glad you like it. I love researching out these places because in doing so I find other places I then fly out and shoot. The world is full of secret places with forgotten history! Stay tuned, much more to follow!

I will stay tuned, indeed! Keep up the amazing work!

That is an outstanding view. Bet it took a long climb to get into position to shoot this.

Glad you like it and LOL yep it did! I took off from Taos, New Mexico and had climbed to here by the time I crossed the river, so about an hour! I am running 160hp with a cruise prop.

Gorgeous highlights in that photo, @skypilot! I love viewing your work!

Very dramatic image and very detailed information on this wilderness. The river sounds pretty hectic at full flood.
Who was flying when you took the shot lol
100% Upvoted and resteemed.

Stunning as usual 😍

Great post and I concur. Resteemed and Up'd

Amazing, once again! Congrats and thank you for the story.

Just Amazing 1000nd votes for me for this photo wish you the same @funnystuff .I tried some more poetry hope you like
https://steemit.com/poetry/@funnystuff/cinderella-cliche

I am the Great Cornholio! I'm a gringo!

really informative my vote is small thing for your post it deserve more

@skypilot Thank you for sharing! What do you think about Natural fur coats?. This is my opinion post. Nice blog! Subscribed

I want to have this view from my home

Nice skypilot. Thanks for sharing.

Would have liked to have seen this from a plane. You captured it so perfectly and gave us a description that matches. Thank you. 🐓🐓