Shiprock or “The Winged Rock” is
a monadnock rising approximately 1,583 feet above the high-desert plain of the
Navajo Nation in San Juan County, New Mexico, United States. It is located in
the center of the Ancient Pueblo People, a prehistoric Native American culture often
referred to as the Anasazi. It is the most noticeable landmark in northwestern
New Mexico. Shiprock peak elevation is approximately 7,177 feet above sea level
and it lies around 10.75 miles southwest of the town of Shiprock, which is
named for the peak.
Well, the formation is four
corners region and plays a significant role in Navajo religion mythology and
tradition. Thus, Shiprock is composed of fractured volcanic breccia and black
dikes of igneous rock called minette. It is the erosional leftover of the
throat of a volcano, and the volcanic breccia formed in a diatreme. Moreover,
shiprock is famous location for rock climbers and has been featured in several Hollywood
movies and novels. It is also consider a heaven for photographer to take
stunning photographs. Furthermore "Shiprock"
or Shiprock peak's has similarity to an enormous 19th-century clipper ship.
Anglos first called the peak "The Needle", a name indicate that "Ship
Rock" dates from the 1870s. The exposed rock probably was originally
formed 2,500–3000 feet below the Earth's surface, and exposed after millions of
years of erosion.
Shiprock and the surrounding land
have religious and historical significance to the Navajo people and has
mentioned in numerous of their myths and legends. Navajo legends put the peak
in a larger geographic context, and said to be either a medicine pouch or a bow
carried by the "Goods of Value Mountain", a large mythic male figure
comprising several mountain features throughout the region. Navajo legend has
it that Bird Monsters nested on the peak and fed on human flesh. The peak is
mentioned in stories from the Enemy Side Ceremony and the Navajo Mountain
Chant, and is allied with the Bead Chant and the Naayee'ee Ceremony. The legend
of the rock seems more likely to be a metaphor hinting of the site's magical
power to lift the human soul above the problems of daily existence into an
awareness of the Great Spirit.
Therefore, the first recorded
ascent was in 1939, by a Sierra Club party including David Brower, Raffi
Bedayn, Bestor Robinson and John Dyer. So, this was the first climb in the
United States to use expansion bolts for protection. After that at least seven
routes have been climbed on the peak, all of them of great technical
difficulty. Moreover, the first ascent route is featured in the book Fifty
Classic Climbs of North America; however, the idea of climbing Shiprock is offensive
to numerous Navajo people; climbing has been illegal since 1970.
In spite of this, rock climbers
continue to see Shiprock as an interesting place to climb. Even more serious
than the possible physical harm illegal climbs could pose is the religious
damage done to the Navajo people by these non-Navajo visitors. The Monuments
are sacred to the Navajo, and any human interaction is strictly off limits.
Please abide by the humble religious requests of the Navajo people and do not
climb the Monuments. Navajo law will be firmly enforced on this issue, Parks
Department Manager Ray Russell also added.