<<< New Mexico
Recreation and Places
of Interest
The rugged and spacious beauty
of New Mexico’s mountains and deserts offers
many recreational opportunities and places to visit.
Ruins of early Native American civilizations, abandoned
Spanish missions, crumbling military outposts,
battlefields of the American Civil War (1861-1865),
and deserted mining towns are reminders of the
state’s colorful past. Pueblos that existed
before the arrival of the Spanish conquistadores
continue to flourish, as do Spanish and Mexican
communities.
Outdoor sports can be enjoyed
year-round in New Mexico. Fishing, boating, and
water skiing are popular sports in the state’s
lakes and reservoirs. Fly-fishing is a common sport
on many streams and rivers in the state, and rafting
and kayaking on the Río Grande below Taos
are enjoyed by many people. Facilities for winter
sports such as skiing and snowboarding are operated
at nine resorts. Five national forests provide
facilities for hiking, camping, and fishing.
National Parks
Carlsbad Caverns National Park,
in the southeast, is famous for the largest and
most extensive underground caves and corridors
found in North America. Eleven areas have been
made national monuments. Near Alamogordo is White
Sands National Monument, a huge desert of pure-white
gypsum dunes. Bordering the monument are the military
proving grounds where the first atomic bomb was
tested in 1945. An extinct volcanic cinder cone
rises 300 m (1,000 ft) in Capulin Volcano National
Monument. El Malpais—“the badlands” in
Spanish—is a volcanic area with a lava tube
system 27 km (17 mi) long and ice caves. The area
is also rich in ancient Pueblo history and features
diverse ecosystems. Fort Union National Monument,
north of Las Vegas, was once a military depot on
the Santa Fe Trail. El Morro National Monument
southwest of Grants, is a sandstone cliff popularly
known as Inscription Rock. The oldest date on this
historical autograph album is 1605, inscribed by
Juan de Oñate, the Spanish colonizer of
New Mexico. Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument,
near Mountainair, preserves a 17th-century Spanish
mission.
The most notable and accessible
ruins of prehistoric Pueblo culture in New Mexico
have been made into national or state monuments.
Aztec Ruins National Monument preserves the site
of a 500-room dwelling occupied by the Pueblo (not
Aztec) people during a period before the 14th century.
Archaeological sites that provide glimpses into
the 12,000 year span of human occupation of the
Albuquerque area are preserved at Petroglyph National
Monument. More than 15,000 Native American and
Hispanic petroglyphs (images carved in rock) stretch
27 km (17 mi) along Albuquerque’s West Mesa
escarpment. Chaco Culture National Historical Park
has 13 major Native American ruins and hundreds
of smaller sites representing the high point of
Pueblo pre-Columbian civilization. Other Pueblo
sites are at Bandelier National Monument and Gila
Cliff Dwellings National Monument, and at Pecos
National Historical Park.
National Forests
A bear cub rescued in May 1950
from a forest fire in the Capitan Mountains, located
in Lincoln National Forest, became famous as Smokey
Bear, living symbol of forest fire prevention.
Named for Kit Carson, noted frontier scout, the
Carson National Forest includes the Sangre de Cristo
Mountains, and the highest point in the Southwest,
Wheeler Peak. The Cibola National Forest encompasses
four wilderness areas in central New Mexico: the
Sandia Mountain, Manzano Mountain, Withington,
and Apache Kid wildernesses. The Gila National
Forest contains vast areas of rugged mountain ranges,
little affected by civilization, and includes the
Gila Wilderness Area. The Santa Fe National Forest
is crowned by the spectacular Pecos Wilderness
Area. Also in the state is the Kiowa National Grasslands
and seven national wildlife preserves. Many migratory
birds can be seen at the Bosque Del Apache National
Wildlife Refuge on the Río Grande in central
New Mexico.
State Parks
New Mexico has 33 state parks
and recreational areas. The state parks at Bluewater,
Bottomless, Conchas, Elephant Butte, Navajo, and
Storrie lakes have facilities for a variety of
water sports. City of Rocks State Park has a desert
setting, and Hyde Memorial State Park is in a forest
high in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Ruins of
old pueblos are found at Jemez and Coronado state
monuments, both located northwest of the town of
Bernalillo. The state maintains the Old Lincoln
County Courthouse, from which Billy the Kid escaped
in 1881. El Palacio State Monument, the Palace
of the Governors, is in Santa Fe. This adobe structure,
built around 1610, served as the seat of government
during the successive periods of Spanish, Mexican,
and finally U.S. territorial rule.
Museums
The state-run Museum of New Mexico
was set up in Santa Fe’s Palace of the Governors
in 1909. The museum includes the Museum of Fine
Arts, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/Laboratory
of Anthropology, and the Museum of International
Folk Art. The Wheelwright Museum of the American
Indian and the El Rancho de las Golondrinas are
also in Santa Fe. In 1997 the Georgia O’Keeffe
Museum, which exhibits paintings, drawings, and
sculpture by the renowned artist who died in 1986,
opened in Santa Fe. O’Keeffe’s home
and studio, located in the small town of Abiquiu
approximately 50 miles north of Santa Fe, is now
owned by the Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation,
and limited tours are made available to the public.
In the metropolitan area of Albuquerque
there are several widely recognized museums and
galleries. The Albuquerque Museum has collections
of traditional and contemporary art from New Mexico
and displays over 400 years of regional cultural
history. The New Mexico Museum of Natural History
and Science features a collection of dinosaurs,
a walk-through volcano, and an “evolution
elevator.”
The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center features performances
of traditional Pueblo and other Native American
dances and demonstrations of traditional crafts.
Other museums in Albuquerque include the Maxwell
Museum of Anthropology, the University Art Museum
and Jonson Gallery, the National Atomic Museum,
the National Hispanic Cultural Center of New Mexico,
and the Explora Science Center and Children’s
Museum of Albuquerque.
Other museums throughout the state
cater to a variety of interests. At the Roswell
Museum and Art Center is a collection of Robert
H. Goddard’s experimental rockets. The Bradbury
Science Museum at Los Alamos houses exhibits dealing
with the history and current research of the Los
Alamos National Laboratory. Museums displaying
Native American, Spanish, and Mexican crafts, anthropological
artifacts, pioneer relics, and objects of regional
interest are housed at state and national monuments
and at colleges and universities.
Other Places to Visit
A few blocks away from El Palacio
is the Mission of San Miguel, dating from 1710.
Mesilla and the Old Town in Albuquerque retain
traces of Spanish occupation. White Oaks, Cabezon,
Mogollon, and many other ghost towns re-create
for the visitor the early ranching or mining days.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia
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