CAJA DEL RIO

Our Priority

The Caja del Rio Plateau is one of the most culturally and ecologically rich landscapes in the entire Southwest. Located southwest of Santa Fe, it contains thousands of petroglyphs, innumerable sacred sites and vital wildlife corridors. The Caja is still used today by surrounding sovereign Pueblo nations and local Hispano communities for a wide variety of traditional land uses. This 107,000-acre expanse of piñon-juniper savanna and dramatic basalt canyons connects us to our past and each other, and demands protection.

Despite this, the landscape faces immediate threat from proposals for a major bypass route to Los Alamos, and a highly impactful powerline to feed LANL’s growing energy needs. This development would permanently industrialize this fragile plateau, desecrating its cultural sites, severing its wildlife corridors, and adversely impacting the traditional land uses of the surrounding communities.

These incredible lands must be protected.

Tell our elected leaders to protect Caja del Rio.

Sign the petition today

What's At Stake

INDIGENOUS LANDS

A spiritual landscape for Pueblos, Caja del Rio is dotted with ancient petroglyphs.

WILDLIFE CORRIDOR

Essential habitat for many plants and animals.

RECREATIONAL OPPORTUNITY

Recreation enthusiasts of all varieties frequent the area.

FUNCTIONAL ECOSYSTEM

Today, it’s a large, undeveloped landscape existing as it has for millennia.

These incredible lands must be protected.

Tell our elected leaders to protect Caja del Rio.

Roadrunner

News

STAY INFORMED

Sign up for monthly updates on the news, events, and ways to get involved in protecting New Mexico’s wilderness, wildlife, and water.
SIGN UP

HELP KEEP NEW MEXICO WILD

Your financial support helps defend our public lands, water, and communities from an onslaught of threats. 
Together, we’ll keep New Mexico wild.
DONATE NOW