The geology of southwestern New Mexico has been studied extensively.[1]
The Clovis people were some of the first people who lived in this area.[2]Uto-Aztecan peoples, such as the Comanches, possibly passed through, although they were not known to have settled in southwestern New Mexico.
Note that neither the Pueblo nor the Hopi ever lived permanently in southwestern New Mexico; they have lived for centuries in northern New Mexico and Arizona, respectively.
Spanish missionaries and explorers started to arrive in 1540, and by the mid-1600s, co-created with the indigenous population a style of agriculture called a Hispanicized or rancheria farming.[2] The colonial period drastically changed the lifestyle of the indigenous peoples of New Mexico.[7]
Mining was an important part of the economic development of southwestern New Mexico,[2] starting in 1804 at Santa Rita during the Nuevo Mexico period of Spanish colonization.[8] Gold was discovered in 1860 at Pinos Altos and in Hillsboro in 1877.[8]Silver City came later.
Personal automobiles and trucks remain the primary means of transportation in southwestern New Mexicans. There are two Interstate Highways that cross over or traverse nearby: 10 and 25.[9]
As of 2024, there are no passenger train services in the area. There were bus services, but the schedules and services change frequently.
Major sights
There are many man-made and natural sights for tourists. Tourism is a major part of the economy in southwestern New Mexico, albeit not as much as the northern part of the state.
Truth or Consequences was started as a hot springs resort, and renamed itself after a popular television show.
^U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Table 1-1: New Mexico Public Road Length, by Functional System [1]Archived October 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine