Use of Valles Caldera dates back to prehistoric times: spear points dating to 11,000 years ago have been discovered. Several
Native American tribes frequented the caldera for hunting prolific game and gathering
obsidian that is common in this area. The obsidian was
knapped into tools and weapons while wild game was followed and hunted seasonally. Obsidian from the caldera was traded by tribes across much of the Southwest. Eventually, the Spanish, and later Mexican settlers along with the
Navajo and other tribes came to the caldera seasonally for grazing livestock. This often resulted in periodic clashes and raids between tribes and cultures. Later, as the United States acquired New Mexico as part of the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, the caldera became the backdrop for the Indian wars with the
U.S. Army. Around the same time, the caldera and its forests began to be used commercially for ranching and logging.
Baca Ranch The caldera became part of the
Baca Ranch in 1876. The
Bacas were a wealthy family given the land as compensation for the termination of a grant given to their family near
Las Vegas, in northeastern New Mexico. The family was given four other parcels by the US Government as well, another one in New Mexico, one in Colorado, and two in Arizona. This area, , was called
Baca Location Number One or
Baca Float Number One. Since then, the land has been through a string of exchanges between private owners and business enterprises. It was owned by Frank Bond in the 1930s. Bond, a businessman based in nearby
Española, ran up to 30,000 sheep in the caldera, significantly overgrazing the land and causing damage from which the watersheds of the landscape are still recovering. The land was purchased by the Dunigan family from Abilene, Texas in 1963. Pat Dunigan did not obtain the timber rights and the New Mexico Lumber Company logged the property heavily - removing significant amounts of old-growth
douglas fir and
ponderosa pine. Dunigan bought out the timber rights in the 1970s and slowed the logging. He negotiated unsuccessfully with the
National Park Service and the
US Forest Service for possible sale of the property in the 1980s. The legislation provided for the federal purchase of this historical ranch with funds coming from the
Land and Water Conservation Fund derived from royalties the US government receives from offshore
petroleum and
natural gas drilling. The Dunigan family sold the entire surface
estate of and seven-eighths of the
geothermal mineral estate to the
federal government for $101 million. As some sites of the Baca Ranch are sacred and of cultural significance to the
Native Americans, of the purchase were given to the
Santa Clara Pueblo, which borders the property to the northeast. These include the headwaters of Santa Clara Creek, which is sacred to the pueblo. The Valles Caldera Preservation Act of 2000 also created the Valles Caldera Trust, an experimental management organization consisting of nine board members, including seven appointed by the
President of the United States. The Trust combined private-sector practices with federal land management protocol. Under the terms of the Valles Caldera Preservation Act, the preserve was to become financially self-sustaining by 2015.
Environmentalists lobbied for the more inclusive protections of national park status instead of the Trust model, but then-Senator
Pete Domenici (R) insisted on the experimental approach as a condition for his support for public purchase. Beginning in 2010, US Senator
Jeff Bingaman (D) introduced legislation that would transfer the property to the
National Park Service as a
national preserve. The 2011 bill was supported by the VCNP trustees and a majority of New Mexico's Congressional delegation. On December 19, 2014, President
Barack Obama signed the
2015 National Defense Authorization Act, which transferred administrative jurisdiction of the preserve from the Valles Caldera Trust to the National Park Service. After a brief transition period, the National Park Service assumed day-to-day management on October 1, 2015. On October 10, the preserve held an official dedication with dignitaries including U.S. Secretary of the Interior
Sally Jewell, U.S. Senator
Tom Udall, U.S. Senator
Martin Heinrich, former U.S. Senator
Jeff Bingaman, National Park Service Intermountain Region Director Sue Masica, and the first National Park Service Superintendent of Valles Caldera National Preserve, Jorge Silva-Bañuelos.
Las Conchas Fire In July 2011, the
Las Conchas Fire, started by a power line on nearby private land, burned of the Valles Caldera National Preserve. The
wildfire burned a total of in the
Jemez Mountains, including most of neighboring
Bandelier National Monument. The Jemez Mountains and surrounding areas of the southwest incorporate dry climates, grasslands, and certain tree species (like
Pinon) that evolved to exist with wildfires. Changes in climate and
anthropogenic interference with the fire cycle and habitats, has led to fires that are hotter and more intense. These types of fires are more difficult for ecosystems to recover from. ==Geoscience==