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New Mexico tribes

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NEW MEXICO INDIAN TRIBES



Extensive categorization and cross-reference of all North American native american indian tribes of the US and Canada First Nations, by nations, bands, rancheria, pueblo, federally recognized, state recognized, unrecognized, petitions for recognition, by state or providence, and by language group and region of original occupation. You can also find a listing of official tribal web sites on the Internet.

New Mexico tribes map


NEW MEXICO INDIAN TRIBES



Federal list last updated 3/07

FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED TRIBES

  • Jicarilla Apache Nation
  • Mescalero Apache Tribe of the Mescalero Reservation
  • Navajo Nation (Arizona, New Mexico and Utah)
  • Ohkay Owingeh (formerly the Pueblo of San Juan)
  • Pueblo of Acoma
  • Pueblo of Cochiti
  • Pueblo of Jemez
  • Pueblo of Isleta
  • Pueblo of Laguna
  • Pueblo of Nambe
  • Pueblo of Picuris
  • Pueblo of Pojoaque
  • Pueblo of San Felipe
  • Pueblo of San Ildefonso
  • Pueblo of Sandia
  • Pueblo of Santa Ana
  • Pueblo of Santa Clara
  • Pueblo of Santo Domingo
  • Pueblo of Taos
  • Pueblo of Tesuque
  • Pueblo of Zia
  • Ute Mountain Tribe of the Ute Mountain Reservation (Colorado, New Mexico and Utah)
  • Zuni Tribe of the Zuni Reservation

STATE RECOGNIZED TRIBES
(Not recognized by the Federal Governemnt)

In New Mexico, the State Constitution authorizes the State to recognize tribes other than those with federal recognition. Genízaro was a specialized ethnic term current in New Mexico during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Fray Agustín Morti, referring to the Genízaro Indians of Analco in Santa Fe in 1779, gave a precise and correct definition of them: "This name is given to the children of the captives of different [Indian] nations who have married in the province".

In 2007, the Genízaros received legislative recognition as an indigenous group.One "form of state recognition may consist of merely acknowledging that a particular tribal group constitutes the Indigenous people of a particular area in the state."

Of the 16 states that host state-recognized tribes, 5 have recognized tribes through joint resolutions, suggesting legislative recognition is an appropriate means for granting recognition. These resolutions to recognize are the first steps in attaining legally binding State tribal recognition apart from the Federal recognition process.

UNRECOGNIZED / PETITIONING TRIBES

  • Canoncito Band of Navajos, petitioned for independent federal recognition 07/31/1989.Note: this is a Chapter (governing unit) of the Navajo Nation.


  • Piro/Manso/Tiwa Indian Tribe of the Pueblo of San Juan de Guadalupe. Letter of Intent to Petition 01/18/1971.


  • Piro/Manso/Tiwa Tribe of Guadalupe Pueblo (aka Tiwa Indian Tribe).[6]. Letter of Intent to Petition 12/17/2002.


  • ? Ramah Navajo Chapter

FIRST CONTACT TO PRESENT

PRE-CONTACT NEW MEXICO TRIBES

PRE-HISTORIC CULTURES IN NEW MEXICO

  • c. 25000 B.C. - Sandia people leave earliest evidence of human existence in what is now New Mexico.


  • c. 10000-9000 B.C. - Clovis hunters roam area in search of mammoth, bison and other game.


  • c. 9000-8000 B.C. - Folsom people flourish throughout Southwest at the end of the last Ice Age.


  • c. 10000-500 B.C. - Cochise people are first inhabitants to cultivate corn, squash and beans, the earliest evidence of agriculture in the Southwest.


  • 300-1400 A.D.- Mogollon culture introduces highly artistic pottery and early architecture in the form of pit houses.


  • 1-700 A.D. - Anasazi basket makers elevate weaving to a high art, creating baskets, clothing, sandals and utensils.


  • 700-1300 A.D. - Anasazi culture culminates in the highly developed Chaco Civilization.


  • 1200-1500s A.D. - Pueblo Indians establish villages along the Rio Grande and its tributaries.
The Clovis-Paleo Indians later discovered the eastern plains of New Mexico, the same expansive romping grounds of the dinosaurs around 10,000 B.C. The river valleys west of their hunting grounds later flooded with refugees from the declining Four Corners Anasazi cultures.

Sometime between A.D. 1130 and 1180, the Anasazi drifted from their high-walled towns to evolve into today's Pueblo Indians, so named by early Spanish explorers because they lived in land-based communities much like the villages, or pueblos, of home. Culturally similar American Indians, the Mogollón, lived in today's Gila National Forest.

The Anasazi occupied the region where present day Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado meet. They were among the most highly civilized of the Native American cultures. They raised corn and cotton, and tamed wild turkeys, using the meat for food and the feathers for clothing. In the winter, the Anasazi wore garments fashioned from turkey feathers.

The Anasazi were cliff dwellers and built many apartment houses out of closely fitted stones. One such building, the Pueblo Bonito, had nearly 800 rooms.

Around 1500 A.D., the Navaho and Apache tribes came to the New Mexico region from the north. Utes and Comanches entered the area a few years later.



Reservation / Reserves
Official Tribal Websites

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