CROW CANYON HISTORY


Citizen scientists contributing to groundbreaking research.

Crow Canyon was founded on the idea that members of the public could play an important role in archaeological research. Each year, we welcome people of all ages to our campus near Mesa Verde in southwestern Colorado. Crow Canyon is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.

Crow Canyon marks its beginning in 1983, with the merger of Ed Berger’s Crow Canyon School and Dr. Stuart Struever’s Center for American Archaeology. In 1968, Northwestern University anthropology professor Struever, established the foundation for Illinois Archaeology (FIA), which purchased the old hardware store in Kampsville, Illinois as a headquarters and began long-term multidisciplinary research in the Illinois River valley. Also, in 1968, Cherry Creek High School teacher, Ed Berger, began teaching summer school programs in southwestern Colorado that included archaeology among many other subjects. Berger created a nonprofit organization called Interdisciplinary Supplemental Education Programs (I-SEP). In 1974, Berger purchased 80-acres in Crow Canyon, brought in several mobile homes, which he remodeled to serve as a campus for his Cherry Creek High School programs. In 1976, Berger left Cherry Creek High school and I-SEP began offering job training programs for Ute Mountain Ute youth, as well as offering archaeology tours for adult learners. In 1982, FIA bought the property from Berger and changed its name to the Center for American Archaeology (CAA), with campuses in Cortez, Colorado and Kampsville, Illinois. Struever served as president and chief fundraiser for CAA, and Berger continued as Executive Director of the Crow Canyon campus. In the winter of 1982–1983, a lodge with dormitory rooms, a kitchen, and dining room was built, and spring—fall programs were advertised. In the spring of 1983, two Ph.D. archaeologists, E. Charles Adams and Bruce Bradley were hired, and Crow Canyon began running public archaeology programs for student and adult learners.

The campus is located in the heart of the Mesa Verde region where Ancestral Pueblo people lived for thousands of years before migrating from the area in the 1200s. There are also significant ancestral connections for the Ute, Paiute, Diné, and Jicarilla Apache nations. The area has a density of more than 100 sites per square mile in some places—one of the highest in the United States.

Since 1983, Crow Canyon has maintained a commitment to long-term archaeological research, including excavation, survey, and environmental studies to address problem-oriented regional and inter-regional research designs. Crow Canyon has consistently fulfilled its legal and ethical obligation to analyze the material collected from sites, curate the collections and records in federal repositories, publish descriptive reports and databases, and publish the methods of field and laboratory data collection from all its projects. In 1995, Crow Canyon established a Native American Advisory Group to integrate archaeological and traditional knowledge and to give back to the communities whose ancestors we study.

The Crow Canyon Archaeological Center emerged as an independent not-for-profit organization in 1985. Today, the Center is widely known as a leader in archaeological research and education, and is recognized as an innovator for its involvement with American Indians in its research and education program development and delivery, and for its partnerships with American Indian communities on mutually beneficial projects. The Center’s 170-acre campus now consists of a lodge, a research lab/office building, hogan-inspired cabins, and student cabins.

Images from Crow Canyons History

Timeline


Our visual timeline takes you through the history and milestones of Crow Canyon.


“We have a responsibility to the land, all things on the land, to one another, and to our ancestors. These places are still occupied by ancestor spirits.”
— Dr. Joseph Suina

Crow Canyon: Learning from the Human Experience


An intro to the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center and its programs. Includes interviews with students doing archaeological fieldwork through Crow Canyon’s school group programs. Don’t just learn about archaeology—do it!

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