Lasers have revealed a 1,000-year-old sacred road near Chaco Canyon in New Mexico. Researchers say the road was part of an Indigenous ritual landscape, serving as a path between natural springs and aligning with the sunrise on the winter solstice, a new study finds.
Until now, researchers thought the road at the Gasco site may have linked Indigenous settlements in the area. But new research shows that not only is a sacred road there much longer than they thought, it also has a previously unknown road running almost parallel to it. In addition, the two roads align with the winter solstice sunrise over Mount Taylor, which remains a sacred mountain among Indigenous peoples today, the researchers wrote in the study.
The discoveries at Gasco, west of Albuquerque and about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Chaco Canyon, indicate that the roads made by this Indigenous culture were not just for regular traffic but were integral to their system of cosmological beliefs, the researchers wrote.