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Welcome to Salinas Pueblo Missions
Once, thriving American Indian trade communities of Tiwa and Tompiro speaking Puebloans inhabited this remote area of central New Mexico. Early in the 17th-century Spanish Franciscans visited the area and found it ripe for their missionary efforts. However by 1677 the entire Salinas District, was depopulated of both Indian and Spaniard alike.
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Cultural Resources
What remains today are austere yet beautiful reminders of the early contact between Pueblo Indians and Spanish Colonials. The ruins of four mission churches, at Quarai, Abó, and Gran Quivira and the partially excavated pueblo of Las Humanas or, as it is known today, Gran Quivira. Established in 1980 through the combination of two New Mexico State Monuments and the former Gran Quivira National Monument, the present Monument comprises a total of 1,100 acres.
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Natural Resources
Salinas Pueblo Missions was set aside because of the importance of the cultural resources, however, there is a major connecting link to the natural resources. The link is the importance of man's adjustment to a marginal land and the man-land relationship during the past 1,000+ years of occupation. more...
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Things To Do
Learn about what makes Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument a special place through self guiding booklets and wayside exhibits.
Bird watching and hiking are also popular activities. more...
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Educational Activities
One of three educational activities, at Quarai students learn about the Mission Experience. With this activity students are asked to look, observe and create as they build a Lego model of the mission during their on-site activity.
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Write to
P.O. Box 517
Mountainair, New Mexico 87036
E-mail Us
Phone
Telephone (505) 847-2585
Fax
(505) 847-2441
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Climate
CLIMATE, RECOMMENDED CLOTHING: Generally mild, dry summers, occasional snow in winter, fierce winds in spring. Walking shoes and sportswear in summer, light outerwear in winter are recommended.
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![Russell E. Dickenson Russell E. Dickenson](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090116020336im_/http://www.nps.gov/imr/customcf/apps/CMS_HandF/Pictures/BIBE_dyk_r-dick.jpg) |
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Did You Know?
Russell E. Dickenson, eleventh Director of the National Park Service (May, 1980-March, 1985) served as Chief Ranger at Big Bend National Park in 1955-56. He later recalled that "Big Bend was a compression of ten years of experience into one."
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Last Updated: August 23, 2007 at 12:18 EST |