• Property Types: Land, Residential, Recreational
  • State: New Mexico
  • County: Cibola County
  • City: Tinaja
  • Price: $27,500
  • Total Acreage: 20
  • Property ID: el morro 162 (orppp)
  • Property Address: Tinaja, NM
  • APN: R12309
  • GPS: 35.088346382254, -108.2420420228
  • Subdivision: El Morro Ranches
  • Unit: 1
  • Lot: 162
  • Taxes: $290
  • Seller Fees: 115
General Information:
Owner financing available

Trees * Rolling landscape

Intermittent gullies

Borders BLM lands

 

  • SIZE: 20+/- ac 
  • APN#: R 12309
  • LEGAL DESCRIPTION: EL MORRO RANCHES Lot: 162 Unit: 1 20 AC
  • STATE: New Mexico
  • COUNTY: Cibola
  • GENERAL LOCATION: About 23 miles W-SW of Grants. About 3 miles North of Ice Caves Road.
  • GPS(approx.): 35.0881 , -108.2420
  • GENERAL ELEVATION: approx. 7820'7860'
  • GENERAL INFORMATION: Camp, RV, build, Mobile, Modulars, site builds allowed. Check with the county for your intended usage.
  • TYPE OF TERRAIN: rolling
  • ZONING: residential
  • POWER: no
  • PHONE: no
  • WATER: Must install well if you build
  • SEWER: No. Only needed when/if you build.
  • ROADS: dirt-unimproved
  • PROPERTY TAX: approx. $290 a year  
  • CLOSING/DOC. FEES: $115  
  • TIME LIMIT TO BUILD: none
  • ASSOCIATION DUES: NONE
  • TITLE INFORMATION: Free and clear 
  • If/when more info becomes available, we will update listing

FINANCING INFO and PURCHASE INFO

 

Go to 1881.com Area Land page


Area Info

The following is courtesy of Wikipedia:

El Morro National Monument is a U.S. national monument in Cibola CountyNew MexicoUnited States. Located on an ancient east–west trail in the western part of the state, the monument preserves the remains of a large prehistoric pueblo atop a great sandstone promontory with a pool of water at its base, which subsequently became a landmark where over the centuries explorers and travelers have left personal inscriptions that survive today.

Between about 1275 to 1350 AD, up to 600 people of the Ancestral Puebloan culture lived in the 355+-room mesa-top pueblo.[3] The village was situated on the old Zuni-Acoma Trail, an important ancient trade route. Spanish explorers visiting the area in the 16th century referred to the notable promontory as El Morro ("The Headland"); the local Zuni people call it A'ts'ina ("Place of writings on the rock"), and early Anglo-Americans referred to it as Inscription Rock.

With its oasis-like source of water, El Morro served as a natural resting place for numerous travelers through the otherwise arid and desolate region, many of whom left their signatures, names, dates, and stories of their treks in the walls of the sandstone cliff. While some of the inscriptions are now faded through age, there are still many that can be seen today and remain legible, with some dating back to the 17th century. The oldest legible inscription at El Morro, left by Juan de Oñate, the first Spanish governor of the colony of Santa Fe de Nuevo México, is dated April 16, 1605. Among the Anglo-American emigrants who left their names there in 1858 were several members of the Rose-Baley Party, including Leonard Rose and John Udell.[4] Nearby petroglyphs and carvings made by the Ancestral Puebloans were inscribed centuries before Europeans arrived. In 1906, U.S. federal law prohibited further carving on the cliffs.

El Morro was designated a national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt on December 8, 1906, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1966. Today the site is managed by the National Park Service. The many inscription panels, water pool, pueblo ruins, and the top of the promontory are all accessible via park trails. El Morro is one of many prehistoric sites on the Trails of the Ancients Byway, a designated New Mexico Scenic Byway.[5] 

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$27,500 20 Acres in New Mexico

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