Park name |
County or counties |
Area[4] |
Elevation[4] |
Date established[5] |
Remarks |
acres |
ha |
ft |
m |
Bluewater Lake State Park | Cibola | 3,000 |
1,200 | 7,400 |
2,300 | 1937 | Encircles a 1,200-acre (490 ha) reservoir in the Zuni Mountains.[6] |
Bottomless Lakes State Park | Chaves | 1,400 |
570 | 3,500 |
1,100 | 1933 | Encompasses eight cenotes whose greenish-blue water disguises their true depth.[7] |
Brantley Lake State Park | Eddy | 3,000 |
1,200 | 3,300 |
1,000 | 1989 | Features New Mexico's southernmost lake, a 4,000-acre (1,600 ha) reservoir on the Pecos River.[8] |
Caballo Lake State Park | Sierra | 5,384 |
2,179 | 4,100 |
1,200 | 1964 | Surrounds Caballo Lake, a 11,500-acre (4,700 ha) reservoir on the Rio Grande.[9] |
Cerrillos Hills State Park | Santa Fe | 1,116 |
452 | | | 2009 | Provides day-use recreation amidst 1,100 years of mining history.[10] |
Cimarron Canyon State Park | Colfax | 378 |
153 | 7,500 |
2,300 | 1979 | Showcases the canyon of the Cimarron River and the Palisades Sill formation.[11] |
City of Rocks State Park | Grant | 1,230 |
500 | 5,250 |
1,600 | 1953 | Features rock formations eroded out of 35-million-year-old volcanic ash, and a public observatory.[12] |
Clayton Lake State Park | Union | 471 |
191 | 5,040 |
1,540 | 1965 | Features a 170-acre (69 ha) reservoir and an extensive fossil trackway of dinosaur footprints.[13] |
Conchas Lake State Park | San Miguel | 359 |
145[14] | 4,200 |
1,300 | 1955 | Adjoins a 16,400-acre (6,600 ha) reservoir on the Canadian River.[15] |
Coyote Creek State Park | Mora | 462 |
187 | 7,700 |
2,300 | 1969 | Boasts the most densely stocked trout stream in New Mexico.[16] |
Eagle Nest Lake State Park | Colfax | 3,488 |
1,412 | 8,300 |
2,500 | 2004 | Provides access to a 2,400-acre (970 ha) reservoir in a scenic mountain valley.[17] |
Elephant Butte Lake State Park | Sierra | 24,500 |
9,900 | 4,500 |
1,400 | 1964 | Surrounds Elephant Butte Reservoir, the state's largest and most popular reservoir.[18] |
El Vado Lake State Park | Rio Arriba | 1,730 |
700 | 6,900 |
2,100 | 1961 | Provides access to a 3,200-acre (1,300 ha) reservoir adjacent to Heron Lake State Park.[19] |
Fenton Lake State Park | Sandoval | 700 |
280 | 7,900 |
2,400 | 1984 | Encompasses a 37-acre (15 ha) reservoir surrounded by ponderosa pine forest.[20] |
Heron Lake State Park | Rio Arriba | 4,100 |
1,700 | 7,200 |
2,200 | | Provides access to a 5,900-acre (2,400 ha) no-wake reservoir adjacent to El Vado Lake State Park.[21] |
Hyde Memorial State Park | Santa Fe | 350 |
140 | 8,500 |
2,600 | 1938 | Provides outdoor recreation amenities near Santa Fe.[22] |
Leasburg Dam State Park | Doña Ana | 293 |
119 | 4,200 |
1,300 | 1971 | Features a quiet stretch of the Rio Grande below a 1908 diversion dam.[23] |
Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Park | Eddy | 1,500 |
610 | 3,200 |
980 | 1967 | Comprises a zoo and botanical garden of wildlife native to the Chihuahuan Desert in the city of Carlsbad.[24] |
Manzano Mountains State Park | Torrance | 160 |
65 | 7,600 |
2,300 | 1973 | Protects part of the forested foothills of the Manzano Mountains.[25] |
Mesilla Valley Bosque State Park | Doña Ana | 305 |
123 | 3,900 |
1,200 | 2003 | Interprets a bosque on the Rio Grande and adjacent Chihuahuan Desert.[26] |
Morphy Lake State Park | Mora | 30 |
12 | 8,000 |
2,400 | 1965 | Preserves a small, secluded lake in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.[27] |
Navajo Lake State Park | Rio Arriba and San Juan | 21,000 |
8,500 | 6,100 |
1,900 | 1995 | Comprises three units on New Mexico's second-largest reservoir.[28] |
Oasis State Park | Roosevelt | 193 |
78 | 4,100 |
1,200 | 1961 | Features a fishing pond and sand dunes amidst the east-central plains.[29] |
Oliver Lee Memorial State Park | Otero | 640 |
260 | 4,363 |
1,330 | 1980 | Showcases a verdant canyon in the Sacramento Mountains and Oliver Lee's restored 1893 ranch house.[30] |
Pancho Villa State Park | Luna | 60 |
24 | 4,060 |
1,240 | 1961 | Interprets the 1916 Battle of Columbus (Pancho Villa's raid onto U.S. soil) and the retaliatory Pancho Villa Expedition.[31] |
Percha Dam State Park | Sierra | 80 |
32 | 4,100 |
1,200 | 1970 | Provides outdoor recreation on an impounded section of the Rio Grande.[32] |
Rio Grande Nature Center State Park | Bernalillo | 38 |
15 | 5,000 |
1,500 | 1982 | Interprets a bosque on the Rio Grande in Albuquerque.[33] |
Rockhound State Park | Luna | 1,100 |
450 | 4,500 |
1,400 | 1965 | Allows mineral collecting for amateur geology in the Florida Mountains.[34] |
Santa Rosa Lake State Park | Guadalupe | 550 |
220 | 4,800 |
1,500 | | Adjoins a 3,800-acre (1,500 ha) reservoir.[35] |
Storrie Lake State Park | San Miguel | 80 |
32 | 6,600 |
2,000 | 1960 | Adjoins a 1,100-acre (450 ha) reservoir in the Zuni Mountains.[36] |
Sugarite Canyon State Park | Colfax | 3,600 |
1,500 | 6,950 |
2,120 | 1985 | Interprets the ruins of a historic early-20th-century coal-mining camp.[37] |
Sumner Lake State Park | De Baca | 6,700 |
2,700 | 4,300 |
1,300 | 1966 | Adjoins a 4,500-acre (1,800 ha) reservoir on the Pecos River.[38] |
Ute Lake State Park | Quay | 1,500 |
610 | 3,900 |
1,200 | 1964 | Adjoins an 8,200-acre (3,300 ha) reservoir on the Canadian River.[39] |
Vietnam Veterans Memorial State Park | Colfax | | 8,500 |
2,600 | 2005 | Honors the veterans of the Vietnam War, the country's oldest such memorial (established 1968) and the only one comprising a whole state park.[40] |
Villanueva State Park | San Miguel | 1,600 |
650 | 5,600 |
1,700 | 1967 | Preserves a red sandstone canyon on the Pecos River.[41] |