Tijeras Canyon

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Tijeras Canyon is a prominent canyon in the central part of the US state of New Mexico. It separates the Sandia Mountains to the north from the Manzano Mountains to the south. (The two ranges can also be considered parts of one larger mountain chain.) The canyon drains to the west, into a large dry wash known as Tijeras Arroyo, which runs through Kirtland Air Force Base, passes just south of the Albuquerque International Airport, and then joins the Rio Grande. It heads at a historically important pass, and this pass and the entire canyon is traversed by Interstate 40, following the path of historic U.S. Route 66. (However the railroad was not routed through this pass, instead skirting around the south end of the Manzano Mountains through Mountainair and Belen.)

The name Tijeras means "scissors" in Spanish, and the name is said to come from the junction of two tributary canyons, or perhaps of two roads.[1] The name is most properly applied only the the small village, Tijeras, at the junction, as the original name of the canyon was Cañon de Carnué. However the name Tijeras is now almost universally applied to the canyon.

The original inhabitants of the canyon were Pueblo people, occupying Tijeras Pueblo near the site of the present-day town of Tijeras, but the site has long been deserted.[1]

[edit] Reference

  1. ^ a b Robert Julyan, The Place Names of New Mexico (Revised Edition), University of New Mexico Press, 1998, ISBN 0-8263-1689-1.

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