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About

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Contacts:
Rebecca Ullrich, (raullri@sandia.gov) Corporate Historian

Laura Martinez,
(martini@sandia.gov)
Web Page Maintenance
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HOW DID SANDIA NATIONAL LABORATORIES GET ITS NAME?


Sandia means "watermelon"  in Spanish. The mountains east of Albuquerque, N.M., are called the Sandia  Mountains because they take on a color similar to the inside of a watermelon  late on sunny days. Sandia was originally exclusively located on  Albuquerque's Sandia Base, which later merged with adjacent Kirtland Air  Force Base. Sandia took a plural name, Sandia Laboratories, in 1956 after  establishing another major facility in Livermore, Calif. Sandia National  Laboratories became the official name in 1979 after Sandia was designated  one of the Department of Energy's unique national labs.