New Mexico
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This is a map of all graticules containing parts of New Mexico, U.S.A. (see also: Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Texas)
Graticules that have not been hashed or only unsuccessfully hashed (or successfully hashed but not reported on the wiki) are orange, whereas the graticule rectangles shaded other colours list the usernames of the first geohashers to achieve a successful documented expedition, and a link to said expedition writeup on the wiki (light green is for expeditions within the borders of New Mexico, light blue for expeditions that fell in the non-New Mexico portion of a border-containing graticule).
N\W | 109 | 108 | 107 | 106 | 105 | 104 | 103 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
36 | Chinle, Arizona | Farmington Redaragorn # |
Bloomfield Redaragorn # |
Chama‡ Redaragorn # |
Taos Redaragorn # |
Raton | Clayton |
35 | Window Rock, Arizona‡ |
Gallup Redaragorn # |
Grants Redaragorn # |
Albuquerque Bishop Wash # |
Santa Fe David & Gina # |
Conchas Lake‡ | Tucumcari |
34 | Eagar, Arizona‡ | Quemado‡ Redaragorn # |
Magdalena‡ Redaragorn # |
Los Lunas Bishop Wash # |
Vaughn Redaragorn # |
Santa Rosa | Clovis |
33 | Whiteriver, Arizona |
Reserve | Truth or Consequences Redaragorn # |
Tularosa Redaragorn # |
Ruidoso | Roswell | Tatum |
32 | Safford, Arizona | Silver City | Deming GPSMen # |
Las Cruces Fugads & Kids # |
Alamogordo | Carlsbad | Hobbs |
31 | Douglas, Arizona‡ AuricTech? # |
Antelope Wells | Columbus‡ | El Paso, Texas‡ Updraft58 & GPSmen # |
names
discuss whether the following graticules should keep their old name, or adopt the suggested new name or a different one at geohashing:Community Portal/Renaming suggestions#30s
- 36,-106: Santa Teresa, USA for Chama, New Mexico
- 35,-109: Fort Defiance, USA for Window Rock, Arizona
- 35,-104: Roy, USA for Conchas Lake, New Mexico
- 34,-109: Pinetop-Lakeside, USA for Eagar, Arizona
- 34,-108: Pinehill, USA for Quemado, New Mexico
- 34,-107: Alamo, USA for Magdalena, New Mexico
- 31,-109: Agua Prieta, Mexico for Douglas, Arizona
- 31,-107: Ascensión, Mexico for Columbus, New Mexico
- 31,-106: Ciudad Juárez, Mexico for El Paso, Texas
globalhashes
There have been at least 6 globalhashes landing in the borders of New Mexico from 1950 to March 2022, only some of which are likely available for retrohashing via ambassador means:
- 2012-02-08 global near Highway 39 entering Logan
- 1971-05-02 global SW of Artesia
- 1950-07-17 global SE of Lordsburg
- 1979-09-29 global near US 70 by the Arizona border
- 1951-11-06 global outside Mountain View near the Malpais
- 1959-12-09 global outside Ramah near the Malpais
derivation and statistics notes
The above is according to the Geohashing Shotgun app (search URL http://geohashing-shotgun.appspot.com/showmap?radsearch=1&globhash=1&YLh=.01&YHh=.21&XLh=.10&XHh=.35&radlimit=500000¢rey=34¢rex=-106&yearmask=****&monthmask=**&daymask=**&startdate=1950-01-01&enddate=&View=View for which a guide exists at the homepage to explain the various URL parameters) which uses Dow data but has a bug that makes some of these invalid -- see following list.
- 1975-01-28 global shown to be near US 84 between Santa Rosa and Lake Sumner, but actually in the sea far west of Australia
- 1976-07-14 global shown to be near Fairview peak on the White Sands missile range, but actually near Gardner Pinnacles, Hawaiʻi
- 1978-01-16 global shown to be near Canjilon in the Carson National Forest, but actually north of Greenland
- 1980-02-12 global shown to be outside Acoma near the Malpais, but actually between Spitsbergen and mainland Norway
- 1980-09-12 global shown to be near US 550 between Nageezi and Huerfano, but actually north of Antarctica
- 2005-05-02 global shown to be near where Sawmill Creek joins the eastern fork of the Red River on the back side of the Wheeler Peak from the Taos Ski area, but actually in the sea east of Madagascar.
- 2010-12-05 global shown to be near Techado, but actually (again) in the sea far west of Australia
The expected value of how many geohashes we would expect in New Mexico for that date range can be calculated thusly: since there is a little greater than 1 in 3 chance (~.395 specifically) that a graticule would host the globalhash on any of the days during the specified period (around 25600 days' duration), there are ~25600 chances for a graticule to host the globalhash divided by the 64800 graticules worldwide that 'compete' each day to host the globalhash, and around 33 hashes worth of area that the state occupies (although as you see, due to the borders not being exactly snapped to graticule boundaries, that is shared between 39 graticules). This matches around twice the observed number of hashes, within a margin of error.