The majority of land within New Mexico is privately owned. Lastly, we’ll explore the places you can’t use a metal detector.
Then, we’ll wander through National Forests, State Parks, and BLM-managed land. Next, we’ll investigate the rules and regulations for metal detecting in public parks throughout the major metropolitan areas in New Mexico. In this article, we’ll explore the history of New Mexico through the lens of 607 places you can use a metal detector within the state.įirst, we’ll provide an introduction to locating historical sites on private property to search with a metal detector. Twenty-two other Native American communities, each their own sovereign nation, hold centuries of life-ways, traditions, and culture. The Taos Pueblo, north of Santa Fe, has been continuously occupied for at least one thousand years. Santa Fe, the state’s capital, is the oldest capital city in the United States. From pinion and juniper forests in the north, to volcanoes, to canyons and rivers, to arid deserts in the south, the state has natural beauty in spades. There is so much more to New Mexico than meets the eye. The communities that make up the state have been inhabited and traveled by indigenous peoples, European colonists, American settlers, and countless others. New Mexico has a richly woven historical fabric dating back millennia.