Macaw/parrot pens at Casas Grandes. Image from Steven Lekson, 2015, The Chaco Meridian, figure 3.15, p. 92.
Archeology
has found proof that macaws were kept, and possibly bred, at many sites in the
Southwest. “Humans can remove chicks from
the nest at around seven weeks of age or later and feed them pre-chewed food
until they wean; in captivity they require feeding 4 times a day by seven weeks
of age. Scarlet macaws may begin mimicking human speech at around 7 months of
age. Scarlet macaws molt about one third of their feathers one to two times per
year. The birds reach sexual maturity at 3-5 years of age. They are not
sexually dimorphic, so determining the sex of a macaw is impossible without DNA
or seeing one lay an egg.” (Crown undated) This brings me back to images of
macaws and parrots in the Southwest. Whether created as pictographs or
petroglyphs, wall murals or decoration on pots, macaws and parrots were of
undeniable importance to Ancestral Pueblo people (and others) and this is
illustrated in remaining examples of their arts and crafts.

Macaw. Three Rivers Petroglyph Site, New Mexico. Internet image, public domain.
Petroglyph
of macaws and/or parrots are found throughout much of the American southwest.
From the Four Corners to Three Rivers Petroglyph Site I have seen examples and
have found other images online and in references (below). “Parrots are clearly depicted at Three Rivers on the northern reaches
of the ridge.” (Price 2018:189)
Mimbres bowl, figure carrying burden basket with a macaw on top. Internet photograph, public domain.
In the case
of the Mimbres region the presence of macaws is addressed by Gilman et al.
(2014) “Why did those receiving the
macaws want them in the first place? We propose here that the macaws were part
of religious quests and the reorganized or augmented religion in the Mimbres
region during the Classic period. - In
the process of obtaining the scarlet macaws for transport, they gained
practical and esoteric knowledge necessary to care for the macaws.” (Gilman
et al. 2014:104)
Square Tower Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Utah. Top - the entire panel, bottom - close-up. Photograph 1988, Peter Faris.
At Square
Tower Canyon in Hovenweep National Monument there is a fascinating petroglyphs
panel. It shows, among other things a spiral connected to a T-shaped doorway
with a macaw sitting on top of the ‘T’, and a second macaw with a squared-fret design
connected to its tail. This was described by Nancy Olsen (1985:65). “At the junction of the main canyon and a
side canyon is a rock point with access from all sides. On the wind-scoured,
exposed bedrock of the point, approximately four feet from the ground two birds
in silhouette dominate the panel, and two other identical bird shapes are less
visible because of repatination and
wind erosion. Prolonged use of the same location is inferred from evidence that
the motif is remade in the same place several times and can be seen in
different stages of repatination.” The
images that Olsen identified as simply birds are very obviously macaws (or
parrots) because of the shape of their beaks.
Macaws, Cedar Mesa, Utah. Photograph by Janet Vervalen.
Gilman et al (2014) theorize a reversal of the possible role of pochteca (traders) from Mesoamerica in providing macaws. In the Mimbres region Gilman et al. write “We propose that, beginning in about the second millennium A.D., people, possibly including both women and men, made
journeys of about 1100 km each way to or from the Huasteca region on Mexico’s
Gulf Coast to transport scarlet macaws necessary for equinoctial rituals,
sacrifice, and the distribution of red feathers tied to religious practices and
ultimately horticultural success. While it is possible that people from the
Huasteca region came north with the macaws and practical and ritual knowledge,
it is unclear what they would have gained from such a dangerous trip.”
(Gilman et al 2014:105) Theoretically, of course, they could have “gained”, but it is just as easy to argue
that the turquoise could have been carried south into Mesoamerica as to have
pochteca coming north to acquire it. Is this settled, I seriously doubt it? It
is, however, a fascinating question, and one that well may come up again. At
least it fascinates me.
NOTE: Some images in this column
were retrieved from the internet with a search for public domain photographs.
If any of these images are not intended to be public domain, I apologize, and
will happily provide the picture credits if the owner will contact me with
them. For further information on these reports you should read the original
reports at the sites listed below.
REFERENCES:
Crown, Patricia, The Scarlet Macaws of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, an online report from
the Arroyo Honda Pueblo Project, https://www.arroyohonda.org. Accessed 13
February 2026.
Gilman, Patricia A., Marc Thompson,
and Kristina C. Wykoff,
2014, Ritual Change and the Distant Mesoamerican Iconography, Scarlet Macaws,
and Great Kivas in the Membres Region of Southwest New Mexico, American Antiquity, 79 (1). 90-107.
Accessed online 12 March 2026 in Academia.org.
Liwosz, Chester R., 2022, Mesoamerica, Macaws, and More: Exploring the Geospatial Relationships
and Cultural Significance of Parrot, Raptor, and Related Bird Iconography at
Mesa Prieta, New Mexico, American Indian Rock Art, Volume 48, edited by Amy
Gilreath, Ken Hedges, and Ann McConnell, American Rock Art Research
Association, 2022.
Olsen, Nancy H., 1985, Hovenweep Rock Art, An Anasazi Visual Communication System,
Occasional Paper 14, Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los
Angeles.
Price, Joan E., 2018, Clay and Stone: Petroglyphs
at Three Rivers Petroglyph Site Compared with Mimbres Ceramic Painted Bowls,
pp. 177-192, in Collected Papers from the
20th Biennial Mogollon Archaeology Conference, October 11-13,
2018, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, edited by Lonnie C.
Ludeman. Accessed online 17 December 2025.
Schaafsma, Polly, 2022, Riders of the Rainbow, pp.
241-262, in Birds of the Sun, Macaws
People in U.S. Southwest and Mexican Northwest, edited by Christofer W.
Schwarts, Steven Plog, and Patricia A. Gilman, 2022, University of Arizona
Press, Tucson.
Tedlock, Dennis, 1994, Stories of Kachinas and the
Dance of Life and Death, pp. 161-174, in Kachinas
in the Pueblo World, edited by Polly Schaafsma, University of New Mexico
Press.
Tyler, Hamilton A., 1979, Pueblo Birds and Myths, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.
Waters, Frank, 1963, Book of the Hopi, Ballantine Books, New York.
Watson, Adam S. et al., 2015, Early procurement of scarlet macaws and the emergence of social
complexity in Chaco Canyon, NM, 7 July 2015, PNAS, Vol. 112, no. 27, pp.
8238-8243. Accessed online.
Weiner, Robert S., 2015, A Sensory Approach to Exotica, Ritual Practice, and Cosmology at Chaco
Canyon, KIVA, 81:3-4, 220-246, DOI: 10.1080/00231940.2016.1147681. Accessed
online.