How land grant heirs and archaeologists are rebuilding history—together.

Historically, archaeological excavation has often been done by people unfamiliar with the places and sites they are researching. And all too often, this excavation resulted in looting and approaches that were not respectful of the cultures and peoples who had once resided at a particular site. 

Now, community-led archaeology has gained a lot of traction as a best practice rooted in respect and also because when archaeologists work with communities it becomes easier to find answers or to know the right types of questions to ask. In the case of the Cañón de Carnué land grant excavation, New Mexico State University (NMSU) has partnered with the Cañón de Carnué land grant heirs to piece together the history of the community who first populated the site in 1763. Like all New Mexico history, this particular land grant excavation reveals the many cultures and peoples who have been a part of making the state what it is today.

“A lot of these late 18th-century land grants …  were being awarded more by the colonial [Spanish] government because they were part of sort of an effort on their part to consolidate their frontier,” says Dr. Kelly Jenks, historical archaeologist with NMSU. “They were … establishing these fortified settlements in peripheral areas to try to protect the colonial core from attack, and also to kind of solidify the frontier. But, because these were pretty dangerous lands that they were looking to settle, and because they were really concerned with them being defended, they were actually, in some cases, specifically recruiting people who were identified in records as Genízaro people who had Indigenous ancestry, but oftentimes had been raised within colonial society.”

Discover more: 

Archaeology in Cañón de Carnué, New Mexico State University

Cañón de Carnué land grant history

New Mexico land grant history

United States v. Sandoval Supreme Court decision stripping land grant rights

Present-day land grant actions

San Miguel del Vado land grant recovery efforts

Nación Genízara: Ethnogenesis, Place, and Identity in New Mexico, edited by Moises Gonzales and Enrique R. Lamadrid

Hear more on Encounter Culture:

A History of Genízaro Identity in the Heart of New Mexico with Dr. Gregorio Gonzales, Encounter Culture season 6

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Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios. 

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