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  Fullname State of New Mexico<br>Estado de Nuevo México
  Flag Flag of New Mexicosvg
  Flaglink Flag Of New Mexico
  Seal New Mexico state sealjpg
  Map Map_of_USA_NMsvg
  Nickname Land of Enchantment / Tierra del Encanto
  Motto Crescit Eundo
  Capital Santa Fe
  LargestCity Albuquerque
  Official Languages and Spanish
  Governor Bill Richardson (D)
  Senators Pete Domenici (R) <br> Jeff Bingaman (D)
  PostalAbbreviation NM
  AreaRank 5<sup>th</sup>
  TotalAreaUS 121,665
  TotalArea 315,194
  LandAreaUS 121,432
  LandArea 314,590
  WaterAreaUS 234
  WaterArea 607
  PCWater 02
  PopRank 36<sup>th</sup>
  2000Pop 1,928,384
  DensityRank 45<sup>th</sup>
  2000DensityUS 1498
  2000Density 579
  AdmittanceOrder 47<sup>th</sup>
  AdmittanceDate January 6 , 1912
  TimeZone -7/ -6
  Longitude 103° W to 109°&#82023′ W
  Latitude 31°&#820220′ N to 37° N
  WidthUS 342
  Width 550
  LengthUS 370
  Length 595
  HighestPoint Wheeler Peak 1
  HighestElevUS 13,161
  HighestElev 4,011
  MeanElevUS 5,692
  MeanElev 1,735
  LowestPoint Red Bluff Reservoir
  LowestElevUS 2,842
  LowestElev 866
  ISOCode US-NM


The State of New Mexico () is a State in the Southwestern Region of the United States Of America . Over its relatively long history it has also been occupied by Native American Population s and has been part of the Spanish Viceroyalty of New Spain , part of a territory of Mexico , and a U.S. Territory . Among U.S. State s, New Mexico has simultaneously the highest percentage of Hispanic Americans (some recent immigrants and others descendants of Spanish Colonist s) and the second-highest percentage of Native Americans after Alaska (mostly Navajo and Pueblo peoples). As a result, the demographics and culture of the state are unique for their strong Spanish, Mexican, and U.S. Amerindian cultural influences. The United States Census Bureau estimates that the state population was 1,954,599 in 2006, a 7.45% increase since 2000.2


GEOGRAPHY

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The eastern border of New Mexico lies along 103° W with Oklahoma , and 3 miles (5 km) west of 103° W with Texas. Texas also lies south of most of New Mexico, although the southwestern boot-heel borders the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora . The western border with Arizona runs along 109° W. The 37° N parallel forms the northern boundary with Colorado . The states New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and Utah come together at the Four Corners in the northwestern corner of New Mexico.

The Landscape ranges from wide, rose-colored deserts to broken Mesas to high, snow-capped peaks. Despite New Mexico's arid image, heavily Forest ed mountain wildernesses cover a significant portion of the state, especially towards the north. The Sangre De Cristo (Blood Of Christ) Mountains , the southernmost part of the Rocky Mountains , run roughly north-south along the east side of the Rio Grande in the rugged, pastoral north.

Cacti , Yucca s, Creosote Bush , Sagebrush , and desert grasses cover the broad, semiarid plains that cover the southern portion of the state.

The Federal government protects millions of acres of New Mexico as National Forest s including:

Other protected lands include the following national monuments:


Visitors also frequent the surviving native pueblos of New Mexico. Tourists visiting these sites bring significant monies to the state. Other areas of geographical and scenic interest include Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument and the Valles Caldera National Preserve . The Gila Wilderness lies in the southwest of the state.

See Also: Delaware Basin




HISTORY

See Also: History of New Mexico



The first known inhabitants of New Mexico were members of the Clovis Culture of Paleo-Indians . Indeed the culture is named for the New Mexico city where the first artifacts of this culture were discovered. Later inhabitants include Native American s of the Anasazi and the Mogollon cultures. By the time of European contact in the 1500s, the region was settled by the villages of the Pueblo People s and groups of Navajo , Apache and Ute .

Francisco Vasquez De Coronado assembled an enormous expedition at Compostela in 1540–1542 to explore and find the mystical Seven Golden Cities Of Cibola as described by Cabeza De Vaca who had just arrived from his eight-year ordeal traveling from Florida to Mexico. Coronado's men found several mud baked pueblos in 1541, but found no rich cities of gold. Further widespread expeditions found no fabulous cities anywhere in the Southwest or Great Plains. A dispirited and now poor Coronado and his men began their journey back to Mexico leaving New Mexico behind.

Over 50 years after Coronado, Juan De Oñate founded the San Juan colony on the Rio Grande in 1598, the first permanent European settlement in the future state of New Mexico. Oñate pioneered the grandly named El Camino Real , "The Royal Road", as a 700 mile (1,100 km) trail from the rest of New Spain to his remote colony. Oñate was made the first governor of the new Province Of New Mexico . The Native Americans at Acoma revolted against this Spanish encroachment but faced severe suppression.

In 1609, Pedro De Peralta , a later Governor Of The Province Of New Mexico , established the settlement of Santa Fe at the foot of the Sangre De Cristo Mountains . The city, along with most of the settled areas of the state, was abandoned by the Spanish for 12 years (1680-1692) as a result of the successful Pueblo Revolt . After the death of the Pueblo leader Popé , Diego De Vargas restored the area to Spanish rule. While developing Santa Fe as a trade center, the returning settlers founded the old town of Albuquerque in 1706, naming it for the viceroy of New Spain, the Duke of Alburquerque.


Mexican province

As a part of New Spain , the claims for the province of New Mexico passed to independent Mexico following the 1810-1821 Mexican War Of Independence . During the brief 26 year period of nominal Mexican control, Mexican authority and investment in New Mexico were weak, as their often conflicted government had little time or interest in a New Mexico that had been poor since the Spanish settlements started. Some Mexican officials, saying they were wary of encroachments by the growing United States, and wanting to reward themselves and their friends, began issuing enormous Land Grant s (usually free) to groups of Mexican families as an incentive to populate the province.

Small trapping parties from the United States had previously reached and stayed in Santa Fe, but the Spanish authorities officially forbade them to trade. Trader William Becknell returned to the United States in November 1821 with news that independent Mexico now welcomed trade through Santa Fe.

William Becknell left Independence, Missouri , for Santa Fe early in 1822 with the first party of traders. The Santa Fe Trail trading company, headed by the brothers Charles Bent and William Bent and Ceran St. Vrain , was one of the most successful in the West. They had their first trading post in the area in 1826, and, by 1833, they had built their adobe fort and trading post called Bent's Fort on the Arkansas River . This fort and trading post, located about 200 miles (322 km) east of Taos, New Mexico , was the only place settled by whites along the Santa Fe trail before it hit Taos. The Santa Fe National Historic Trail follows the route of the old trail, with many sites marked or restored.

The Spanish Trail from Los Angeles, California to Santa Fe, New Mexico was primarily used by Hispanics, white traders and ex-trappers living part of the year in or near Santa Fe. Started in about 1829, the trail was an arduous 2,400 (3862 km) mile round trip pack train sojourn that extended into Colorado, Utah, Nevada and California and back, allowing only one hard round trip per year. The trade consisted primarily of blankets and some trade goods from Santa Fe being traded for horses in California.

The Republic Of Texas claimed the mostly vacant territory north and east of the Rio Grande when it successfully seceded from Mexico in 1836. New Mexico authorities captured a group of Texans who embarked an Expedition to assert their claim to the province in 1841.


American territory

Following the Mexican-American War , from 1846-1848 and the Treaty Of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, Mexico forcibly ceded its mostly unsettled northern holdings, today known as the American Southwest and California to the United States of America in exchange for an end to hostilities, the evacuation of Mexico City and many other areas under American control. Mexico also received $15 million cash, plus the assumption of slightly more than $3 million in outstanding Mexican debts.

The Congressional Compromise Of 1850 halted a bid for statehood under a proposed antislavery constitution. Texas transferred eastern New Mexico to the federal government, settling a lengthy boundary dispute. Under the compromise, the American government established the Territory Of New Mexico on September 9 , 1850 . The territory, which included most of the future states of Arizona , New Mexico, and parts of Colorado , officially established its capital at Santa Fe in 1851.

The United States acquired the southwestern boot heel of the state and southern Arizona below the Gila River in the mostly desert Gadsden Purchase of 1853. This purchase was desired when it was found that a much easier route for a proposed transcontinental railroad was located slightly south of the Gila river. The Southern Pacific built the second transcontinental railroad though this purchased land in 1881.

During the American Civil War , Confederate troops from Texas briefly occupied the Rio Grande valley as far north as Santa Fe. Union troops from the Territory Of Colorado re-captured the territory in March 1862 at the Battle Of Glorieta Pass . The Territory Of Arizona was split off as a separate territory on February 24 , 1863 .

There were centuries of Conflict between the Apache , the Navajo and Spanish-Mexican settlements in the territory. It took the federal government another 25 years after the Civil War to exert control over both the civilian and Native American populations of the territory. This started in 1864 when the Navajo were sent on "The Long Walk" to Bosque Redondo Reservation and then returned to most of their lands in 1868. The Apache were moved to various reservations and Apache Wars continued until Geronimo finally surrendered in 1886.

The railway encouraged the great cattle boom of the 1880s and the development of accompanying cow towns. The cattle barons could not keep out sheepherders, and eventually homesteaders and squatters overwhelmed the cattlemen by fencing in and plowing under the "sea of grass" on which the cattle fed. Conflicting land claims led to bitter quarrels among the original Spanish inhabitants, cattle ranchers, and newer homesteaders. Despite destructive overgrazing, ranching survived and remains a mainstay of the New Mexican economy.

Albuquerque, the largest city in New Mexico, on the middle Rio Grande, was incorporated in 1889.


Statehood

Congress admitted New Mexico as the 47th state in the Union on January 6 , 1912 . The admission of the neighboring State of Arizona on February 14 , 1912 completed the contiguous 48 states.

The United States government built the Los Alamos Research Center in 1943 amid the Second World War . Top-secret personnel there developed the Atomic Bomb , first detonated at Trinity Site in the desert on the White Sands Proving Grounds between Socorro and Alamogordo on July 16 , 1945 .

Albuquerque expanded rapidly after the war. High-altitude experiments near Roswell in 1947 reputedly led to persistent but unproven suspicions that the government captured and concealed extraterrestrial corpses and equipment. The state quickly emerged as a leader in nuclear, solar, and geothermal energy research and development. The Sandia National Laboratories , founded in 1949, carried out nuclear research and special weapons development at Kirtland Air Force Base south of Albuquerque and at Livermore, California .

Located in the remote Chihuahuan Desert the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) is located 26 miles (42 km) southeast of Carlsbad . Here nuclear wastes are buried deep in carved out salt formation disposal rooms mined 2,150 feet (655 m) underground in a 2,000-foot (610 m) thick salt formation that has been stable for more than 200 million years. WIPP began operations on March 26 , 1999 .


DEMOGRAPHICS


(See also List Of Cities In New Mexico and New Mexico Locations By Per Capita Income ) As of 2005, New Mexico has an estimated population of 1,928,384, which is an increase of 25,378, or 1.3%, from the prior year and an increase of 109,338, or 6.0%, since the year 2000. This includes a natural increase since the last census of 74,397 people (that is 143,617 births minus 69,220 deaths) and an increase due to net migration of 37,501 people into the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 27,974 people, and migration within the country produced a net increase of 9,527 people.

The Center Of Population of New Mexico is located in Torrance County , in the town of Manzano U. S. Census Bureau, Population and Population Centers by State: 2000 .

As of 2004, 27% of the residents of the state were foreign-born, and more than 2% of state residents were illegal immigrants.

  1850 61547
  1860 87034
  1870 91874
  1880 119565
  1890 160282
  1900 195310
  1910 327301
  1920 360350
  1930 423317
  1940 531818
  1950 681187
  1960 951023
  1970 1016000
  1980 1302894
  1990 1515069
  2000 1819046


According to the Census Bureau, 1.5% of the population is Multiracial/Mixed-Race, a population larger than both the Asian and NHPI population groups. New Mexico has the highest percentage of people of Hispanic ancestry of any state, some recent immigrants and others descendants of Spanish Colonist s. The state also has a large Native American population, third behind Alaska and Oklahoma . Hispanics of colonial ancestry, along with recent Mexican immigrants, are present in most of the state, especially northern, central, and northeastern New Mexico. Mexican immigrants, legal or illegal, are prominent in southern parts of the state. The northwestern corner of the state is primarily occupied by Native Americans, of which Navajos and Pueblos are the largest tribes. As a result, the demographics and culture of the state are unique for their strong American, Colonial Spanish, Mexican, and Native American cultural influences.


Ancestry groups

According to the U.S. Census, the largest ancestry groups in New Mexico are:

Many are mixtures of all of these groups and others.

7.2% of New Mexico's population was reported as under 5 years of age, 28% under 18, and 11.7% were 65 or older. Females make up approximately 50.8% of the population.


Languages

According the 2000 U.S. Census , 28.76% of the population aged 5 and over speak Spanish at home, while 4.07% speak Navajo MLA Language Map Data Center: Most spoken languages in New Mexico .

New Mexico is commonly thought to have Spanish as an official language alongside English , due to the widespread usage of Spanish in the state. Although the original state constitution of 1912 provided for a temporarily bilingual government, New Mexico has no official language. Nevertheless, the state government publishes election ballots and a driver's manual in both languages, and, in 1995, New Mexico adopted a "State Bilingual Song", titled " New Mexico-Mi Lindo Nuevo México ".

January 6, 1912 Statehood Proclamation signed by President Taft

The constitution provided that, for the following twenty years, all laws passed by the legislature be published in both Spanish and English, and thereafter as the legislature should provide.

Prior to 1967, notices of statewide and county elections were required to be printed in English and "may be printed in Spanish."
Additionally, many legal notices today are required to be published in both English and Spanish.

Source:[http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/jwcrawford/nm-con.htm "Language Rights and New Mexico Statehood", ''The Excluded Student: Educational Practices Affecting Mexican Americans in the Southwest'', Mexican American Education Study, Report III, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972, pp. 76-82]


Religion

New Mexico has the highest percentage of Roman Catholics of any Western U.S State . In comparison to other U.S. State s, and like many other states in the region, New Mexico has a higher-than-average percentage of people who claim no religion. {ref}

Within the Catholic church, New Mexico belongs to the Ecclesiastical Province of Santa Fe. New Mexico has three Diocese s, one of which is an Archdiocese :


ECONOMY

The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that New Mexico's total state product in 2003 was $57 billion. Per capita personal income in 2003 was $24,995, 48th in the nation.[http://www.bea.gov/ U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis website]





Taxes



Largest employers


(Not ranked by size)

:: Source: Economic Research & Analysis Bureau New Mexico Department of Labor New Mexico Department of Labor statistics


TRANSPORTATION


Passenger trains

The New Mexico Rail Runner Express is a Commuter Rail system serving the metropolitan area of Albuquerque, New Mexico . It began operation on July 14, 2006. The system is in Phase I of planned development, operating on an existing BNSF Railway right of way from Belen to Bernalillo . Phase II, scheduled to open in 2008, will extend the line northward to Santa Fe .

Amtrak's Southwest Chief passes through daily at stations in Gallup , Albuquerque , Lamy , Las Vegas , and Raton , offering connections to Los Angeles , Flagstaff , Kansas City , and Chicago . The only true transcontinental train in the United States, The Sunset Limited makes stops three times a week in Lordsburg , and Deming .


Roadways

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See Also: List of New Mexico highways




LAW AND GOVERNMENT

The Constitution of 1912, as amended, dictates the form of government in the state.

Governor Bill Richardson and Lieutenant Governor Diane Denish , both Democrats, won re-election in 2006. Their terms expire in January 2011. Governors serve a term of four years and may seek reelection. For a list of past governors, see List Of New Mexico Governors .

Other Constitutional officers, all of whose terms also expire in January 2011, include Secretary of State NM State Treasuer's Office official web site . Herrera, King, Balderos and Lewis are Democrats. Lyons is a Republican.

The New Mexico State Legislature is comprised of a 70-seat House Of Representatives and a 42-seat Senate . The Democratic Party generally dominates state politics, and As Of 2004 50% of voters were registered Democrats, 33% were registered Republicans, and 17% did not affiliate with either of the two major parties.

New Mexico sent Democrat Jeff Bingaman to the United States Senate until January 2013 and Republican Pete V. Domenici until January 2009. Republicans Steve Pearce and Heather Wilson and Democrat Tom Udall represent the state in the United States House Of Representatives .


Politics

In national politics, New Mexico has given its Electoral Votes to all but two Presidential election winners since statehood. In these exceptions, New Mexicans supported Republican President Gerald Ford over Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter in 1976, and Democratic Vice President Al Gore over Texas Governor George W. Bush in 2000. No presidential candidate has won an absolute majority in New Mexico since George H. W. Bush in 1988, and no Democrat has done so since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. In the last four elections, New Mexico supported Democrats in 1992, 1996, and 2000. New Mexico was one of only two states to support Al Gore in 2000 and George Bush in 2004 (the other state was Iowa ). In 2004, George W. Bush narrowly won the state's electoral votes by a margin of 0.8 percentage points with 49.8% of the vote. Democrat John Kerry won in Albuquerque, Las Cruces, two northwestern counties, and by large margins in six counties of Northern New Mexico (Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, Taos, Mora, San Miguel, and Guadalupe).

Major political parties in New Mexico include the Democratic and Republican Parties; minor qualified parties include the Green Party of New Mexico , the Constitution Party , and Libertarian Party .


IMPORTANT CITIES AND TOWNS


New Mexico's largest cities are Albuquerque , Las Cruces , Santa Fe , Rio Rancho , Roswell , and Farmington .


MILITARY

In addition to the National Guard,New Mexico has a State Defense Force .


EDUCATION


Secondary education

See Also: List of high schools in New Mexico




Colleges and universities

in Tucumcari ]]

See Also: List of colleges and universities in New Mexico




MISCELLANEOUS TOPICS


State symbols





CULTURE

s and a blanched white Cow 's Skull hang in a market near Santa Fe ]]
With a Native American population of 134,000 in 1990, New Mexico still ranks as an important center of American Indian culture. Both the Navajo and Apache share Athabaskan origin. The Apache and some Ute live on federal reservations within the state. With 16 million acres (6,500,000 Ha ), mostly in neighboring Arizona , the reservation of the Navajo Nation ranks as the largest in the United States. The prehistorically agricultural Pueblo Indians live in pueblos scattered throughout the state, many older than any European settlement.

More than one-third of New Mexicans claim Hispanic origin, the vast majority of whom descend from the original Spanish colonists in the northern portion of the state. Most of the considerably fewer recent Mexican immigrants reside in the southern part of the state.

There are many New Mexicans who also speak a unique dialect of Spanish. New Mexican Spanish has vocabulary often unknown to other Spanish speakers. Because of the historical isolation of New Mexico from other speakers of the Spanish language, the local dialect preserves some late medieval Castillian vocabulary considered archaic elsewhere, adopts numerous Native American words for local features, and contains much Anglicized vocabulary for American concepts and modern inventions.

The presence of various indigenous Native American communities, the long-established Spanish and Mexican influence, and the diversity of Anglo-American settlement in the region, ranging from pioneer farmers and ranchers in the territorial period to military families in later decades, make New Mexico a particularly heterogeneous state.

There are natural history and atomic museums in Albuquerque, which also hosts the famed Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta .

A large artistic community thrives in Santa Fe . The capital city has museums of Spanish colonial, international folk, Navajo ceremonial, modern Native American, and other modern art. Another museum honors resident Georgia O'Keeffe . Colonies for artists and writers thrive, and the small city teems with art galleries. In August, the city hosts the annual Santa Fe Indian Market , which is the oldest and largest juried Native American art showcase in the world.

Performing arts include the renowned Santa Fe Opera which presents five operas in repertory each July to August, the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival held each summer, and the restored Lensic Theater a principal venue for many kinds of performances. The weekend after Labor Day boasts the burning of Zozobra , a 50 ft (15 m) marionette, during Fiestas De Santa Fe .

Writer D. H. Lawrence lived near Taos in the 1920s at the D. H. Lawrence Ranch where there is a shrine said to contain his ashes.


Tourism

New Mexico tourist attractions:


The state also has a number of Casino s located on Native American Indian Reservations that attract thousands of visitors each year.


NOTABLE NEW MEXICANS

See Also: List of people from New Mexico



Many New Mexicans—those who were born, raised, or lived a significant period in New Mexico—have gained local, national, and international prominence. New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson is currently one of the candidates for the 2008 United States Presidential Election . Notable businessmen include Jeff Bezos , founder of Amazon.com , and Conrad Hilton , founder of the Hilton Hotels Corporation . New Mexicans have also studied Outer Space , notably NASA astronauts Sidney M. Gutierrez and Harrison Schmitt . Astronomer Clyde Tombaugh , a former New Mexico State University professor, discovered Pluto . Several New Mexicans have served roles in Popular Culture , including artist Georgia O'Keeffe , animator William Hanna , actor Neil Patrick Harris and actress Demi Moore , Pulitzer Prize winners Bill Mauldin and Ernie Pyle , and rapper Xzibit . Notorious criminals include outlaw Billy The Kid and attempted assassin Francisco Martin Duran . Athletes like Ross Anderson (skier) fastest skier in History for the Western Hemisphere and World Cup / Professional Speed Skier with a Speed of 154.060 MPH on Alpine Skis .


SEE ALSO



REFERENCES



FURTHER READING





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  Preceded Oklahoma
  Office List Of US States By Date Of Statehood
  Years Admitted on January 6 , 1912 (47th)
  Succeeded Arizona