Aztec Butte
Canyonlands National Park
Aztec Butte rises prominently over expansive brush flats with exceptional views across the Island Mesa, adjacent buttes and Trail Canyon. Ancestral Puebloans settled in Canyonlands about 800 years ago, and built storage structures called granaries to cache and preserve harvests for future use. The Aztec Butte Trail leads to several of these exceptionally well preserved structures.
Around 1300 A.D., changing weather patterns impacted agriculture and the Ancestral Puebloans began migrating south from Canyonlands
Though typically associated with inaccessible cliffs, it's not uncommon for Desert Bighorn Sheep to graze the grasslands of Island Mesa
Once stocked with squash, beans and maze, granaries were sealed with stone and mud
Lupine can be poisonous to sheep and horses, posing a challenge to early ranchers in this area
Native Americans used boiled primrose roots for digestive and respiratory ailments
Blooming mahonia emits a strong, pleasant fragrance detectable from a distance
A few steps off the slickrock path leads to exceptional views over Trail Canyon and the Alcove Spring Trail
Sticky shoes and 3-4 points of contact are required to scale the near-vertical slopes of Aztec Butte
The Aztec Butte Granaries are concealed and sheltered by the butte's mesa rim
Though Aztec Butte is 'singular', it refers to a complex of buttes in the area around which artifacts can be found
When Canyonlands was established in 1964, there were approximately 100 bighorn sheep remaining in the park; today the herds total 350
Trail Canyon's many fingers can be seen from high points on the Aztec Butte Trail
Though concentrated around Salt Creek in the Needles District, Ancestral Puebloans built granaries throughout Canyonlands
Buttes were ideal places to build cache-granaries because they could be easily seen and navigated to from long distances
Grasslands in the high desert take root in areas where soils are several feet thick
A deceptively challenging .2 mile, 185' climb leads to the top of Aztec Butte
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