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Located on the border of southeastern
Utah and northern Arizona, Monument Valley contains some of the most
dramatic rock formations on the Colorado Plateau. These large blocks of
sandstone were compacted during the Paleozoic era, while the effects of
differential erosion through exfoliation, wind, and water started during
the Cenozoic era. The reddish hues in the sand and rock of this
twenty-five-mile valley come from iron oxide, while the black streaks, or
desert varnish, that course down the cliffs are manganese oxide. In
addition to sandstone formations, there are also remains of volcanic
activity, El Capitan being the most famous.
The valley's earliest inhabitants include the Ice Age Paleo-Indian hunters
(12,000-6,000 B.C.), Archaic hunter-gatherers (6,000 B.C.-A.D. 1), and Anasazi
farmers (A.D. 1-1300). The latter group's pottery styles reflect a regional
variation known as Kayenta Anasazi. As early as the 1300s, San Juan Band
Paiutes frequented the area as temporary hunters and gatherers. They named it
"Valley or Treeless Area Amid the Rocks", and vested the landscape with
supernatural qualities and mythological stories. For example, Totem Pole Rock
is said to be a god held up by lightning, El Capitan a sky-supporter, and all
of Monument Valley near Goulding's Trading Post a hogan that faces east.

Spanish and Mexican incursion into the area was either exploratory or punitive
(in their attempts to control Navajo raiders). In the early 1860s Kit Carson
followed suit by sending Utes into the region to capture Navajos, who fled to
peripheral areas such as Navajo Mountain. The majority of the Navajos returned
from captivity in 1868 and soon confronted miners seeking silver. Ernest
Mitchell and James Merrick, two of the most notable, were killed by Utes or
Paiutes near monoliths that still bear the miners names.

In 1884 President Chester Arthur added this region by executive order to the
Navajo Reservation, but white men's interest in the area did not wane.
Prospectors continued to search for silver, and in 1906 John Wetherill and
Clyde Colville established a trading post at Oljeto that remained in operation
for four years until Wetherill moved to Kayenta. In 1924 Harry Goulding
established a post which is still in operation today, although under different
management. During the 1950s Goulding encouraged the employment of Navajos in
the uranium industry as well as in holding parts in the movie industry.
Monument Valley became known throughout the world when it was featured in such
western film classics as John Ford's. Stagecoach, She Wore a Yellow
Ribbon, and Cheyenne Autumn.

Outside influences brought further
development in the form of a Seventh-day Adventist mission and hospital, and an
Episcopalian mission--both in the Oljeto area. The Navajo tribe has also
established a tribal park that includes some of the most dramatic monoliths,
making the area accessible to thousands of tourists who visit the region each
year.



 
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