Mexico Guide
The north
Paquimé
Paquimé (Tues– Sun 10am–5pm; M$40, free on Sun) is the most important, and certainly the most striking, ruins in northern Mexico. Originally home to an agricultural community and comprising simple adobe houses (similar to those found in Arizona and New Mexico), it became heavily influenced by Mesoamerican, probably Toltec, culture. Whether this was the result of conquest or, more likely, trade, is uncertain, but from around 1000 to 1200 AD, Paquimé flourished. Pyramids and ball-courts were constructed, and the surrounding land was irrigated by an advanced system of canals. At the same time local craftsmen were trading with points both south and north, producing a wide variety of elaborate ornaments and pottery. Among the finds at the site (many of them are now in the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City) have been cages that held exotic imported birds, whose feathers were used in making ornaments; necklaces made from turquoise, semiprecious stones and shells obtained from the Sea of Cortés; and other objects of copper, bone, jade and mother-of-pearl.
Much must have been destroyed when the site was attacked, burned and abandoned around 1340 – either by a marauding nomadic tribe, such as the Apache, or in the course of a more local rebellion. Either way, Paquimé was not inhabited again, its people leaving their already depleted trade for the greater safety of the sierras. When excavation began in the late 1950s, there were only a few low hills and banks where walls had been, but by piecing together evidence archeologists have partly reconstructed the adobe houses – the largest of which have as many as fifty interconnecting rooms around an open courtyard or ceremonial centre. The foundations of the houses, which were originally two or three storeys high, have been reconstructed to waist-height, with an occasional standing wall giving some idea of scale.
To fully appreciate the sophistication of this civilization, it pays to first pop into the Centro Cultural Paquimé (Tues– Sun 10am–5pm; entrance fee included with site entrance), a beautifully laid-out, if thinly stocked museum, architecturally designed to mimic the ruins of the defence towers that once stood on the site. A large model of how Paquimé must have looked, interactive touch-screen consoles with commentary in Spanish and English and intelligent displays of artefacts aid interpretation. Modern examples of finds from the surrounding area – drums, dolls in native costume, ceramics and ceremonial masks – compete with the Paquimé artefacts, notably the beautiful pottery, its often anthropomorphic vessels decorated in geometric patterns of red, black and brown on a white or cream background.
To reach the site you have first to travel 260km south of Ciudad Juárez through dusty chaparral and cotton country to Nuevo Casas Grandes. Travelling from Chihuahua is also an option, as buses for the five-hour journey depart regularly. Once in Nuevo Casas Grandes, take one of the frequent yellow buses ("Casas Grandes/Col Juárez") from the corner of Constitución and 16 de Septiembre to the plaza in Casas Grandes (about 15min), from where the site is signposted – it's a ten-minute walk.