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"My ancestors were here," he said, adding that grew up in Santo Domingo Pueblo, just down the Rio Grande from Frijoles Canyon. "It's a national park," he said. "But it was a place where people lived, and I'm pretty sure the spirits of the people are still roaming, you know. And I'm pretty sure they don't like it either." Volcanic eruptions more than a million years ago left deposits of soft tuff that cover much of northern New Mexico's Pajarito Plateau. The residents of Frijoles Canyon
-- an estimated 800 people by the late 15th century -- excavated into the tuff to create rooms, many of them fronted by big masonry pueblos. There are nearly 1,100 such cavates in the canyon, and Vanishing Treasures has funded their first-ever extensive documentation, in addition to the graffiti removal. Humetewa and fellow conservator Conor McMahon use a variety of methods to get rid of graffiti. In Cave Kiva, accessible by ladder and the largest of the cavates on the public trail, they re-soot the ceiling about twice a year to obscure the vandalism. They close the cavate, don respirators, and burn small pieces of wood to create the smoke and soot that blackens the ceilings. They painstakingly fill in graffiti carved into the mud-plastered lower walls of cavates, using natural materials
-- tuff, silt, clay-like soils dug from washes and creek beds and mixed together to match the color and texture of the walls. Getting rid of graffiti not only helps stabilize the walls and enhance the visitors' experience, it also deters other would-be vandals. "People are much more likely to graffiti an area where they already see it," McMahon said. Roger Kennedy, director of the National Park Service from 1993-97, views the Vanishing Treasures effort as capturing the spirit of the conservation programs initiated by the New Deal during the Franklin Roosevelt administration. "It says, as those programs did, it's time to pay attention -- and more than pay attention
-- to help sustain our common heritage," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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