Tribe seeks to adapt as climate change alters ancestral home

Norma Naranjo, left, is helped by relatives and friends to peel corn at her home in Ohkay Owingeh, formerly called San Juan Pueblo, in northern New Mexico, Sunday, Aug. 21, 2022. Friends and relatives of the Naranjos gather every year to make chicos, dried kernels used in stews and puddings. (AP Photo/Andres Leighton)

SANTA CLARA PUEBLO, NM (AP) — This was a land of dense forests. A creek cascading through ponds in a canyon. A valley of sage and juniper with shady cottonwood galleries and many gardens.

For thousands of years, the Tewa people of Kha’p’o Owingeh — Valley of the Wild Roses — have called Santa Clara Pueblo in northern New Mexico home. They hunted, gathered firewood and medicinal and ceremonial plants and dug clay to make shiny black and redware pottery. Fields near the Rio Grande bore a bounty of corn, beans, squash and chiles.

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