"Capulin Volcano National Monument, New Mexico" by National Park Service , public domain
Capulin Volcano
National Monument - New Mexico
Capulin Volcano National Monument is a U.S. National Monument located in northeastern New Mexico which protects and interprets an extinct cinder cone volcano that is part of the Raton-Clayton Volcanic Field.
Map of the Westward Expansion of the Santa Fe Trail for Fort Larned National Historic Site (NHS) in Kansas. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
Official Visitor Map of Santa Fe National Historic Trail (NHT) in Colorado, Kansas, Misouri, New Mexico and Oklahoma. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
https://www.nps.gov/cavo/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capulin_Volcano_National_Monument
Capulin Volcano National Monument is a U.S. National Monument located in northeastern New Mexico which protects and interprets an extinct cinder cone volcano that is part of the Raton-Clayton Volcanic Field.
Part of the 8,000 square mile Raton-Clayton Volcanic Field, Capulin Volcano showcases the volcanic geology of northeastern New Mexico. The views are spectacular day or night, with views of 4 different states from the volcanic rim and one of the darkest night skies in the country. Whether it's a quick stop or a day's trip, enjoy exploring the landscape of this unique volcano!
Capulin Volcano National Monument is located in northeast New Mexico. The monument is located 33 miles east of Raton, NM, and 57 miles west of Clayton, NM on NM325 3 miles north of US64. No public transportation systems serve the park.
Capulin Volcano Visitor Center
The Visitor Center is at the base of Capulin Volcano and includes a fee and information station, exhibits, theater for the park film, restrooms, and a park bookstore. Hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m most of the year, except in the summer months (Memorial Day to Labor Day) when it is open from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Capulin Volcano National Monument is located in northeast New Mexico. The monument is located 33 miles east of Raton, NM, and 57 miles west of Clayton, NM. No public transportation systems serve the park. From US-64, turn on to NM-325 and head north for approximately 3 miles. The park entrance will be on the right. Follow the entrance road until you see the visitor center on the right.
Capulin Volcano
A cloud shrouded volcano rises behind a field of yellow flowers.
Capulin Volcano in summer.
Aerial View of Capulin Volcano
View of cinder cone volcano and the road leading to the top of the volcano as seen from the air.
Capulin Volcano is a classic example of a cinder cone. The crater is approximately 130 m (420 ft) deep and 440 m (1,450 ft) across. The base of the mountain is 6 km (4 mi) in circumference. Volcano Road spirals up the volcano, providing panoramic views.
Nature Trail at Capulin Volcano
A shaded bench on the side of a paved nature trail wending through juniper trees and grasses.
A paved nature trail at Capulin Volcano NM.
Volcano Road
Layers of rock are visible in the steep hillside along a road.
Layers of volcanic material can be seen in the Volcano Road that takes visitors to the top of Capulin Volcano.
Capulin Volcano-Best Example of a Cinder Cone in North America
View of a cinder cone volcano covered with grasses, small trees, and other plants.
Although Capulin Mountain is considered no longer active, because its excellent condition, the cinder cone is considered one of the best and most accessible examples of a cinder cone in North America.
NPS Geodiversity Atlas—Capulin Volcano National Monument, New Mexico
Capulin Volcano, which erupted 54,200 years ago within the easternmost young volcanic field in North America, is one of the most scenic and most accessible cinder cones on the continent. Links to products from Baseline Geologic and Soil Resources Inventories provide access to maps and reports.
capulin volcano
Air Quality Monitoring in the Southern Plains and Chihuahuan Desert Networks
Both the Clean Air Act and the National Park Service Organic Act protect air resources in national parks. Park resources affected by air quality include scenery and vistas, vegetation, water, and wildlife. Over the past three decades, the National Park Service has developed several internal and cooperative programs for monitoring various measures of air quality.
Cactus and clear skies at Tonto National Monument
Wildland Fire in Douglas Fir: Western United States
Douglas fir is widely distributed throughout the western United States, as well as southern British Columbia and northern Mexico. Douglas fir is able to survive without fire, its abundantly-produced seeds are lightweight and winged, allowing the wind to carry them to new locations where seedlings can be established.
Close-up of Douglas fir bark and needles.
Capulin Volcano Breeding Bird Inventory
The first thorough survey for breeding birds at Capulin Volcano National Monument was conducted in 2002, by the New Mexico Natural Heritage Program.
Mountain Chickadee
Exotic Plants Monitoring in the Southern Plains and Chihuahuan Desert
National parks, like other publicly managed lands, are deluged by new exotic species arriving through predictable (e.g., road, trail, and riparian corridors), sudden (e.g., long distance dispersal through cargo containers and air freight), and unexpected anthropogenic pathways (e.g., weed seeds mixed in with restoration planting mixes).
Landscape with a uniform, green foreground consisting of invasive kochia
Capulin Goldenrod
Capulin Volcano National Monument is located within a vegetative transitional zone between the Rocky Mountains and shortgrass prairie, resulting in a relatively high diversity of habitats for wildlife and plants not found elsewhere in the surrounding grasslands. Capulin goldenrod (<em>Solidago capulinensis</em>) is a rare plant found at the monument, and was first described and collected in 1936 by Cockerell and Andrews.
Capulin goldenrod
Capulin Alberta Arctic Butterfly
The Capulin Alberta arctic butterfly was first found at Capulin Volcano National Monument’s crater rim in 1969 and was soon determined to be a new subspecies known only to the monument and some nearby areas.
Capulin Alberta arctic butterfly specimen
Pollinators - Hummingbirds
Hummingbirds (family Trochilidae) are amazingly adapted pollinators, and they play an important role in pollination.
A flying hummingbird hovers next to a red flower
Pinyon-Juniper Habitat at Capulin Volcano National Monument
Pinyon-juniper is one of the major habitat types found within Capulin Volcano National Monument and comprises approximately 59% of the monument’s total area.
Pinyon-juniper and grasslands at Capulin Volcano National Monument
Climate Change in the Southern Plains Network
Climate change may have direct and/or indirect effects on many elements of Southern Plains network ecosystems, from streams and grasslands to fires and birds.
Russian knapweed (Acroptilon repens) is an invasive plant that has invaded the Southern Plains
Climate Monitoring in the Southern Plains, Sonoran Desert, and Chihuahuan Desert
Climate is one of many ecological indicators monitored by the National Park Service (NPS) Division of Inventory & Monitoring (I&M). Climate data help scientists to understand ecosystem processes and help to explain many of the patterns and trends observed in other natural-resource monitoring. In NPS units of the American Southwest, three I&M networks monitor climate using the scientific protocol described here.
Kayaking across a fl ooded parking lot, Chickasaw NRA, July 2007.
Southwestern Plains
The Plains of the Southwest include the southern Great Plains, the High Plains, Llano Estacado (Staked Plains), and Edwards Plateau.
Sunset lights up the grass at Capulin Volcano National Monument
Series: Geologic Time Periods in the Cenozoic Era
The Cenozoic Era (66 million years ago [MYA] through today) is the "Age of Mammals." North America’s characteristic landscapes began to develop during the Cenozoic. Birds and mammals rose in prominence after the extinction of giant reptiles. Common Cenozoic fossils include cat-like carnivores and early horses, as well as ice age woolly mammoths.
fossils on display at a visitor center
Series: Defining the Southwest
The Southwest has a special place in the American imagination – one filled with canyon lands, cacti, roadrunners, perpetual desert heat, a glaring sun, and the unfolding of history in places like Tombstone and Santa Fe. In the American mind, the Southwest is a place without boundaries – a land with its own style and its own pace – a land that ultimately defies a single definition.
Maize agriculture is one component of a general cultural definition of the Southwest.
Series: Southern Plains Bird Inventories
Birds are a highly visible component of many ecosystems and because they respond quickly to changes in resource conditions, birds are good indicators of environmental change. Bird inventories allow us to understand the current condition, or status, of bird populations and communities in parks. These data are important for managing birds and other resources and provide baseline information for monitoring changes over time.
Violet-green swallow
Quaternary Period—2.58 MYA to Today
Massive ice sheets advanced and retreated across North America during much of the Quaternary, carving landscapes in many parks. Bering Land Bridge National Preserve contains geologic evidence of lower sea level during glacial periods, facilitating the prehistoric peopling of the Americas. The youngest rocks in the NPS include the lava of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and the travertine at Yellowstone National Park, which can be just a few hours old.
fossil bone bed and murals of mammoths
Cenozoic Era
The Cenozoic Era (66 million years ago [MYA] through today) is the "Age of Mammals." North America’s characteristic landscapes began to develop during the Cenozoic. Birds and mammals rose in prominence after the extinction of giant reptiles. Common Cenozoic fossils include cat-like carnivores and early horses, as well as ice age woolly mammoths.
fossils on display in a visitor center
Women Who Were There
No comprehensive data has been compiled about women government employees working in national parks before the NPS was founded on August 25, 1916. Their numbers are undoubtedly few but perhaps not as small as we might imagine. The four early NPS women featured here were exceptional in their own ways, but they are also proxies for the names we no longer remember and the stories we can no longer tell.
Una Lee Roberts, 1933.(Courtesy of the Oklahoma Hall of Fame, Gaylord-Pickens Museum)
Strombolian Eruptions
Stombolian eruptions look like volcanic firework displays. Explosions eject glowing volcanic bombs into the air that then fall around the crater.
volcanic eruption with glowing lava seen at night
Volcanic Craters
Craters are present at many volcanic vents. The size and shape of volcanic craters vary a great deal from volcano to volcano, and they even change during the lifespan of an active volcano. Craters can become filled by lava domes or lava flows, and new craters may form during subsequent eruptions.
cinder cone crater
Maars and Tuff Rings
Maars and tuff rings are low-standing pyroclastic cones with large craters that usually form from highly-explosive eruptions caused by the interaction of magma with ground or surface waters. Ubehebe Crater in Death Valley National Park is a maar.
lakeshore and tundra
Changing Patterns of Water Availability May Change Vegetation Composition in US National Parks
Across the US, changes in water availability are altering which plants grow where. These changes are evident at a broad scale. But not all areas experience the same climate in the same way, even within the boundaries of a single national park. A new dataset gives park managers a valuable tool for understanding why vegetation has changed and how it might change in the future under different climate-change scenarios.
Green, orange, and dead grey junipers in red soil, mountains in background
Jessie Foote Jack
Businesswoman and rancher Jessie Foote Jack became custodian of Capulin Volcano National Monument in August 1916, shortly before the National Park Service (NPS) was created. For seven years she was the only woman to manage a national monument. After she resigned in 1923, another woman wasn't appointed to lead an NPS site until July 1940.
Jessie Jack in front of a bush wearing a long black skirt, white blouse, and a black hat.
Cinder Cones
Cinder cones are typically simple volcanoes that consist of accumulations of ash and cinders around a vent. Sunset Crater Volcano and Capulin Volcano are cinder cones.
photo of a dry grassy field with a cinder cone in the distance
Lava Lakes
Lakes of molten or solidified lava are usually only found in pit craters or calderas (both are types of collapse features) on shield volcanoes. Lava lakes may occasionally occur within other vent areas, or sometimes even on pooled lava flows. Long-lasting lava lakes typically only form in places where there is good connectivity with a shallow magma reservoir.
photo of a lava lake taken with a thermal camera
Series: Volcanic Features
Volcanoes vary greatly in size and shape. Volcanoes also may have a variety of other features, which in turn, have a great range in diversity of form, size, shape, and permanence. Many volcanoes have craters at their summits and/or at the location of other vents. Some craters contain water lakes. Lakes of molten or solidified lava may exist on some volcanoes. Fumaroles and other geothermal features are a product of heat from magma reservoirs and volcanic gases.
photo of a lava lake in a summit crater
Volcanic Inverted Topography
Inverted topography arises when lava flows that filled valleys at the time of their eruption later hold up mesas because their resistance to erosion is greater than most other rock types.
photo of volcanic rock with petroglyphs and a distant mesa
Series: Volcano Types
Volcanoes vary in size from small cinder cones that stand only a few hundred feet tall to the most massive mountains on earth.
photo of a volcanic mountain with snow and ice
Monogenetic Volcanic Fields
Monogenetic volcanic fields are areas covered by volcanic rocks where each of the volcanic vents typically only erupt once. Monogenetic volcanic fields typically contain cinder cones, fissure volcanoes, and/or maars and tuff rings. They also usually encompass large areas covered by basaltic lava flows.
oblique aerial photo of a lava flow that extended into a body of water
Series: Volcanic Eruption Styles
Categories in this traditional classification are based on the eruption styles of particular volcanoes. These magmatic eruption styles are listed in the order of increasing explosivity.
volcanic eruption with glowing lava
Volcanic Ash, Tephra Fall, and Fallout Deposits
Volcanic ash, pumice, and tephra ejected in volcanic eruptions ultimately falls back to Earth where it covers the ground. These deposits may be the thin dustings or may be many tens of feet (meters) thick near an eruptive vent. Volcanic ash and tephra can present geohazards that are present great distances from the erupting volcano.
photo of a bluff with exposed fine-grained volcanic ash and pumice.
Lava Flow Surface Features
Surface features on a lava flow may reveal important information of the specific dynamics that occurred during the eruption and emplacement of the flow.
photo of lava rock with a rippled surface of ropey lava
Series: Geologic Time—Major Divisions and NPS Fossils
The National Park System contains a magnificent record of geologic time because rocks from each period of the geologic time scale are preserved in park landscapes. The geologic time scale is divided into four large periods of time—the Cenozoic Era, Mesozoic Era, Paleozoic Era, and The Precambrian.
photo of desert landscape with a petrified wood log on the surface
Outside Science (inside parks): Hummingbirds–Banding Together in Capulin Volcano National Monument
The Outside Science crew spends time at Capulin during hummingbird banding time, which is an interactive process involving park visitors, interns, volunteers, and park staff.
two children watch as a hummingbird is released from a ranger's hands
Outside Science (inside parks): Interns in Capulin Volcano National Monument
If you've ever completed an internship, you know that it can bring unanticipated opportunities...like banding hummingbirds at Capulin Volcano National Monument. Watch Cassi Hill explain how her internship kickstarted her career.
Cassy Hill and junior rangers
Making an Impact: Long-Term Monitoring of Natural Resources at Intermountain Region National Parks, 2021
Across the Intermountain Region, Inventory & Monitoring Division ecologists are helping to track the effects of climate change, provide baseline information for resource management, evaluate new technologies, and inspire the next generation of park stewards. This article highlights accomplishments achieved during fiscal year 2021.
A man looks through binoculars at sunrise.
A Changing Bimodal Climate Zone Means Changing Vegetation in Western National Parks
When the climate changes enough, the vegetation communities growing in any given place will also change. Under an expanded bimodal climate zone, some plant communities in western national parks are more likely to change than others. National Park Service ecologists and partners investigated the future conditions that may force some of this change. Having this information can help park managers decide whether to resist, direct, or accept the change.
Dark storm clouds and rainbow over mountains and saguaros.
Climate and Water Monitoring at Capulin Volcano National Monument: Water Year 2022
Climate and hydrology determine how an ecosystem functions and what life subsists. We monitor climate and water at Capulin Volcano National Monument as part of a larger monitoring program. The annual average minimum temperature was higher in Water Year 2022 than the 1991–2020 average, and precipitation varied greatly compared to historic averages. This report summarizes Water Year 2022 climate and water data at at the park.
A gently sloping mountain is covered in bushy green shrubs.
National Park Service project to build up 'workhorse' native seed stocks for major restoration and revegetation efforts
The National Park Service, with funds from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will be able to build up stocks of the native workhorse plant species that can out compete invasive plant species so that native grasses and forbs can grow in previously disturbed areas.
a man kneels next to a bucket collecting seeds in a field
50 Nifty Finds #38: A Germ of an Idea
A lot of articles have been written about the history of the National Park Service (NPS) arrowhead emblem. Many recycle the same content and outdated information that has largely come from the NPS itself. Challenging the traditional story has revealed new sources of information—and two previously overlooked arrowhead designs—that rewrite the arrowhead origin story.
Wooden arrowhead plaque on stand
Updated Species Database Will Help Boost Amphibian Conservation Across the National Park Service
To steward amphibians effectively, managers need basic information about which species live in parks. But species lists need constant maintenance to remain accurate. Due to recent efforts, the National Park Service now has an up-to-date amphibian species checklist for almost 300 parks. This information can serve as the basis for innumerable conservation efforts across the nation.
A toad sits on red sand, looking into the camera.
Lava Flow Forms
Young lava flows also have structures and textures that reveal information about their eruptions. Basaltic lava flows come in two major forms: Pāhoehoe and ‘A‘ā.
photo of ropey and blocky lava
Climate and Water Monitoring at Capulin Volcano National Monument: Water Year 2023
Climate and hydrology shape ecosystems and how they function. We monitor climate and water at Capulin Volcano National Monument as part of a larger monitoring program. This report summarizes Water Year 2023 climate and water data at at the park.
A volcano-shaped hill covered in green shrubby trees and grasses at the base under a cloudy sky..
Project Profile: Produce Seed for Intermountain Grasslands and Restore Intermountain Central Grasslands
The National Park Service will restore grassland ecosystems in select national parks in Arizona and Colorado to advance landscape conservation actions, mitigate the overall loss of these systems, and build a strong core of healthy grasslands to benefit the species and communities who rely on them. The process includes collecting and increase native seed for restoration in central grasslands, supporting the National Seed Strategy.
A tan grassland with trees in the forefront and two mountains in the background.
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Park News
Newsletter
The
Capulin
Title
Chronicle
Capulin Volcano Recipient of Three Grants from
the National Park Foundation
The National Park Foundation, the official
charity of America’s national parks, has
been extremely generous to Capulin Volcano
National Monument (CAVO) this year
by awarding the park nearly $50,000 to
enhance its educational offerings. Three
grants were provided by the National
Park Foundation, each for a specific purpose.
“Climate change is a profound
problem & the youth of America
need to be at the forefront of
the solution.”
America’s Best Idea Grant
Inspired by the critically acclaimed Ken
Burns documentary The National Parks:
America’s Best Idea, the America’s Best
Idea grant program funds park projects
designed to connect diverse, under-engaged
populations throughout the United States
with their national parks in innovative
and meaningful ways. With these funds,
CAVO created an outdoor classroom,
greenhouse, and interactive student
program to engage local and regional youth
promoting stewardship, conservation,
sense of place, and an understanding of
both the National Park Service and the
natural and cultural resources of the park.
Parks Climate Challenge Grant
The 2012 Parks Climate Challenge grant
program uses national parks as classrooms
to educate teachers and students about
climate change. “Climate change is a
profound problem and the youth of America
need to be at the forefront of the solution,”
said Neil Mulholland, President and CEO
of the National Park Foundation. “Parks
Climate Challenge is just one of our programs
that empowers our youth and strengthens
our parks.” Now in its third year, the program
first connects with teachers, giving them the
tools to create engaging curriculum on the
subject of climate change. The grant at CAVO
gave 18 educators from four states the rare
opportunity to work directly with USGS
scientist Bruce Molnia, PhD., providing
teachers the platform, information, and
tools to develop hands-on service projects
for their students incorporating national
park experiences either within or outside
the boundaries of a national park.
Park Stewards Grant
The Park Stewards grant program gives high
school teachers and students the opportunity
to explore the relevance of national parks
to their lives, and encourages them to become
civically engaged stewards of their national
parks. The program places high school
educators in national parks for immersive
learning experiences during the summer
months. As a result of their in-park experiences
“These service-learning
activities allow students to
apply academic knowledge
and critical thinking skills...”
the teachers develop service-learning
programs that are implemented by their
students during the following school year.
These service-learning activities allow
students to apply academic knowledge
and critical thinking skills (in addition to
physical skills as appropriate) to address
genuine needs of the park.
Climate Challenge Grant Participants (from left front): Wendy Kendle (OK), Joe Curie (NM), Claudia Labeth (OK),
Rick Peek (NM), Tonna Winford (CO), Ranger Lynn Cartmell, Suzanne Garcia (TX), Daniel Kendle (OK), Heidi Karr
(NM), Christalina Donovan (NM), Michelle Brown (TX), Danny Kendle (OK), Keith Berry (CO), Gary Smith (OK),
Jennifer Keeler (CO), Jason Allensworth (OK), Larry Arizmendez (TX), Chris Dobbins (OK), & Jeffrey Dilda (CO).
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National Parks: Education for the Next Generation
Since the creation of the National Park
Service in 1916, visitors have been flocking
to national parks to take in breathtaking
scenery. Though our mission is to protect
and preserve natural and cultural historical
resources for future generations to enjoy,
there is an unspoken responsibility in our
mission. We cannot properly protect and
preserve these resources without ensuring
their safety by educating the next generation
of park stewards.
National parks throughout the nation offer
educational and service-learning projects to
academic institutions. Over the course of
the last year, Capulin Volcano hosted 1,076
students and offered 29 curriculum-based
programs to students. The majority of these
programs were to schools from New Mexico,
Colorado, Kansas, Texas, and Oklahoma.
The park was also used by several colleges
for geologic and natural resource studies.
Two different universities, Oklahoma State
University and Southwestern Oklahoma
State University, held classes in the park
during the month of May. These courses
helped students gain valuable experience in
resource management. With the volunteer
work contributed by both schools, Capulin
Volcano’s Natural Resource Team was
able to accomplish several important exotic
plant management projects.
Stu
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Park News
Newsletter
The
Capulin
Title
Chronicle
Park to Host Youth with Assistance from Rocky
Mountain Youth Corps
Capulin Volcano National Monument is
teaming up with Rocky Mountain Youth
Corps (RMYC) for the summer 2012 to
revitalize the park’s visitor resources. Two
crews of eight corpsmembers each are
slated for the work at Capulin. One group
will focus on rehabilitating the Lava Flow
Trail between the Visitor Center and
picnic area. The other crew will work to
“Rocky Mountain Youth Corps
inspires young adults to make
a difference in themselves and
their communities.”
remove invasive plant species and reinstate
native grasses as well as address the park’s
fire hazards by removing woody debris
and downed fuel. The completion of these
projects will meet the needs of more
people by creating a safer, more accessible
and educational experience for visitors of
all ages.
“This is one small step to take Capulin
Volcano to a full service park,” stated
park superintendent Peter Armato.
According to the organization’s mission
statement, “Rocky Mountain Youth Corps
inspires young adults to make a difference
in themselves and their communities.
Through training and team service,
Rocky Mountain Youth Corps is a stepping
stone to new opportunities.” Last year,
RMYC employed over 100 young people
across the state of New Mexico. For many,
this was their first job and first time going
Rocky Mountain Youth Corps crew members hard at work on a trails project in the summer of
2011.
through the interview process. RMYC
interviews each applicant to ensure that
he or she gets that real world experience
they will need when they join the work
force after graduating.
rehabilitate areas recently affected by
wildfires and renovate trails while others
assisted with afterschool and healthcare
programs.
RMYC seeks applicants who are “willing
to learn, take direction, and work with
others as part of a team,” said Field Program
Director Ben Thomas. They look to
recruit a diverse group for each crew
because, “there is strength in diversity,”
Thomas said.
“This is one small step to
take Capulin Volcano to a
full service park.”
The tasks these crews take on must have
a long-term impact, be educational in
nature, and/or meet a high priority need.
This leads to a wide range of possible
projects. In 2011, some crews worked to
RMYC will begin recruiting for the
Capulin crews in May with work starting in
June. Positions are open to New Mexico
residents ages 16-25 years old. All those
interested in applying should contact Ben
Thomas. He can be reached by calling
(575) 751-1420 ext. 27 or via e-mail at
ben@youthcorps.org.
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Teacher-Ranger-Teacher Selections Made for
Summer 2012
Imagine spending your summer in the
outdoors, surrounded by nature, given
the rare chance to serve in the national
park system. For many people, working
for the National Park Service is the
opportunity of a lifetime. This summer,
four teachers will leave their classrooms
to join the green and grey for 8 weeks.
Teacher-rangers selected to work at
Capulin Volcano National Monument
this summer include Gary Smith from
Tulsa, Oklahoma; Claudia Labeth from
Wilson, Oklahoma; Kelly Jones from
Des Moines, New Mexico; and Suzanne
Garcia from Amarillo, Texas.
The Teacher-Ranger-Teacher program at
Capulin has been in place since 2008 and
strives to connect teachers from diverse
schools to national parks. Priority is given
to teachers whose students have little access
to national parks, are underrepresented,
or economically marginalized. Time spent
in a national park helps teacher-rangers
provide kids with a national park experience
in their own classrooms. This, in turn,
Teacher-Ranger-Teacher Claudia Labeth swearing in Junior Rangers after an interpretive program
at the volcano rim.
helps foster a sense of appreciation for our
national parks in today’s youth.
This summer at Capulin, teacher-rangers
will lead interpretive programs, assist
researchers in the field, and shadow
park employees—all while wearing the
national park uniform. They will develop
lesson plans focusing upon the unique
resources found at Capulin which they
can then take back to their classrooms
helping students to connect from afar.
They will also be aiding the park in
launching a new program called Students
Teaching About Monumental Park Sites
Meet Virginia Tavarez,
Maintenance Work Supervisor
Recently, Capulin Volcano hired a new Maintenance Work Supervisor, Virginia Tavarez.
Virginia oversees the Capulin maintenance staff and is in charge of everything from
janitorial duties to building renovation. Armed with lots of energy and enthusiasm,
Virginia has promised “to do whatever it takes to maintain the park facilities for visitor
use