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Traversing and Taming Treacherous Terrain
Today, people enjoy the convenience of Colorado's roads without realizing that beneath lie the original Ute and Spanish trails, mountain men's pathways, and early military wagon roads. The cultural landscape of western Colorado has undergone immense changes since the mid-sixteenth century. The rapid advancement of transportation technology has enabled the conquest of complex climate zones and challenging regional topography. Early western Colorado inhabitants once migrated on footpaths that followed the path of least resistance, traversing lush meadow corridors between rugged mountain ranges, paralleling the river bottoms, and enjoying the welcome shade of cool canyon trails in the high desert. The early Ute people, Spanish explorers, mountain men, and U.S. topographical engineers developed resourceful ways to make travel less strenuous and cover greater distances. Historian David P. Bailey chronicles their early treks, which paved the way for the first major thoroughfare through western Colorado.
David P. Bailey is a historian and writer specializing in western Colorado history. Bailey served as a history curator at the Museum of the West, a division of the Museums of Western Colorado, for twenty-eight years. He enjoys researching and writing about western Colorado and regional history. Bailey has served as a documentary film presenter and consultant, collaborating with prominent organizations such as National Geographic, the History Channel, the Travel Channel, the Mysteries at the Museum television series, and the BBC. He also worked with the National Geographic online magazine.
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