Annual Letter from Solstice Project 2022

Annual Letter from Solstice Project 2022

Archaeologists Rich Friedman and Rob Weiner with Anna Sofaer at a Written on the Landscape filming event.
Photo by cinematographer Dyanna Taylor.

My Chaco Canyon Journey

Many of you have experienced my Chaco Canyon journey through my two previous films, The Sun Dagger and The Mystery of Chaco Canyon, both narrated by Robert Redford and together viewed by more than half a million people. Audiences continue to access the films on Amazon Prime and as presented every year on PBS in New Mexico.

I’m writing you on the winter solstice, December 21, the shortest day of the year, and a day marked by the people of Chaco Canyon in works of architecture that spanned some 75,000 square miles of the American Southwest.

With a team of superb, experienced filmmakers, and extensive interviews with researchers and indigenous experts over the past decade, we are close to realizing the completion of my third film, Written on the Landscape. I am pleased to announce that with our existing funding we have completed a first assembly of a rough cut. The film reveals our latest findings about the Chaco culture and the vast expanse of its influence and interchange with peoples of Mesoamerica.

Another $50,000 is needed to add new state of the art animation and complete the editing necessary for a polished rough cut. With the formal rough cut in hand, we can approach additional sources for completion funding, distribution and marketing.

Our film will document Chaco’s fast vanishing cultural landscape and awaken the public to its significance in our world today. The Chaco civilization came to fruition between 800 and 1250 AD with an incredible cultural richness and astronomical knowledge that carries moral lessons for our own era. The story of Chaco suggests that perhaps a civilization can become too powerful and contain within its achievements, the seeds not of destruction but rather a remarkable moral reawakening toward a more sustainable and egalitarian society.

You may have seen Chaco in the news lately, as Secretary Deb Haaland has called for Congressional approval of a 10-mile radius around Chaco Canyon for protection from oil and gas drilling and development. We have uncovered a wealth of new knowledge about the Chacoan people who have been greatly undervalued, in part, because they left us no written record. The record, as we show, is literally “written on the landscape.”

Our film documents archaeological evidence that reveals a far larger Chacoan region that has gone largely unrecognized and requires greater protection than the initial Congressional allocation. We seek to promote protection and acknowledgment of this world treasure in our own “backyard.”

See below our cast and crew in the production of Written on the Landscape.

Please join me by contributing however generously you can in our effort to complete Written on the Landscape and share the wonders and lessons of the ancient Chaco people with a national and international audience.

Thank you,

Anna Sofaer
President
Solstice Project
222 East Marcy Street #19
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501

If you prefer, please mail your donation to the Solstice Project address above. Please note that the Solstice Project is a 501c3 non-profit organization and your contributions are tax deductible to the extent that the law allows.

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Written on the Landscape

Cast & Crew

With these remarkable participants, Written on the Landscape will transform understanding of the Chaco people; showing that their interests and achievements reached to the stars with a brilliant conceptual map of the cosmos on the vast arid landscape of the Chaco region. In reflections of descendant people, the film also highlights the wisdom of their choice to close Chaco and to no longer live in a hierarchy of powerful people seeking control of nature. A profoundly important message has been shared for us today as we face challenging choices with our human created climate crises.

Petuuche Gilbert, of Acoma Pueblo, educator and activist, describes the moral lessons of Chaco and how people left Chaco to form new, more egalitarian and sustainable societies that exist to this day.

Petuuche Gilbert
Taft Blackhorse

Taft Blackhorse, a member of the Diné, is an archaeologist with extensive knowledge of Chaco. He shares his people’s understanding of Chaco sites, and the power of The Gambler who enslaved people, manipulating them with gambling and Datura, to build the Great Houses of Chaco.

Phillip Tuwaletstiwa, of the Hopi Tribe, former deputy director of the National Geodetic Survey, combines his scientific research into the astronomical alignments of Chaco buildings with insights into the symbolic significance of the sun and moon as instruments for Chaco elites to gain power with their special knowledge.

Phillip Tuwaletstiwa
Paul Pino

Paul Pino, of the Laguna Pueblo, educator, and former chairman of the Laguna Tribal Historic Preservation Board explores the spiritual dimensions of the Chaco world that continue in traditions of his people today.

Elena Ortiz, of the Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo, an educator and daughter of anthropologist Alfonso Ortiz, speaks from personal experiences beginning in childhood, to convey cautionary lessons learned from the Chaco dominance over nature, and a move by her people to an ethos of equality. 

Elena Ortiz
Alonso Mendez

Alonso Mendez, an archaeoastronomer and artist of Maya heritage, who has done extensive work in Palenque, Mexico, shares his deep insights into Mesoamerican cosmology, drawing parallels between these traditions and Chacoan and Puebloan traditions.

Rich Friedman, archaeologist with four decades of Chaco field research, applies new technologies, such as LiDAR, to broaden our understanding of the immense scope of the Chacoans’ architecture and the significance of their system of “roads.”

Rich Friedman
Rob Weiner

Rob Weiner, archaeologist and doctoral candidate, explores the significance of Chacoan roads and their relationships with distinct topographic features and astronomical events. He shares his findings of Mesoamerican exotic goods and gaming pieces as powerful ritual objects in Chacoan society.

Anna Sofaer, our guide on the Chaco journey, rediscovered long-lost knowledge of the Sun Dagger in 1977. Her writings and two previous films have broadened our knowledge and understanding of this remarkable ancient civilization that left no written record, but “writing on the landscape,” to be uncovered by the Solstice Project team.

Anna Sofaer
Pat Sandoval

Pat Sandoval, member of Laguna Pueblo, retired Superintendent of Laguna Middle School, former Director of Planning and Evaluation at the SFIS, and a long-time supporter of the Solstice Project’s educational outreach. She underscores the importance of Indian youth learning the scientific achievements of their ancestors.

Adriel Heisey, pilot and aerial cinematographer, is contributing to our film striking images of Chaco Great Houses and “roads” throughout the vast expanse of the Four Corners. He says in the film that he continues to “discover new sites every day,” in some of the most surprisingly remote desert landscapes.

Adriel Heisey
David Valentine

With his expertise in archaeoastronomy and refined skills in night sky cinematography, David Valentine has captured magnificent imagery for Written on the Landscape. In exploring Chaco ruins in the canyon and the far reaches of the Four Corners he has also created beautiful footage of ancient architecture set in rugged desert terrains.

Christopher Beaver has produced, directed, and edited numerous films including Dark Circle that was awarded Grand Prize in Documentary at the US (now Sundance) Film Festival, and  a National Emmy in News and Broadcasting, and was short-listed for Academy Award Feature Documentary. Recently, his film, Groundwater, received Special Recognition, Knight-Risser Prize for Western Environmental Journalism. Chris has contributed film and edited extensively our rough cut of Written on the Landscape.

Christopher Beaver

If you prefer, please mail your donation to the Solstice Project address above. Please note that the Solstice Project is a 501c3 non-profit organization and your contributions are tax deductible to the extent that the law allows.

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Solstice Project on PBS KNME  Colores , 1/15 – New Insights on Chaco

Solstice Project on PBS KNME Colores , 1/15 – New Insights on Chaco

Dear Friends,

 

When asked why I and my colleagues stay so deeply engaged with Chaco, over decades, I talk about new compelling evidence that this ancient culture brilliantly mapped a vast region of the American Southwest with their cosmology — holding in their mind’s eye writing on the landscape. These new insights resonate deeply with the Puebloan people today who have shared that “roads” are spirit ways and perceive land as sacred.

Visit our beautiful new web site: www.solsticeproject.org

518 Old Santa Fe Trail
STE 1 #511
Santa Fe, NM 87505

©Adriel Heisey  Chimney Rock Great House,  92 miles north of Chaco Canyon, perched on a precipice in the southern Rockies; at lower left of photo 

Annual Letter from the Solstice Project

Annual Letter from the Solstice Project

2020-2021 Annual Letter

December 2021

Dear Friend,
I want to thank you for your interest and continuing support to the Solstice Project, and send warm greetings of the season. Our research and engagement with Chaco has been ongoing even in this challenging time, and despite the uncertainties we’ve all been experiencing, we have exciting news to share. May this letter find you well.

Work in Progress

Our biggest news is the progress on our film, Written on the Landscape.  Our latest research  shows that the patterns of astronomical alignments in the central canyon and their relationships to sacred landscape are repeated throughout the Chaco world, much amplified since The Mystery of Chaco Canyon. The new film expands our field of vision to the culture’s reach across the Four Corners, and it also looks south, finding interchanges and correspondences with Mesoamerica.

One of our most important recent discoveries is how remarkably vast the Chaco region is – reaching into four states, an area the size of Ohio. We query the Chacoans’ inspiration to amass immense resources and manpower to build massive structures in desolate swaths of a remote desert, including hundreds of great kivas and ritual roads. The mystery unfolds as we discover many sites and roads align to dramatic formations in the landscape, and often to solar or lunar events. And we return to Chaco Canyon, to Pueblo Bonito as a great ritual center and power hub radiating out.

Rather than telling you, we’re including a special bonus, to show you – a link to the trailer that suggests its promise as a final hour-long film. We are very pleased that Robert Redford has lent his endorsement to the film.

We need to raise $180,000 now to reach our goals of completing this phase of production in early 2022, and ultimately to raise an additional $700,000 further to complete our full-length version of the film. Interviews are in the wings to be shot on location in Aztec Ruin at winter solstice, at Mt. Taylor, and two outlying Great House/Road complexes. Updating scenic, time lapse and aerial footage is essential in evoking the magnetic beauty of the Chaco world. Further development of the script is required, involving consultations with writer/advisors, as well as review and sequencing of extensive footage. Please join us by contributing to this exciting venture to enhance our understanding and appreciation of the great legacy of the Chaco culture – not only for Puebloan descendants, but for all of us! Know that contributions will be noted in thoughtful credits in the final production.

 


Governor Brian Vallo of Acoma Pueblo

Action for Preservation of Chaco

News on Chaco from the Biden administration is encouraging. U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced it would seek to withdraw federal land holdings within 10 miles of the Chaco Culture National Park boundary, making the area off-limits to oil and gas leasing for 20 years. The action halts new leases in the area for the next two years while federal officials consider the proposed withdrawal. We are proud that the LiDAR work of the Solstice Project’s colleague Rich Friedman showing Chaco roads, helped inform the government’s decision.

We’ve led protests on fracking at Chaco for years, and though we’re relieved at the announcement, we’re also fully aware that a protection bill needs to become law so that future administrations cannot undo it. Thanks to the efforts of U.S. Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez, and Senators Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Lujan, such a bill is underway. Further, our latest findings indicate Chaco sites extend well beyond the 10-mile radius. Our friend, Governor Brian Vallo of Acoma Pueblo, had this to say:

“Our fight to protect this sacred place is rooted in what our elders teach us and what we know as descendants of those who settled here. That is our responsibility – to maintain our connection, our deep-felt obligation and protective stewardship of this sacred place.” Governor Brian Vallo

Education

We are also happy to report that The Mystery of Chaco Canyon still impacts and informs audiences in significant ways. We are told by our distributor that 800 K-12 schools and colleges have purchased copies of The Mystery of Chaco Canyon to teach about the remarkable archaeoastronomy of the ancient Pueblo people of Chaco. The film has also streamed at 130 colleges and universities where 5,000 viewings have taken place in classrooms, student centers, dorm rooms and apartments for a total time viewed of 1,800 hours!

One feature of the film’s popularity is that PBS stations continue to broadcast the film year after year since its release in 1999.  Just three weeks ago, the film was aired again on KNME, our local PBS station in Albuquerque.  Over the last six months The Mystery of Chaco Canyon film has had over 600,000 viewings on Amazon Prime.

Outreach

More PBS-related news! I’ve been invited to appear on KNME’s “Colores,” to be filmed shortly and aired in January. I’ll be talking about some of the findings explored in our new film, Written on the Landscape, including the great expanse of the Chaco culture across the Four Corners, as shown in Adriel Heisey’s aerial photography, the huge scale of the Great Houses, numerous roads (enhanced by Rich Friedman’s LiDAR and animation), and the great number of kivas.  Check our website for the date!

 

“For the past four decades. Anna Sofaer and her colleagues at the Solstice Project have documented the brilliant  astronomy of the ancient Chaco culture. Her newest film, “Written on the Landscape”, includes the latest technologies of Lidar and 3-D animation along with sweeping aerial imagery, to reveal how the Chacoans’ deep engagement with the celestial cycles transformed the vast desert of the entire Four Corners region into a map of cosmology. Please join me in supporting this important work.” -Robert Redford

Archaeologist Rob Weiner, Solstice Project team member, teaching in the field.

Research

Solstice Project colleagues Rob Weiner and Rich Friedman are greatly advancing our understanding of the complex roads of the Chaco culture. As we had found with Chaco’s Great North Road, their findings suggest remarkable parallels between the Chacoan road relationships with topographic features and the Puebloan and Navajo people’s profound regard for the sacred peaks of the four directions. Sometimes in fact the same peaks are involved.

Great efforts are made by descendant peoples to commemorate events of their history in pilgrimages to special land forms. This belief in the power of the land to carry vital history and spiritual life is inspiring to our world today. As we interviewed Petuuche Gilbert of Acoma at the uranium tailings mounds (not fully reclaimed) at the base of Mt. Taylor, we had the painful realization that our modern regard for land for economic gain contrasts sharply with the indigenous view of its sacredness. This view of the power of the sacred peaks also enlightens our understanding of the Chacoans’ enormous expense of labor and engineering to create rigorously straight roads, often 3 feet deep and 30 feet wide, and up to 35 miles long, to make connections to canyons, mountains, springs and buttes, and frequently with astronomical connections.

 

 

 

Please support our ongoing efforts to educate young people and convey to world-wide audiences the remarkable achievements of the Chaco culture. A contribution of any size will be much appreciated!‡ (Please mail checks to the P.O. Box below or donations may be made on our website: solsticeproject.org.)

Keep in touch with our progress on our new film, Written on the Landscape, as well as upcoming events, news about protecting Chaco Canyon and other exciting information on our Solstice Project Facebook page: www.facebook.com/solsticeproject.

All best wishes for good health and harmony in the coming year,

Anna Sofaer
President
Solstice Project
518 Old Santa Fe Trail
STE 1 #511
Santa Fe, NM 87505

‡Please note that the Solstice Project is a 501c3 non-profit organization and your contributions are tax deductible to the extent that the law allows.