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All the United States New Mexico Ramah Inscription Rock at El Morro
AO Edited

Inscription Rock at El Morro

Some 2,000 carvings show this rare desert spring has been an oasis for travelers for over a thousand years.

Ramah, New Mexico

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Stuart Black
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El Morro From Inscription Trail   Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
Inscriptions on the rock   Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
1886 inscription by RH Orton.   National Park Service/public domain
Inscription area   Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
Pool at El Morro   Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
The spring pool.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
Native American and Anglo inscriptions.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
Union Pacific Inscriptions   Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
Juan de Oñate 1605 inscription.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
Kachinas and big horn sheep petroglyphs.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
Breckinridge inscription.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
El Morro.   cyccommute / Atlas Obscura User
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
The pool at El Morro.   Šarūnas Burdulis/cc by-sa 2.0
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
Inscription by Juan de Oñate in 1605. This is the oldest historical inscription at El Morro.   George A. Grant
  Ken Lund/CC BY-SA 2.0
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About

In the high desert water is difficult to find, and a permanent spring that forms a pool is very rare indeed. The spring at the El Morro bluff, hidden at the base of a cliff, has flowed for a thousand years or more. The pool has served as an oasis for groups including Native Americans, Spanish conquistadores, and 19th-century emigrants, and they have all left their mark.

Hundreds of years ago, local Ancestral Puebloan people built dwellings on top of the mesa and farmed the surrounding land. Although they carved inscriptions and petroglyphs in the rock wall by the spring, their story has been mostly lost to time. The ancient Zuni Indians developed pueblos near water sources and large sandstone structures on which they carved the petroglyphs that still remain today. 

Then in the late 1500s, men in steel suits with steel swords and lead shot came to conquer the land and the peoples that still lived there. One of the conquistadores, Juan de Oñate, was “given” the land to settle, which he did with a vengeance. After massacring and enslaving the people of the Acoma Pueblo, he left his mark on the wall of El Morro in 1605. It is one of the earliest markings by European colonists in America, 15 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.

Oñate was followed by others. One soldier couldn’t resist adding to his commander’s inscription, “The 14th day of July 1736 passed by here the General Juan Paez Hurtado, Inspector,” with the addendum, “And in his company, the Corporal Joseph Trujillo!” Another name is that of P. Gilmer Breckinridge, a wrangler for the U.S. Camel Corps under Lt. Edward Beale. 

In the years that followed, countless more soldiers and American settlers, both well known and lost to history, came through the desert and left their mark at this watering hole. There are now around 2,000 signatures at the base of the cliff, and the El Morro National Monument was established to protect this unique historical record.

In June 2015, Cultural Heritage Imaging, the National Park Service, and the University of Colorado Denver began working together on a project that would capture important inscriptions and petroglyphs at El Morro. They used photogrammetry to capture large-scale sections of the rock, creating a record of the inscriptions that can be used to monitor changes to the site over time. The historical record is critical because of the fragility of the petroglyphs and inscriptions at the site.

Related Tags

Petroglyphs Names History Spring Deserts Colonialism Native Americans

Know Before You Go

Take Exit 81 on I-40 for Grants, New Mexico. Take Highway 53 south toward El Malpais visitor center for 43 miles. Admission and camping are free. The park is dog friendly, as long as they are leashed. There are ruins on the top of the mesa and the views from the top are spectacular. The hike to the top of the mesa is not difficult, but be prepared with water, sunscreen, and appropriate shoes. The upper loop is about 4 miles total. A climb to the top of the mesa is not required, however. The inscriptions are on the north and east end of the bluffs at ground level on an easy walking path.

Community Contributors

Added By

cyccommute

Edited By

Luis Morato, mikewalker, Meg, michellecassidy1

  • Luis Morato
  • mikewalker
  • Meg
  • michellecassidy1

Published

November 28, 2018

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  • https://www.newmexico.org/nmmagazine/articles/post/inscription-rock/
  • http://culturalheritageimaging.org/What_We_Do/Projects/elmorro/
Inscription Rock at El Morro
Highway 53
Ramah, New Mexico
United States
35.043208, -108.337898
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