Petroglyph National Monument stretches 17 miles (27 km) along Albuquerque, New Mexico's West Mesa, a volcanic basalt escarpment that dominates the city's western horizon. The western boundary of the monument features a chain of dormant fissure volcanoes. Beginning in the northwest corner, Butte volcano is followed to its south by Bond, Vulcan, Black and JA volcanoes.
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/petr/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrified_Forest_National_Park
Petroglyph National Monument stretches 17 miles (27 km) along Albuquerque, New Mexico's West Mesa, a volcanic basalt escarpment that dominates the city's western horizon. The western boundary of the monument features a chain of dormant fissure volcanoes. Beginning in the northwest corner, Butte volcano is followed to its south by Bond, Vulcan, Black and JA volcanoes.
Petroglyph National Monument protects one of the largest petroglyph sites in North America, featuring designs and symbols carved onto volcanic rocks by Native Americans and Spanish settlers 400 to 700 years ago. These images are a valuable record of cultural expression and hold profound spiritual significance for contemporary Native Americans and for the descendants of the early Spanish settlers.
GPS: Lat: 35.139 Long: -106.711 From Interstate 40, take the Unser Blvd. exit (#154) proceed north 3 miles to Western Trail. Turn left or west onto Western Trail and follow road to the Visitor Information Center parking lot. From Interstate 25, take the Paseo del Norte exit (#232) and proceed west to Coors Road exit south (must be in center lane to veer left at the Y). Proceed south on Coors Road to Western Trail. Turn right or west onto Western Trail and follow road to the Visitor Info Center parking lot.
Visitor Information Center
Information only. There are no hiking trails at the visitor information center. The visitor information center is open 8:30 am to 4:30 pm daily. It is located at the intersection of Unser Blvd. NW and Western Trail. From Interstate 40, take the Unser Blvd. exit (#154) and proceed north for 3 miles. GPS Lat: 35.1385 Long: -106.711 Park Store open 9-4. You must drive to a petroglyph viewing trail system from the visitor information center. They are located 2-6.5 miles away from the information center.
GPS Lat: 35.138 Long: -106.711 From I-40 take the Unser Blvd. exit (#154). Proceed north 3 miles to Western Trail. Turn left or west onto Western Trail and follow road to the visitor information center parking lot. From I-25 take the Paseo del Norte exit (#232). Proceed west to Coors Road exit south. Proceed south on Coors Road to Western Trail. Turn right or west onto Western Trail and proceed west through the Unser Blvd. intersection. Follow road to the visitor information center parking lot.
Handprint petroglyphs in Piedras Marcadas Canyon
Petroglyphs on dark boulders with a cloudy sky.
Handprints and other petroglyphs on boulders at Piedras Marcadas.
Hawk petroglyph at Mesa Prieta
A petroglyph of a hawk on a dark boulder with a cloudy sky and mountains in the background.
A petroglyph of a hawk at Mesa Prieta. It can be visited from the South Point trailhead.
Desert mammal petroglyph
Petroglyph of a small mammal along the Mesa Point Trail in Boca Negra Canyon.
Petroglyph of a small mammal along the Mesa Point Trail in Boca Negra Canyon.
Macaw petroglyph
Petroglyph of a macaw parrot along the Macaw Trail in Boca Negra Canyon.
Petroglyph of a macaw parrot along the Macaw Trail in Boca Negra Canyon.
Coyote and rattlesnake petroglyphs in Rinconada Canyon
Petroglyph imagery of a coyote and rattlesnake in Rinconada Canyon.
Petroglyph imagery of a coyote and rattlesnake in Rinconada Canyon.
Petroglyph of grazing sheep in Rinconada Canyon
Petroglyph panel of sheep grazing in Rinconada Canyon.
Petroglyph panel of sheep grazing in Rinconada Canyon.
Snow Dusted Cinder Cones
Winter scene of snow covered cinder cones at the Volcanoes Day Use Area.
Winter scene of snow covered cinder cones at the Volcanoes Day Use Area.
Coyote and rattlesnake petroglyphs
Petroglyphs of a coyote and a rattlesnake on a dark boulder.
These petroglyphs could possibly depict a coyote and a rattlesnake, two of the more commonly seen animals at the monument.
Bird Petroglyph
A petroglyph of a bird on a dark boulder.
A petroglyph of a bird at Rinconada Canyon.
Bird and Footprint Petroglyphs
Petroglyphs of a bird and a footprint on a dark boulder.
Petroglyphs of a bird and a footprint at Piedras Marcadas Canyon.
The Volcanoes of Petroglyph
A view of the cinder cones covered by dormant grasses.
A line of cinder cone volcanoes at the Volcanoes Day Use Area.
Increasing temperature seasonality may overwhelm shifts in soil moisture to favor shrub over grass dominance in Colorado Plateau drylands
Increasing variability of temperature favors a shift to shrublands over grasslands in arid southwestern landscapes. This effect is greater than the effect of increasing soil moisture, which favors a shift to grasslands over shrublands.
Grassland with scattered junipers and hills in the background.
The Colorado Plateau
The Colorado Plateau is centered on the four corners area of the Southwest, and includes much of Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico.
Hazy Fajada Butte, Chaco Culture National Monument
NPS Geodiversity Atlas—Petroglyph National Monument, New Mexico
Petroglyph National Monument, located on the west side of Albuquerque, New Mexico, preserves more than 24,000 petroglyphs carved onto volcanic rock outcroppings and boulders. It is located in the Albuquerque Volcanic Field where eruptions about 156,000 years ago formed the Albuquerque Volcanoes which is a series of three spatter cones and the basaltic lava flows in the monument.
person photographing a petroglyph panel
Monitoring Upland Vegetation and Soils on the Southern Colorado Plateau
Vegetation and soils are the foundation upon which all terrestrial ecosystems are built. Soils provide the medium for the storage and delivery of water and nutrients to plants, which in turn provide animal populations with both habitat and food.
Sampling grassland vegetation at a long-term monitoring plot at Wupatki National Monument
Going Green at Petroglyph National Monument
Petroglyph National Monument has installed the National Park Service’s first solar powered electric vehicle charging station! Built in 2016, this solar station was built so that visitors and the staff alike could charge their car using direct sunlight. There are four charging stations available and free or charge to any visitor that has to charge up their electric vehicle.
Visitor plugging in electric vehicle to charger
Shaping the System under President George H.W. Bush
President George H.W. Bush was an ardent supporter of the national parks. Explore some the parks that are part of the legacy of the presidency of George H.W. Bush, who served as the 41st president of the United States from January 20, 1989 to January 20, 1993.
President George H.W. Bush shaking hands with a park ranger at the World War II Memorial
Modeling Past and Future Soil Moisture in Southern Colorado Plateau National Parks and Monuments
In this project, USGS and NPS scientists used the range of variation in historical climate data to provide context for assessing the relative impact of projected future climate on soil water availability. This report provides the results of modeled SWP generated for 11 ecosystems in nine Southern Colorado Plateau Network parks.
Extensive grassland at Wupatki National Monument
Southern Colorado Plateau Bird Inventories
Birds are considered to be good indicators of environmental change. Inventories of bird populations not only provide valuable information that can help manage bird populations, but can also be helpful in managing other resources as well.
Yellow-rumped warbler
Vegetation Characterization and Mapping on the Southern Colorado Plateau
Vegetation mapping is a tool used by botanists, ecologists, and land managers to better understand the abundance, diversity, and distribution of different vegetation types across a landscape.
Vegetation plots used for the classification and mapping of El Malpais NM
Climate Change on the Southern Colorado Plateau
The combination of high. elevation and a semi-arid climate makes the Colorado Plateau particularly vulnerable to climate change. Climate models predict that over the next 100 years, the Southwest will become warmer and even more arid, with more extreme droughts than the region has experienced in the recent past.
One result of climate change may be more, larger floods, like this flash flood in Glen Canyon NRA
Southern Colorado Plateau Mammal Inventories
Mammal inventories help to close the gap in our knowledge and understanding of some taxonomic groups on the Colorado Plateau.
Coyote (Canis latrans)
Geomorphologic Modeling Example—Knickpoint Arroyo
Geomorphologic Model of Knickpoint Migration Arroyo Petroglyph National Monument, New Mexico
color model of arroyo showing depth
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: Photogrammetry Applications and Examples
Photogrammetry is the science and art of using photographs to extract three-dimensional information from a series of well-placed images. Paired with either a standard ruler or GPS locations of camera positions provides the scale in completed models. This Series provides examples of photogrammetry projects for a variety of resources in National Parks.
fossil redwood stump trio
Find Your Park on Route 66
Route 66 and the National Park Service have always had an important historical connection. Route 66 was known as the great road west and after World War II families on vacation took to the road in great numbers to visit the many National Park Service sites in the Southwest and beyond. That connection remains very alive and present today. Take a trip down Route 66 and Find Your Park today!
A paved road with fields in the distance. On the road is a white Oklahoma Route 66 emblem.
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
Judith Córdova
Judith Córdova experienced discrimination as a child in her Denver-area neighborhood. As an adult, she continued to fight against it in her job as an equal opportunity employment specialist for the National Park Service (NPS). Eventually she rose through the ranks herself, becoming the first Latina superintendent in 1993.
Judith Cordova in an NPS baseball cap looks into the camera.
Robin White
Robin White experienced profound loss and the injustices of discrimination as a child. Surrounded by women, she grew up understanding the importance of nature, family, cultural heritage, and her own worth. During more than 40 years in the National Park Service (NPS) White valued community engagement and diversity, first as an interpretative ranger and later as a superintendent.
Robin White in her NPS uniform and ranger flat hat stands in front of a brown sign.
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
Water Resources on the Colorado Plateau
Describes the origin, uses, threats to, and conservation of water on the Colorado Plateau.
Dark green body of water winding through red rock formations with brilliant sun overhead.
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
Fissure Volcanoes
Fissure volcanoes erupt from elongated vents (fissures) rather than a central vent. The lava flows in Craters of the Moon National Monument were erupted from fissures.
aerial photo of a line of volcanic cones and lava flows
Rocky Mountain Youth Corps’ American Sign Language Crews Improve Trails and Historic Structures at Petroglyph and Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monuments
The National Park Service Youth Programs Division continues to increase accessibility in our national parks and expand opportunities for youth and young adults through a partnership with Rocky Mountain Youth Corps’ (RMYC) American Sign Language Conservation Program. Read some highlights from 2022.
Rocky Mountain Youth Corps ASL members at work
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.
The Plateau Postcard: Spring-Summer 2023
The Plateau Postcard is the official newsletter of the Southern Colorado Plateau Inventory and Monitoring Network. In this issue, we say hello to many new faces within the network and head to the field with some of this year's spectacular monitoring crews.
Pile of postcards with images of various southwest national parks on them.
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.
Data Publication Brief - Aquatic Macroinvertebrates and Upland Vegetation/Soils
The data packages for all our long-term monitoring efforts across the Southern Colorado Plateau are the foundations for almost everything we do here. We recently underwent our biggest effort yet in reformatting our data to fit the new standards put out by the Inventory & Monitoring Division. We are proud to announce that two of our largest datasets have now been published and are available for everyone to utilize.
A split image, one side is a stonefly insect and the other side is a white flower.
Desert Varnish
Ever wondered what those dark lines were on the rock walls of canyon country? These black, brown, and red streaks are called desert varnish.
streaks of black desert varnish on a red rock wall
The Plateau Postcard: Winter 2024
The Plateau Postcard is the official newsletter of the Southern Colorado Plateau Inventory and Monitoring Network. In this issue, we learn about how we are trying to predict pinyon-juniper die-offs, as well as a new tool we developed to help make us all better field scientists, and we hear from Bob Parmenter about his remarkable career at Valles Caldera National Preserve.
A pile of postcards.
Breeding Bird Inventory of Petroglyph National Monument, with Special Emphasis on Species Associated with Rocky Escarpment Habitat
Managing problematic social trails and formalizing trail networks requires careful consideration. As part of this management need, the Southern Colorado Plateau Network conducted a breeding bird inventory at Petroglyph National Monument, especially along a unique rocky escarpment which may represent important raptor breeding habitat.
A bird with black and white head, yellow throat, white breast, and brown back, wings and tail.
Updated Species Database Will Help Boost Amphibian Conservation Across the National Park System
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
Park News
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
The official magazine of
Petroglyph National Monument
2017 Volume Fourteen
A
B e aut i f ul
Mystery
What’s Inside...
Manhatten Project
NHP
Valles Caldera NP & PRES
Page 5
park magazine 2017.indd 1
Page 8
Page 14
8/29/2017 10:49:48 AM
1916
Celebrating 100 Years of the
Welcome to Petroglyph
National Monument
Rio Grande Rift Valley and how landforms influence culture over time.
New Mexico has 15 national park units.
Each of these places shares a unique story,
preserves a part of history, or offers inspiring natural beauty. I invite you to visit and
experience the wonders of each of the
national parks in New Mexico and other
public lands managed for your enjoyment.
A visit to Petroglyph National Monument
will begin a lifetime of experiences exploring your national park system or can be
another stop on your life-long journey. In
2016, the National Park Service celebrated
its 100th anniversary as a federal agency
caring for special places saved by the
The centennial of the National Park SerAmerican public so that all may experience
vice is the perfect opportunity for each of
our heritage. As we engage the next genus to create a new relationship or rekindle
eration of park stewards, we invite you to
an old one with our public lands and our
Find Your Park.
shared natural and cultural heritage. Explore Petroglyph National Monument,
As you visit Petroglyph National Monuexplore New Mexico, and explore the
ment, I hope that you find something that
country! With over 400 units of the nainspires wonder, provokes a question,
tional park system in all 50 states and the
piques your curiosity, or leaves you wantterritories, get out there and...
ing more. The thousands of petroglyphs
Find Your Park!
etched into ancient volcanic rocks offer
a tangible connection to this land and its
Experience your America,
people over a long continuum. These images hold profound significance for the
Dennis A. Vásquez
native peoples of the middle Rio Grande
Superintendent
Valley and others, and offer an opportunity
for visitors to contemplate the meaning
of cultural continuity in our world of accelerating change. A brief silent moment
surrounded by the ancient images may
lead you to a mental exploration of land
stewardship and cultural identity in the
American Southwest. You may find that
a walk through the field of volcanic cones
and lava flows can facilitate both an understanding of the rich geologic history of the
Page 2
park magazine 2017.indd 2
Petroglyph National Monument
8/29/2017 10:49:50 AM
2016
f the National Park Service
Dennis A. Vásquez
Superintendent
Photo: Mark Bohrer
Globemallow
(Sphaeralcea incana)
Photo: NPS
Bird of Paradise (Caesalpinia gilliesii)
Photo: NPS
Apache Plume (Fallugia paradoxa)
Photo: NPS
Albuquerque, NM
park magazine 2017.indd 3
Blanket Flower (Gaillardia pinnatifida)
Photo: NPS
Page 3
8/29/2017 10:49:57 AM
Understanding the Petroglyphs
Allison Martin, Interpretation and
Outreach
Some of the most important questions we
get asked are,“What do these petroglyphs
mean? Who made them and why are they
here?” These are my favorite questions, as
it opens up topics for interpretation and
communication between myself and the
visitor. The easy answer is that we have
no way of possibly interpreting an image
to mean something specific because the
individual who created the image can not
tell us the meaning. This begs the question, How can we begin to understand
these images? One place to start is to understand the lifestyle and culture of the
Ancestral Puebloans, the ancient Native
people that lived here 400-700 years ago.
Then, we must look at how that culture
shaped not only Native lifestyle during
that time, but the lifestyles of those living in New Mexico today. When we see a
petroglyph of an animal we may ponder,
“What purpose did this animal serve to the
Ancestral Puebloans?” Many animals were
used for meat, skin and other necessities
to help aide survival. Other animals were
domesticated and used for protection or
celebration. These are the perspectives that
help shine light on the reason of the petroglyphs. The more questions we ask, the
more knowledge we obtain.
Many different cultural groups in and
around New Mexico recognize this area,
from the petroglyphs to the volcanoes, as
a sacred place. The Ancestral Puebloans
settled in this area for a reason. The Rio
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park magazine 2017.indd 4
Grande supplied them with water, food,
and a place to flourish. It holds special
meaning to the Pueblo people as they created a community of life here some 700
years ago. Everything that they depended
on for survival was found in this area,
which makes every rock and tree a part of
their life and culture.
The images here were carved not only
by the Ancestral Puebloans, but also the
Spanish settlers traveling through this
area. Some petroglyphs in the monument
appear to represent sheep brand
Park News
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
The official newspaper of
Petroglyph National Monument
ECHOES
from
the EARTH
2012 Volume Eleven
Inside...
Page 16
Page 6
Page 2
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
And Other Important Business
By Dr. Joseph P. Sánchez
Superintendent of Petroglyph National Monument
Petroglyph National Monument is pleased open air environment under our New Mexico sky.
to announce that the construction of the new amAside from the accessible seating area at the
phitheater is nearing an end. By fall, Petroglyph top and bottom portion of the amphitheater, an acNational Monument
cessible sidewalk will
will offer programs to
facilitate entrance and
the public at the new
exit from it. Interpretive
structure.
Without
wayside exhibits will
doubt, the amphithealso be developed. Two
ater opens a new chapgeologic and cultural
ter for Petroglyph Nawaysides, for example,
tional Monument in its
will be placed along
services to the visiting
the walkway leading to
public and our neighthe amphitheater. The
bors. The amphithewayside exhibits will
ater offers an opportuexplain such features
nity for visitors to enjoy
of the land and people
open air evening and
that have historically
day time lectures and
NPS Photo surrounded the west
presentations, cultural The new amphitheater, constructed with Federal
mesa escarpment with
demonstrations, and Lands Recreation Enhancement Act funds.
its marvelous natural
impromptu programs.
and cultural resources.
Special groups incluRestroom facilities and
sive of students from neighboring schools within drinking water are available nearby.
Albuquerque Public Schools and other school disThe use of new media technology marks a
tricts around the state will be welcome at the new new approach to the presentations at Petroglyph
facility.
National Monument. The amphitheater, for examAdditionally, the amphitheater will allow ple, will feature large visual aids, visually interacfor tiered stadium-style seating. Truly, there is not tive programs, and large screen presentations. Fua bad seat in the place! The new structure adds ture plans will include live streaming of programs
flexibility to our programs. With it, we can move that can be viewed by anyone across the country as
our programs away from the visitor center patio, well as by students utilizing long distance learning.
although the patio will be used for different pro- These technological amenities at the amphitheater
grams that don’t require an amphitheater such as place Petroglyph National Monument more in the
book signings. The location of the amphitheater, league with other National Parks that do have ammoreover, provides more isolation from the city’s phitheaters.
ambient lights and sounds and allows for a more
2
Petroglyph National Monument’s
Federal Fire Plan
Natural and Cultural Resource Advisors damage
assessment report will be completed and if arson
or negligence on the part of an individual and or
commercial entity is identified, the responsible
parties will be held accountable according to law.
One additional effort
carried out by Petroglyph
National Monument, within the Federal Jurisdiction
of the Monument, has been
to clear debris and undergrowth from the boundary
line as much as possible. To
that end, we continue to remind our neighbors that the
cleared areas are not trails,
but act more of a firebreak
along the boundary. We also remind our neighbors whose back yards straddle the boundary not
to throw cuttings, leaves, or other debris into that
area. As a reminder, throwing cut brush and construction debris from residential and commercial
property over walls and across fences into Petroglyph National Monument is strictly prohibited.
Every year wildfire dangers increase with
each successive drought. It looks like this year
will be no different. It is
important to know that
Petroglyph National Monument has a Fire Plan that
spells out the responsibilities of the Park Superintendent, the Chief Ranger,
as our key fire management
contact person, and other
City of Albuquerque, Bernalillo County and State
authorities. There are two
fire control agencies with direct jurisdiction and
responsibility within Petroglyph National Monument. They are the Albuquerque Fire Department
and the Bernalillo County Fire Department. Effective in May of 2011, a Mutual Aid Agreement
was signed between these two fire departments
and the National Park Service’s Wildland Fire
Four Winds Group, located in Grants, NM. This
defines the responsibilities for general fire control
and initial attack.
The Albuquerque Fire Department has
full suppression and control authority over all
fires that occur within Albuquerque’s city limits. Should a wildland fire incident occur within
Petroglyph National Monument, a Unified Command will be set up with the Albuquerque Fire
Management Officer and the initial attack agency
per jurisdiction. The NPS Fire Management Officer of the Four Winds Group will be notified and
the fe
Park News
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Earth & Sky
The official newspaper of
Petroglyph National Monument
2010 Volume Ten
Inside...
Page 14
Page 6
Page 2
20 Years of Earth and Sky
By Dr. Joseph P. Sanchez
Superintendent of Petroglyph National Monument
Since its establishment on June 27, 1990, the creasingly evident. Changes in the last decade, in
staff at Petroglyph National Monument has been particular, have been dramatic to a stretch of land
dedicated to the preservation and protection of that was once vacant. Residential and commercial
the invaluable cultural and natural resources with- development around the Monument has occurred
on all of its sides makin its boundaries. As
ing it an island within
we approach the annithe city limits. Today,
versary of Petroglyph
two roads, Unser Blvd.
National Monument’s
and Paseo del Norte
first twenty years, we
have divided Petrotake time to ponder the
glyph National Monuantiquity of the petroment into three parts.
glyphs made by NaWhile the results have
tive Peoples and their
been positive in regard
relationship to earth
to the progression of
and sky. The secrets
the City of Albuquerof such knowledge
que, the effects on
are buried in timeless
wildlife have been sigpetroglyphs and arnificant. For example,
cheological sites along
White House Photo
many river valleys, ra- President George H. W. Bush signs the law creating disruption of animal
patterns for hunting
vines and escarpments Petroglyph National Monument on June 27, 1990.
and migration through
of the American Southa once unencumbered
west and northern
habitat
has
been
affected.
Visitor
uses have been,
Mexico. Notably, Petroglyph National Monument
preserves over 20,000 petroglyphs many of which to an extent, fragmented as the two roads have segtell of equinoxes, solstices, and other features of mented visitor activities within the Monument to
possible sun-moon-earth relationships. That many areas between the roads.
Currently, Petroglyph National Monument
Indian cultures had sophisticated knowledge about
is
developing
a Visitor Use Plan to define activithe sun, moon and night sky is especially evident
at Chaco Canyon, the many Mayan sites, and Az- ties and uses within the Monument. In that retec temples. There are other stories behind each gard, the staff has taken a pro-active approach to
petroglyph, some of which were made by Spanish managing the Monument. Within the context of
these changes, consultation with associated tribes,
colonial settlers. Their legacy is our inheritance.
In the last twenty years, the challenges to who consider the Monument to be a sacred place,
Petroglyph National Monument’s mission to pre- is ongoing. Thus resource protection takes many
serve and protect its resources have become in- forms. To that end, the staff at Petroglyph National
2
Monument is engaged in visitor services, law enforcement activities, natural and cultural resources
monitoring programs, and facility management
projects. These activities serve to preserve and
protect the Monument’s resources for the enjoyment of future generations.
As an urban park,
Petroglyph National Monument is located within the
fastest growing area of Albuquerque. Recent expansive
plans for additional residential development near the
south end of the Monument
are underway. Additionally, three new elementary
schools are within walking
distance of the Monument.
On the very edge of the city,
residential lots adjacent to
Petroglyph National Monument enjoy panoramic views that, by dint of their
locations, are protected in perpetuity. Monument
neighbors appreciate
having a National Park
in their own back yard.
Today land acquisition
is almost complete.
When the monument
was established in
1990, half of the 7239
acres were already in
public ownership. The
State of New Mexico
transferred 640 acres
to the Federal Govern-
ment in 2001. In addition, the City owns several
thousand acres of Major Public Open Space lands
immediately adjacent to the monument. Those
lands, while not within the monument boundary, are maintained in their natural state for recreational use and as an open
space preserve. The lands
are part of Albuquerque’s
20,000 acres of designated
and highly celebrated Major
Public Open Space.
The City of Albuquerque and the National Park
Service continue to manage
the lands cooperatively within the monument boundaries consistent with a Memorandum of Understanding.
While the National Park
Service manages the Atrisco
Unit, the federally-owned
portion of the Monument, the City of Albuquerque manages both the Boca Negra Unit and Piedras Marcadas Units.
The logos of both the
city Open Space and
National Park Service are displayed on
Monument signs and
printed materials as a
manifestation of the
long standing cooperative relationship to
manage this complex,
dynamic and evolving
national treasure.
As an urban park,
Petroglyph
National Monument
is located in the
fastest growing area
of Albuquerque.
NPS photo