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The
San Juan River, named by the Spanish San Juan Bautista
(Saint John the Baptist), threads its way through Colorado,
New Mexico, and Utah to the border of northern Arizona.
With its headwaters in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern
Colorado from which comes ninety percent of its flow,
the river still drains nearly sixteen million acres of
the Four Corners region as it drops from an altitude of
14,000 feet to approximately 3,600 feet above sea level.
The flow of the river today is largely controlled by the
waters released from Navajo Dam in New Mexico into the
San Juan. The river's Utah portion is approximately 125
miles long; it then terminates as it flows into Lake Powell.
The
river historically has played an important part as a continuous
source of water in an arid climate. Anasazi ruins and
rock-art panels dot its sandstone cliffs and floodplains.
The San Juan also plays a significant role in Navajo mythology,
where it is known as Old Age River, One-With-a-Long-Body,
or One-With-a-Wide-Body, and is characterized variously
as an old man with hair of white foam, a snake coiled
at the Goosenecks, a flash of lightning, and a black club
of protection. This latter theme is important to the Navajos,
who, even before the river became an official reservation
boundary in 1884, viewed it as a line of separation between
their safe confines and the land of the Utes and white
men.
The
first substantial Anglo settlement on the Utah portion
of the San Juan occurred at Riverside (Aneth) in 1878-79
when eighteen families from Colorado established a small
community more than a year before the Mormons made their
trek through the Hole-in-the-Rock and settled Bluff. Through
the 1880s and early 1890s, trading posts flourished as
Navajos herded sheep and planted small horticultural plots
while the settlers struggled to prevent destructive flooding.
In
addition to agriculture, the San Juan has been the focus
of a variety of economic endeavors. During the 1890s and
early 1900s, there were futile attempts to find gold and
the beginning of an interest in oil. Oil companies in
the 1920s started drilling in earnest, giving rise to
a petroleum industry that is still in operation today
near the river towns of Aneth, Montezuma Creek, Bluff,
and Mexican Hat. By the 1940s Norman Nevills and Jack
Frost dominated the river-running business and took hundreds
of tourists down the San Juan. This industry continues
to grow, and the Bureau of Land Management has had to
restrict in an attempt to keep the river experience safe
and enjoyable for all.
Robert
S. McPherson
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