800-year-old spiral rock carvings marked the solstices for Native Americans

The spiral patterns that appear prominently in the rock carvings are thought to be a symbol among ancestral Pueblo peoples for the sky or the sun.
The spiral patterns that appear prominently in the rock carvings are thought to be a symbol among ancestral Pueblo peoples for the sky or the sun. (Image credit: Jagiellonian University)

The Pueblo people created rock carvings in the Mesa Verde region of the Southwest United States about 800 years ago to mark the position of the sun on the longest and shortest days of the year, archaeologists now say.

Panels of ancient rock art, called petroglyphs, on canyon walls in the region show complex interactions of sunlight and shadows.These interactions can be seen in the days around the winter and summer solstices, when the sun reaches its southernmost and northernmost points, respectively, and, to a lesser extent, around the equinoxes — the "equal nights"— in spring and fall, the researchers said.

The carvings show scenes depicting the traditions of contemporary Hopi people — descendants of the ancestral Puebloans who lived in parts of the Southwest until the 13th century. The traditions describe important rituals at seasonal points in the yearly solar calendar tied to farming activities, such as planting and harvesting.

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The rock carvings "probably marked the specific seasons," archaeologist Radek Palonkaof Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland, told Live Science. "It was not only to observe the phenomena."

Archaeologist Radek Palonka with some of the 800 year-old rock carvings that are illuminated by patterns of sunlight and shadow at the time of the winter solstice.

Archaeologist Radek Palonka with some of the 800 year-old rock carvings that are illuminated by patterns of sunlight and shadow at the time of the winter solstice. (Image credit: Jagiellonian University)

Since 2011, Palonka has led researchers from his university in investigations of ancient sites around Castle Rock Pueblo that date from the early 13th century. Their research is one of only a few European archaeological projects in the region. 

Castle Rock Pueblo is now part of the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, near Colorado's border with Utah and about 20 miles (32 kilometers) west of Mesa Verde National Park.

Archaeological investigations

Patterns of sunlight and shadow move across the rock carvings only at certain times of the day, and only for a few days around the solstices and equinoxes.

Patterns of sunlight and shadow move across the rock carvings only at certain times of the day, and only for a few days around the solstices and equinoxes. (Image credit: Jagiellonian University)

Ethnographic studies in the 19th century suggested that rock carvings in the area may have been used as solar calendars, but Palonka's team is the first to verify and document the phenomena. 

"We used a lot of new technologies, like laser scanning and photogrammetry," a method that uses detailed photographs to create a map or 3D model of a place or object, he said. "So we were able to see more stuff on the rocks than it is possible to see only with the naked eye." 

At one of the sites studied so far, the petroglyphs are carved on a flat, south-racing rock wall that's shaded by an overhanging rock. They consist of three carved spirals and smaller elements, including rectangles, grooves and hollows. 

At the time of sunset on days near the midwinter solstice, which happens around Dec. 22 each year, patterns of sunlight and shadow can be seen to move through the spirals, grooves and other parts of the petroglyphs, Palonka said.

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The phenomenon is also visible around the spring and fall equinoxes, around March 20 and Sept. 22 each year, but it does not occur at other times of the year.

Similar petroglyphs at another ancestral Puebloan site, at nearby Sand Canyon, are lit by sunlight only in the late mornings and early afternoons around the summer solstice, he said.

The observations were made by archaeologists and students from Poland, mostly during the warmer months, and throughout the year by volunteers for the administration of the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument. The team has also discovered several panels of Pueblo rock art previously unknown to scientists, Palonka said. 

Castle Rock Pueblo in the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument include several cliff dwellings and rock carvings made about 800 years ago.

Castle Rock Pueblo in the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument include several cliff dwellings and rock carvings made about 800 years ago. (Image credit: Jagiellonian University)

Pueblo peoples

The name Pueblo — which means "village" in Spanish — was given by Spanish colonists to several Native American peoples who lived in the American Southwest.

Unlike many nomadic Native Americans, the Pueblo peoples lived in large complexes of buildings they constructed from adobe and stone.

In the Mesa Verde region and elsewhere, the ancient villages of ancestral Puebloans are represented by sophisticated "cliff dwellings" in the sides of canyons and under rock overhangs. But the buildings are also found on valley floors, such as at Chaco Canyon in New Mexico.

Archaeologists and students from Poland's Jagiellonian University and local volunteers have studied the cliff dwellings and rock art at Castle Rock Pueblo since 2011.

Archaeologists and students from Poland's Jagiellonian University and local volunteers have studied the cliff dwellings and rock art at Castle Rock Pueblo since 2011. (Image credit: Jagiellonian University)

Many ancient monuments throughout the world show signs of having been used, at least in part, to mark annual events of the solar calendar, such as the midwinter and midsummer solstices.

The importance of solar solstices is also found in several Native American traditions. "This collaboration with native people, in this case Hopi people from Arizona, is really important." Palonka said.

Among other details, Palonka has learned that the spiral symbol, seen in many of the rock carvings related to the solstices and equinoxes, was often an emblem of the sun or sky — but not always. 

The symbol can also have other meanings — including water, physical migration or spiritual migration — such as moving between the physical world and a mythical or spiritual world, he said.

Originally published on Live Science.

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Live Science Contributor

Tom Metcalfe is a freelance journalist and regular Live Science contributor who is based in London in the United Kingdom. Tom writes mainly about science, space, archaeology, the Earth and the oceans. He has also written for the BBC, NBC News, National Geographic, Scientific American, Air & Space, and many others.


  • Etherair
    I am saddened my ancestors spent all their energy to eradicate all traces of native peoples and their culture. It was a fairly complete job, very few genocides in modern history even come close.

    Puzzling it out after the fact is more difficult but at least some are making an effort.
    Reply
  • The Pahana
    Etherair said:
    I am saddened my ancestors spent all their energy to eradicate all traces of native peoples and their culture. It was a fairly complete job, very few genocides in modern history even come close.

    Puzzling it out after the fact is more difficult but at least some are making an effort.
    Can an ignoramus provide a single shred of evidence of your imaginary genocides?The Siberians aren't native either!They original Natives were White and Celtic that discovered Europe!!
    "This study analyzed DNA samples taken in 1971 from 48 nonadmixed Easter Island natives, and it found that 5 of them (10%) were R1b. It also found that several of the natives had a European HLA haplotype whose frequency peaks in Basques. (Note that my K = 26 admixture analysis of Amerindians and Mestizos showed that a primary component in the additional Caucasoid admixture found in Peruvians is a Basque component.) The study notes that the genealogy of the natives sampled implies that the R1b and the HLA haplotype must have been introduced to the island before about 1816."
    Reply