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Native America in New Mexico
The mystique of New Mexico's American Indian tribes is extremely powerful. Their unique languages, colorful dances, distinct arts and crafts, and cultural stories and traditions have been passed down through the generations and are intrinsic to the Land of Enchantment. The spiritual roots that sustain the state's various tribes, connecting them to the earth and sky, to wind and water, to sun and moon, and to their ancestors, are a prominent part of New Mexico’s rich cultural history. Each of New Mexico’s Native American communities has their own beliefs to explain their origins. For example, many Native Americans believe their people originated from the earth itself, and are as natural and integral to New Mexico as its native trees and terrain.
Archaeologists believe that American Indians first arrived in New Mexico between 12,000 to 30,000 years ago, after crossing the Bering Sea from Siberia. For centuries, these ancestral Indians lived a nomadic life, hunting and gathering their food throughout the Southwest. About 1,500 years ago, some of these ancestral groups (today referred to as the Anasazi Indians) began practicing agriculture and established permanent settlements, or pueblos. The wild foods the Anasazi domesticated are critically important culturally and economically today, and include corn, beans, squash, and chilies. The wonderful and unique cuisine of New Mexico and the Southwest, and much of their agricultural economy, can be traced, in large part, to the original agricultural efforts of the Anasazi.
Other groups, like the ancestors of the Navajo and Apache, continued their nomadic hunting and gathering lifestyles. For some New Mexican tribes, this way of life continued until well into the 19th century. Later, many became nomadic herders. Today, herding is still a major economic enterprise for these Native Americans, and for New Mexico.
New Mexico’s American Indian cultures influence many aspects of our modern lifestyles. Perhaps the most obvious is the architectural style of the typical pueblo village, a style that is imitated statewide and often combined with other traditional and modern building styles. New Mexico’s Native Americans are famous around the world for their pottery, jewelry, basket and textile weaving, fine art and music.
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EXPERIENCE
Pueblos, Tribes, Nations: Acoma, Cochiti, Isleta, Jémez, Jicarilla Apache Nation, Laguna, Mescalero Apache Reservation, Nambé, Navajo Nation, Ohkay Owingeh, Picurís, Pojoaque, Sandia, San Felipe, San Ildefonso, Santa Ana, Santa Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque, Zia, Zuni
Enjoy
Events: Galllup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial, Gathering of Nations, Santa Fe Indian Market, tribal
feast days, Zuni Harvest Festival
Dances:
Corn dance, Buffalo Dance, Deer dance, Matachines dance,
Food: Fry bread, Grilled Corn, Oven Bread
PLAY
Golf: Buffalo Thunder Resort, Sandia Resort & Casino, Tamaya Resort & Spa
Boating/Fishing: Cochiti, Nambé Falls & Recreation Area
Gaming: Apache Nugget Casino, Jicarilla Inn and Casino, Big Rock Casino Bowl, Camel
Rock
Casino, Cities of Gold Casino, Dancing Eagle Casino, Inn of the Mountain Gods, Isleta Gaming Palace West, Ohkay Casino and Resort, Route 66 Casino, Sandia Resort & Casino, San Felipe's Casino Hollywood, Santa Ana Star Casino, Sky City Casino, Taos Mountain Casino
LEARN
Miscellaneous: Visitor Etiquette, History & Timeline
of Indigenous New Mexicans, Kivas, Horno
Arts & Crafts: Weaving, Pueblo Indian Pottery, Jewelry, Kachinas
Museums/Centers: A:Shiwi A:Wan Museum & Heritage Center, Acoma
Tourist & Visitation
Center, Chaco Culture National Historical Park, Deming
Luna Mimbres Museum, Geronimo Springs Museum, Gila Visitor Center,
Indian Arts Research Center at the School of American Research, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Institute of American Indian Arts Museum, Mescalero Apache Cultural Center Museum, Museum of Indian Arts & Culture/Laboratory
of Anthropology, Museum of the Institute of American Indian Arts, Navajo National
Museum (Window Rock, AZ),
Palace of the Governors, Poeh Cultural Center, Pueblo
of Pojoaque, Red Rock Museum, San Ildefonso Pueblo Museum, Walatowa Visitor Center, Wheelwright
Museum of the American Indian
EXPLORE
Map to Native New Mexico
Ruins: Aztec Ruins National Monument, Bandelier National Monument, Chaco Culture National Historical Park, El Morro National Monument, Gila Cliff Dwelling National Monument, Petroglyph National Monument,Three
Rivers Petroglyph Site, Village of the Great Kivas
Missions: Nuestra Señora de la Asunción de Zia, Nuestra Señora de los Angeles de Porciuncula de los Pecos, Nuestra Señora de Purísima Concepción de Quarai, San Agustín de la Isleta Mission, San Buenaventura
de Cochiti, San Esteban del Rey de Acoma, San Felipe Mission, San
Gregorio de Abó Mission, San Ildefonso Mission, San Buenaventura
de Humanas (Gran Quivira) and San Isidro, San José (Giusewa) de Jémez Mission, San José de Laguna, San Lorenzo de Picurís, San
Miguel Mission Chapel, Santa Ana Pueblo Mission, Santo Domingo Mission, Santuario de Chimayó, Santuario de Guadalupe



