Rio Nutrias
Rio Nutrias (Ojotepo, Pajapaana[1]) | |
Arroyo de las Nutrias,[2] Rio de las Nutrias,[1] Nutrias Creek[1] | |
stream | |
Country | United States |
---|---|
State | New Mexico |
Region | Rio Arriba County |
Tributaries | |
- left | Terrero Creek, Canada del Policarpo |
City | Las Nutrias |
Source | |
- location | North slope of Canjilón Mountain, Carson National Forest |
- elevation | 10,544 ft (3,214 m) [3] |
- coordinates | 36°36′10″N 106°20′20″W / 36.60278°N 106.33889°W [4] |
Mouth | Confluence with the Rio Chama |
- elevation | 6,653 ft (2,028 m) [4] |
- coordinates | 36°33′10″N 106°42′57″W / 36.55278°N 106.71583°WCoordinates: 36°33′10″N 106°42′57″W / 36.55278°N 106.71583°W [4] |
Rio Nutrias is a 35-mile-long (56 km)[5] westward-flowing stream originating on the north slope of Canjilón Mountain in the Carson National Forest, in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, United States. Rio Nutrias is tributary to the Rio Chama which it joins about 3-mile-long (4.8 km) below El Vado Reservoir in Rio Arriba County, in northern New Mexico.
History
Rio Nutrias is archaic sixteenth and seventeenth century Spanish (primarily rural Castilian) for "beavers river".[6] On August 2, 1776 Francisco Silvestre Vélez de Escalante wrote in his diary, "...we halted in a small plain on the bank of another arroyo which is called Rio de las Nutrias, because, although it is of permanent and running water, apparently during all or most of the year it stands in pools where they say beavers breed."[7] In his annotated 1900 translation of the diary of Francisco Garcés, Elliott Coues wrote in a footnote: "In proof of this use of nutrias for beavers I can cite a passage in Escalante's Diario. Doc. para Hist. Mex.,2d ser., i, 1854, p. 426: "Aqui tienen las nutrias hechos con palizades tales tanques, que representan a primera vista un rio mas que mediano - here have the beavers made with sticks such ponds that they look at first sight like a river larger than usual"; the reference being of course to the damming of the stream by these animals."[2] In his dictionary of New Mexico and Southern Colorado Spanish, Rubén Cobos also translates the contemporary Spanish word nutria for otter, as meaning beaver in the archaic Spanish that persists in the region from the earliest settlers since 1598.[8]
Watershed and course
The Rio Nutrias passes through the village of Las Nutrias (variant name is Nutrias) at the Highway 84 crossing.[9] It enters Nutrias Canyon in its last couple miles before its confluence with the Rio Chama. This Rio Nutrias is not to be confused with the Rio Nutrias that is tributary to the Rio San Antonio, or Rio Nutria that is tributary to the Zuni River.[6]
Ecology
Not surprisingly, the river is excellent habitat for beavers (Castor canadensis).[6]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 John Harrington Peabody (1916). The Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, Volume 29 of the Annual Report, United States Bureau of American Ethnology. Government Printing Office. p. 606.
- 1 2 Francisco Tomás Hermenegildo Garcés, Elliott Coues (1900). On the trail of a Spanish pioneer: the diary and itinerary of Francisco Garcés (missionary priest) in his travels throughout Sonora, Arizona, and California, 1775-1776 Vol. I and II. F. P. Harper.
- ↑ "The National Map". Retrieved 2012-06-04.
- 1 2 3 "Rio Nutrias". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
- ↑ 2010 Waterbody Report for Rio Nutrias (Rio Chama to Headwaters) (Report). U. S. Environmental Protection Agency. 2010. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
- 1 2 3 Robert Hixson Julyan (1996). The Place Names of New Mexico. University of New Mexico Press. p. 297. ISBN 9780826316899. Retrieved 2012-06-04.
- ↑ "The Diary and Itinerary of Fathers Dominguez and Escalante". Retrieved 2012-06-04.
- ↑ Rubén Cobos (1983). A Dictionary of New Mexico and Southern Colorado Spanish. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0890134535.
- ↑ "Las Nutrias". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.