| Introduction | States | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Capital: Santa Fe Governor: Gary E. Johnson, R (to Jan. 2003) Lieut. Governor: Walter Bradley, R (to Jan. 2003) Senators: Jeff Bingaman, D (to Jan. 2007); Pete V. Domenici, R (to Jan. 2003) Secy. of State: Rebecca Vigil-Giron, D (to Jan. 2003) Atty. General: Patricia A. Madrid, D (to Jan. 2003) State Auditor: Domingo P. Martinez, D (to Jan. 2003) State Treasurer: Michael A. Montoya, D (to Jan. 2003) Commissioner of Public Lands: Ray Powell, D (to Jan. 2003) Organized as territory: Sept. 9, 1850 Entered Union (rank): Jan. 6, 1912 (47) Present constitution adopted: 1911 Motto: Crescit eundo (It grows as it goes) State Symbols:
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Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, a Spanish explorer searching for gold, traveled the region that became New Mexico in 1540-42. In 1598 the first Spanish settlement was established on the Rio Grande River by Juan de Onate; in 1610 Santa Fe was founded and made the capital of New Mexico. The U.S. acquired most of New Mexico in 1848, as a result of the Mexican War, and the remainder in the 1853 Gadsden Purchase. Union troops captured the territory from the Confederates during the Civil War. With the surrender of Geronimo in 1886, the Apache Wars and most of the Indian conflicts in the area were ended. Since 1945, New Mexico has been a leader in energy research and development with extensive experiments conducted at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and Sandia Laboratories in the nuclear, solar, and geothermal areas. Minerals are the state's richest natural resource and New Mexico is one of the U.S. leaders in output of uranium and potassium salts. Petroleum, natural gas, copper, gold, silver, zinc, lead, and molybdenum also contribute heavily to the state's income. The principal manufacturing industries include food products, chemicals, transportation equipment, lumber, electrical machinery, and stone-clay-glass products. More than two-thirds of New Mexico's farm income comes from livestock products, especially sheep. Cotton, pecans, and sorghum are the most important field crops. Corn, peanuts, beans, onions, chilies, and lettuce are also grown. Tourist attractions in New Mexico include the Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Inscription Rock at El Morro National Monument, the ruins at Fort Union, Billy the Kid mementos at Lincoln, the White Sands and Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monuments, and the Chaco Culture National Historical Park. Nickname: Land of Enchantment (1999) Origin of name: From the country of Mexico 10 largest cities (1999 est.): Albuquerque, 420,578; Las Cruces, 75,786; Santa Fe, 69,299; Rio Rancho, 52,012; Roswell, 47,644; Farmington, 40,599; Clovis, 31,504; Alamogordo, 28,411; Hobbs, 26,898; Carlsbad, 26,262 Land area: 121,365 sq mi. (314,334 sq km) Geographic center: In Torrance Co., 12 mi. SSW of Willard Number of counties: 33 Largest county by population and area: Bernalillo, 523,472 (1999 est.); Catron, 6,928 sq mi. State-owned forested land: 933,000 ac. State parks: 31 (267,302 ac.) Residents: New Mexican 1999 resident population est.: 1,739,844 1990 resident census population (rank): 1,515,069 (37). Male: 745,253; Female: 769,816. White: 1,146,028 (75.6%); Black: 30,210 (2.0%); American Indian: 134,355 (8.9%); Asian: 14,124 (0.9%); Other race: 190,352 (12.6%); Hispanic: 579,224 (38.2%). 1990 percent population under 18: 29.5; 65 and over: 10.8; median age: 31.1. |
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