Tsin Kletzin
Tsin Kletzin or Tsin Kletsin is a Chacoan Anasazi archaeological site located on top of South Mesa in Chaco Culture National Historical Park, northwestern New Mexico, United States. It is located 3.2 kilometers south of Pueblo Bonito. Tree-ring dating placed the construction around 1110-1115 A.D. Originally it contained 81 rooms, 3 kivas and a plaza constructed to create a 2-story structure. The plaza was enclosed by a wall, and a 1-meter-wide entry portal allowed access to the plaza from the south. The masonry style of this complex is called McElmo (Chaco-McElmo), characterized by large sandstone blocks and some tubular slabs. Some 800 meters north-east from Tsin Kletzin there is Weritos Dam. Its alleged role was to retain the storm water runoff in a reservoir that archaeologists Lagasse, Gillespie and Eggert suggest provided Tsin Kletzin with all of its domestic water. However, massive amounts of silt accumulated during flash floods would have forced the residents to regularly (10-15 years) rebuild the dam and dredge the drainage channel, and perhaps as early as every 2 years the water might have overflown the dam causing some flooding.
Presently Tsin Kletzin is accessible through the South Mesa Trail (2.6 miles round trip) starting at Casa Rinconada; however, tourists typically do not visit there.
Etymology
Tsin Kletzin is a misspelled version of Navajo Tsin Łizhin meaning "black wood place" or "charcoal place.
References
- William N. Morgan, "Ancient architecture of the Southwest," University of Texas Press, 1994, ISBN 978-0-292-75159-0, p.55-56
External links
- "Chaco Research Archive", University of Virginia
Coordinates: 36°02′11″N 107°57′28″W / 36.0364°N 107.9578°W