• Donate
    • Donate
    • Member Circles and Benefits
    • Become a Member
    • Renew Today
    • Give a Gift Membership
    • Student Membership
  • Take Action
    • Volunteer Program
    • Make Your Voice Heard
  • About
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • What We Do
    • Position Papers
    • Team & People
    • Job Openings
    • Partners & Friends
    • Annual Reports
    • Policies & Financials
  • Things to Do
    • Events
    • Archaeology Café
    • Exhibits
    • Classes
    • Field School
  • Explore
    • Free Resources
    • Introduction to Southwestern Archaeology
    • Projects
    • Protection Efforts
    • Ancient Cultures
    • Videos
    • Places to Visit
  • Store
    • Archaeology Southwest Magazine
    • All Products
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press Releases/Announcements
    • Preservation Archaeology Today
    • Sign up for E-News
  • Donate
    • Donate
    • Member Circles and Benefits
    • Become a Member
    • Renew Today
    • Give a Gift Membership
    • Student Membership
  • Take Action
    • Volunteer Program
    • Make Your Voice Heard
X
  • About
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • What We Do
    • Position Papers
    • Team & People
    • Job Openings
    • Partners & Friends
    • Annual Reports
    • Policies & Financials
  • Things to Do
    • Events
    • Archaeology Café
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Exhibits
    • Classes
    • Field School
  • Explore
    • Free Resources
    • SW Archaeology 101
    • Projects
    • Protection Efforts
    • Ancient Cultures
    • Videos
    • Places to Visit
  • Store
    • Archaeology Southwest Magazine
    • All Products
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press Releases/Announcements
    • Preservation Archaeology Today
    • Sign up for E-News

Salmon Ruins Museum

New Mexico
  • Home
  • >
  • Locations
  • >
  • Salmon Ruins Museum

Salmon Pueblo was constructed as a Chacoan outlier—a settlement or enclave of people from Chaco Canyon—around A.D. 1090. At that time, the pueblo had 275 to 325 original rooms spread across three stories, an elevated tower kiva in its central portion, and a great kiva in its plaza. Subsequent use by local Middle San Juan people (beginning in the 1120s) resulted in extensive modifications to the original building: hundreds of rooms were reused, many of the original large rooms were divided into smaller rooms, and more than 20 small kivas were built into pueblo rooms and plaza areas. The site was inhabited by Pueblo people until the 1280s, when much of the site was destroyed by fire and people left.

The museum exhibits artifacts from the site and Four Corners region.

Magazines

Salmon Ruins: Past, Present, and Future (ASW 16-2)

Salmon Pueblo: Chacoan Outlier and Thirteenth-Cent...

see more magazines

Details

Salmon Ruins Museum

Get Directions
Not loading? Make sure location services are enabled on your device and browser.
Type of place:
Ancestral Pueblo site
Ownership:
San Juan County
Telephone:
(505) 632-2013
Website:
Salmon Ruins
Hours:
Vary by season; see website.
Entrance fee:
Yes
Nearby heritage sites:
Aztec Ruins National Monument, Chaco Culture NHP, Pueblitos of Dinetah

Related to This

  • Project Collections Management at Salm...
  • Project Salmon Pueblo and the Middle S...
  • Location Chaco Culture National Histori...
  • Page Chaco’s Legacy
  • Page From Above: New Mexico
  • Person Paul F. Reed
  • Project Salmon Pueblo Archaeological R...
  • Post Now Online: The Salmon Pueblo ...
  • Post Following Up on My April 14 Ar...

Want to help us? Make a donation

or take action

Cyber SouthwestRespect Great BendHands-On ArchaeologySave History

© 2025 Archaeology Southwest

520.882.6946
Contact
  • My Store Account
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Press Room