
Aztec Ruins National Monument
Early settlers saw those massive stone walls and figured only the famous Mexican empire could have built something this impressive. They were off by hundreds of miles and years. Here’s the story behind New Mexico’s misnamed monument.

An Ancient Planned Town
Ancient Pueblo people began building here in the late 1000s. The town grew from 1050-1150 and became one of the Southwest’s biggest settlements. Old roads connected it to Chaco Canyon 55 miles south.

The West Ruin
Builders finished the West Ruin between 1100-1130. This huge U-shaped building is originally stood three stories tall with 221 ground-floor rooms and about 353 rooms total.
The building has 12 small kivas plus the Great Kiva in the center plaza. Many 900-year-old wooden roof beams still survive today.

The Great Kiva
The Great Kiva is 48 feet across, making it one of the Southwest’s biggest ceremony rooms. Built partly underground, its walls rise above the plaza while the floor sits below ground level. Four huge pillars held up the 95-ton roof.
Fifteen rooms circle the center space, each with doorways opening to the plaza. The center has a raised fire pit and wind guard to control smoke during ceremonies.
A small floor hole called a sipapu represents where ancient people came from the underworld in Pueblo creation stories.

How Two Cultures Left Their Mark
Chacoan people built here from 1100-1130 CE using their signature large-scale architecture. Mesa Verde groups arrived in the 1200s, modifying existing buildings and adding cobblestone walls set in adobe mud alongside the original sandstone construction.
The site’s kivas show both traditions. Chacoan kivas are simple circles, while Mesa Verde kivas have keyhole shapes with wall niches and sipapus.

The Mysterious Tri-Wall Structures
Aztec Ruins contains three of the Southwest’s rarest buildings called tri-walls. These unusual structures have three circular walls with rooms between them, unlike any other Pueblo architecture. The Hubbard Tri-Wall, Mound A, and Mound F likely date from the early 1100s.
Together with the West and East Ruins, they form a five-point pattern that may have held spiritual meaning.

When Drought Forced People To Leave
By 1300 CE, everyone had abandoned Aztec Ruins. A severe drought from 1276-1299 CE hit the entire region.
Many moved southeast to the Rio Grande Valley or south and west into Arizona, continuing their cultural traditions in new homes. This exodus was part of a wider regional abandonment of the Four Corners area in the late 1200s.

World Heritage Recognition
UNESCO designated Aztec Ruins a World Heritage Site in 1987 as part of the Chaco Culture sites. Earlier, officials listed it on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966 for additional protection.
The site highlights the Trail of the Ancients Scenic Byway connecting regional archaeological sites. The American Museum of Natural History later bought and donated the land to ensure government protection.

Visiting Aztec Ruins National Monument
Aztec Ruins National Monument sits within the city limits of Aztec, New Mexico, on Ruins Road (County Road 2900). The central location makes it easy to reach for visitors exploring the Four Corners region.
A self-guided tour extends about half a mile, leading through the West Ruin where visitors can walk through many of the original structures. The rebuilt Great Kiva stands as the highlight of the tour.
Read More from This Brand:
- 11 of the Most Remarkable Ruins at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
- Ancient Puebloans Hand-Carved Homes, Petroglyphs & Steps Into These Volcanic Canyons
- Ancestral Puebloans Built This Towering Sky City Long Before Columbus Was Even Born
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