2 ~ |NTROOUCiNG NORTHERN N;~t~ n~f ,<br > Fi<br > 1. GEOGRAPHY, HISTOBY ~ ,i,sr<br > THE PEOPLE p~eb<br > were<br > missi<br > GEOGRAPHY were<br > missi<br > Forget any preconceptions about the New Mexico "desert." It ca~ be exp~<br > hot in the summer certainly; but t s co d in the winter and on pnng ex~<br > and fa nights. Santa Fe is at 7,000-feet e evation, Taos at 6,950. into<br > Albuquerque is in the "lowlands" at 5 300 feet.<br > The most notable phys ca features of northern New Mexico m<br > the~<br > the Sangre de Cristo (Blood of Christ) Mountains and the Rio setxl,<br > Grande (Big River). The Sangre de Cristus, with their summit at ("~<br > 13,161-foot Wheeler Peak irnt north of Taos, are the southern rs il<br > extremity of the Rockies. The Rio Grande flows through a deep pta~l<br > north-south cut dividing the mountains from the mesa country to the by (<br > west. Albuquerque is on the R o Grande; both Santa Fe and Ta0sm ffo~<br > within 25 miles east on tributary streams. . 1<br > New Mexico is c ass fled as having a "semiarid subtropical" res,<br > climate. That means there s lots of sun, prec p tation is light and Too!<br > relative humidity is low. But because of the elevation difference,<br > temperatures at Santa Fe and Tarn are often 10~F cooler than those at<br > Albuquerque. rcta<br > 12y<br > HISTORY by t<br > The Pueblo tribes of the upper Rio Gmnde valley are believed to be SI~.t,i.<br > descendants of the Anasazi, who lived from the 9th to the 13th<br >century in the Four Comers region where the states of New Mexico, ~]cl<br >Arizona Colorado, and Utah now meet The Anasazi built spectaco-<br >lar^stmctures; an idea of their scale and intricacy is hinted at by ruins<br >at tA~aco L.any.on and Mesa Verde. It isn t known for certain whythey ~,tl<br >an~doned their homes (some archaeologists suggest drought othen, s~:1<br >social unrest), bat by the time the first Spanish arrived in the 1500s x<br >.mey were long gone, and the Pueblo culture was well established MI<br >mroughout northem and western New Mexico.<br > A distinguishing and unifying mark of the otherwise dh e~ apgp<br >Ana~t.andPueblo cultures was architecture sty e. Both built<br >d~rnUOrmmum-style, communities of stone and mud adobe bricks,<br > ee and four stones high. Focused around centra plazas, villages<br >incorporated circular spiritual chambers called kivas These people<br >were primitive farmers who used the waters of the R o Grande and i~<br >tnbutaries to irrigate fields of corn, beans, and squash and creatco )t~<br >ehborate works of pottery.<br >THE SPANISH OCCUPATION The Spanish ventured into the at}]<br >upper Rio Gmnde after their conauest of Mexico s Azte~ tn<br >1519-21. In 1540 Franc sco V~squez de Coronado led an expedam<br >in search of the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola, coincidental Y<br >introducing horses and sheep to the region Ne ther Coronado nor a<br >~u~ess~on of w~lth-~irsff conquistador3 could located the,lrg~,n~<br >
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Santa Fe Taos and Albuquerque 1993-1994 Frommers City Guides 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
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Santa Fe Taos and Albuquerque 1993-1994 Frommers City Guides 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載