Skip to SearchSkip to NavigationSkip to BodySkip to Footer
National Park Service LogoU.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park ServiceNational Park Service
National Park Service:  U.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park Service Arrowhead
El Morro National MonumentImage of the pool at El Morro
view map
text size:largestlargernormal
printer friendly

Paso por aqui . . .

A reliable waterhole hidden at the base of a sandstone bluff made El Morro (the headland) a popular campsite. Ancestral Puebloans and Spanish and American travelers carved over 2,000 signatures, dates, messages, and petroglyphs for hundreds of years. We invite you to make El Morro a stopping point during your travels.
 
Experience all El Morro has to offer by hiking the trail.

Trails

A ½-mile loop trail leads to the historic pool and past hundreds of inscriptions and petroglyphs. Continuing to the top of the bluff for the breathtaking views and Ancestral Puebloan ruins makes this a two-mile loop trail.
more...

 
A Park Ranger guides a group to the top of the bluff at El Morro.

Ranger Programs

Explore El Morro and nearby El Malpais National Monuments. In the summer we offer Ranger-led programs; guided hikes, cave tours, and bat flights. For the current schedule click on "more" for a downloadable PDF file.
more...

 
Image of a Spanish Inscription carved by Ramon Garcia Jurado in 1709.

Inscription Preservation

Inscriptions and petroglyphs carved into soft sandstone won't be here forever. Find out what the National Park Service is doing to delay the effects of weathering, erosion and time on these fascinating links to our past.
more...

 
 

Write to

El Morro National Monument
HC 61 Box 43
Ramah, NM 87321

E-mail Us

Phone

Visitor Center
(505) 783-4226 ext. 0

Monument Headquarters
(505) 285-4641 ext. 0

Fax

(505) 783-4689

Climate

At an elevation of 7,219 feet (2200 meters) winters can be cold, snowy and windy. Summers are warm with afternoon thunder showers in July and August.
more...
Skip to SearchSkip to NavigationSkip to BodySkip to Footer
Image of White-throated Swift  

Did You Know?
El Morro National Monument's avian claim to fame is the White-throated Swift, which was described to science for the very first time here in 1851, by Dr. S. W. Woodhouse of the Sitgreaves Expedition.

Last Updated: June 30, 2009 at 14:58 EST