Colorado - Wikipedia Colorado From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search State of the United States of America This article is about the State of Colorado. For the river, see Colorado River. For the physiographic region, see Colorado Plateau. For other uses, see Colorado (disambiguation). State in the United States Colorado State State of Colorado Flag Seal Nickname(s): The Centennial State Motto(s): Nil sine numine (English: Nothing without providence) Anthem: "Where the Columbines Grow" and "Rocky Mountain High"[1] Map of the United States with Colorado highlighted Country United States Admitted to the Union August 1, 1876[2] (38th) Capital (and largest city) Denver Largest metro Denver metropolitan area Government  • Governor Jared Polis (D)  • Lieutenant Governor Dianne Primavera (D) Legislature General Assembly  • Upper house Senate  • Lower house House of Representatives Judiciary Colorado Supreme Court U.S. senators Michael Bennet (D) John Hickenlooper (D) U.S. House delegation 4 Democrats 3 Republicans (list) Area  • Total 104,094 sq mi (269,837 km2)  • Land 103,718 sq mi (268,875 km2)  • Water 376 sq mi (962 km2)  0.36% Area rank 8th Dimensions  • Length 380 mi (610 km)  • Width 280 mi (450 km) Elevation 6,800 ft (2,070 m) Highest elevation (Mount Elbert[a]) 14,440 ft (4,401.2 m) Lowest elevation (Arikaree River[b]) 3,317 ft (1,011 m) Population (2019)  • Total 5,758,736  • Rank 21st  • Density 52.0/sq mi (19.9/km2)  • Density rank 37th  • Median household income $69,117[7]  • Income rank 12th Demonym(s) Coloradan Language  • Official language English Time zone UTC−07:00 (Mountain)  • Summer (DST) UTC−06:00 (MDT) USPS abbreviation CO ISO 3166 code US-CO Latitude 37°N to 41°N Longitude 102°02′48″W to 109°02′48″W Website www.colorado.gov Colorado state symbols Flag of Colorado Living insignia Amphibian Western tiger salamander Ambystoma mavortium Bird Lark bunting Calamospiza melanocoryus Cactus Claret cup cactus Echinocereus triglochidiatus Fish Greenback cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki somias Flower Rocky Mountain columbine Aquilegia coerulea Grass Blue grama grass Bouteloua gracilis Insect Colorado Hairstreak Hypaurotis crysalus Mammal Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis Pet Colorado shelter pets Canis lupus familiaris and Felis catus Reptile Western painted turtle Chrysemys picta bellii Tree Colorado blue spruce Picea pungens Inanimate insignia Colors Blue, red, yellow, white Dinosaur Stegosaurus Folk dance Square dance Chorea quadra Fossil Stegosaurus Stegosaurus armatus Gemstone Aquamarine Mineral Rhodochrosite Rock Yule Marble Ship USS Colorado (SSN-788) Slogan Colorful Colorado Soil Seitz Sport Pack burro racing Tartan Colorado state tartan State route marker State quarter Released in 2006 Lists of United States state symbols The State of Colorado (/ˌkɒləˈrædoʊ, -ˈrɑːdoʊ/ (listen), other variants)[8][9][10] is a state in the Western United States encompassing most of the Southern Rocky Mountains as well as the northeastern portion of the Colorado Plateau and the western edge of the Great Plains. It is the 8th most extensive and 21st most populous U.S. state. The estimated population of Colorado is 5,758,736 as of 2019, an increase of 14.5% since the 2010 United States Census.[11] The region has been inhabited by Native Americans for more than 13,000 years, with the Lindenmeier Site containing artifacts dating from approximately 9200 BCE to 1000 BCE; the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains was a major migration route for early peoples who spread throughout the Americas. The state was named for the Colorado River, which early Spanish explorers named the Río Colorado ("Red River") for the ruddy silt the river carried from the mountains. The Territory of Colorado was organized on February 28, 1861,[12] and on August 1, 1876, U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant signed Proclamation 230 admitting Colorado to the Union as the 38th state.[2] Colorado is nicknamed the "Centennial State" because it became a state one century after the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence. Colorado is bordered by Wyoming to the north, Nebraska to the northeast, Kansas to the east, Oklahoma to the southeast, New Mexico to the south, Utah to the west, and touches Arizona to the southwest at the Four Corners. Colorado is noted for its vivid landscape of mountains, forests, high plains, mesas, canyons, plateaus, rivers and desert lands. Colorado is one of the Mountain States and is a part of the western and southwestern United States. Denver is the capital and most populous city in Colorado. Residents of the state are known as Coloradans, although the antiquated term "Coloradoan" is occasionally used.[13][14] Colorado is a comparatively wealthy state, ranking 8th in household income in 2016,[15] and 11th in per capita income in 2010.[16] Major parts of the economy include government and defense, mining, agriculture, tourism, and increasingly other kinds of manufacturing. With increasing temperatures and decreasing water availability, Colorado's agriculture, forestry and tourism economies are expected to be heavily affected by climate change.[17] Contents 1 Geography 1.1 Mountains 1.2 Plains 1.3 Front Range 1.4 Continental Divide 1.5 Southern region 1.6 Colorado Western Slope 2 Climate 2.1 Eastern Plains 2.2 Front Range foothills 2.3 Extreme weather 2.4 Climate change 2.5 Records 2.6 Earthquakes 3 History 3.1 Territory act 3.2 Statehood 4 Fauna 5 Demographics 5.1 Birth data 5.2 Language 5.3 Religion 5.4 Health 5.4.1 Obesity 5.4.2 Life expectancy 6 Culture 6.1 Arts and film 6.2 Cuisine 6.3 Wine and beer 6.4 Marijuana and hemp 6.4.1 Medicinal use 6.4.2 Recreational use 6.5 Sports 6.5.1 Professional sports teams 6.5.2 College athletics 7 Economy 7.1 Natural resources 8 Transportation 9 Government 9.1 State government 9.2 Counties 9.2.1 Metropolitan areas 9.3 Municipalities 9.4 Unincorporated communities 9.5 Special districts 10 Politics 10.1 Significant Initiatives and Legislation Enacted in Colorado 11 Education 12 Military installations 13 Protected areas 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External links 17.1 State government 17.2 Federal government 17.3 Other Geography[edit] Main article: Geography of Colorado Colorado is notable for its diverse geography, which includes alpine mountains, high plains, deserts with huge sand dunes, and deep canyons. In 1861, the United States Congress defined the boundaries of the new Territory of Colorado exclusively by lines of latitude and longitude, stretching from 37°N to 41°N latitude, and from 102°02′48″W to 109°02′48″W longitude (25°W to 32°W from the Washington Meridian).[12] After 159 years of government surveys, the borders of Colorado are now officially defined by 697 boundary markers and 697 straight boundary lines.[18] Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah are the only states that have their borders defined solely by straight boundary lines with no natural features.[19] The southwest corner of Colorado is the Four Corners Monument at 36°59′56″N, 109°2′43″W.[20][21] The Four Corners Monument, located at the place where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet, is the only place in the United States where four states meet.[19] Ten Mile Range and Dillon Reservoir near Breckenridge, Colorado Mountains[edit] See also: List of mountain peaks of Colorado To the west of the Great Plains of Colorado rises the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains. Notable peaks of the Rocky Mountains include Longs Peak, Mount Evans, Pikes Peak, and the Spanish Peaks near Walsenburg, in southern Colorado. This area drains to the east and the southeast, ultimately either via the Mississippi River or the Rio Grande into the Gulf of Mexico. The Rocky Mountains within Colorado contain 53 true peaks with a total of 58 that are 14,000 feet (4,267 m) or higher in elevation above sea level, known as fourteeners.[22] These mountains are largely covered with trees such as conifers and aspens up to the tree line, at an elevation of about 12,000 feet (3,658 m) in southern Colorado to about 10,500 feet (3,200 m) in northern Colorado. Above this tree line only alpine vegetation grows. Only small parts of the Colorado Rockies are snow-covered year-round. Much of the alpine snow melts by mid-August with the exception of a few snow-capped peaks and a few small glaciers. The Colorado Mineral Belt, stretching from the San Juan Mountains in the southwest to Boulder and Central City on the front range, contains most of the historic gold- and silver-mining districts of Colorado. Mount Elbert is the highest summit of the Rocky Mountains. The 30 highest major summits of the Rocky Mountains of North America all lie within the state. The summit of Mount Elbert at 14,440 feet (4,401.2 m) elevation in Lake County is the highest point in Colorado and the Rocky Mountains of North America.[3] Colorado is the only U.S. state that lies entirely above 1,000 meters elevation. The point where the Arikaree River flows out of Yuma County, Colorado, and into Cheyenne County, Kansas, is the lowest point in Colorado at 3,317 feet (1,011 m) elevation. This point, which is the highest low elevation point of any state,[4][23] is higher than the high elevation points of 18 states and the District of Columbia. A view of the arid high plains in Southeastern Colorado Plains[edit] A little less than half of Colorado is flat and rolling land. East of the Rocky Mountains are the Colorado Eastern Plains of the High Plains, the section of the Great Plains within Nebraska at elevations ranging from roughly 3,350 to 7,500 feet (1,020 to 2,290 m).[24] The Colorado plains are mostly prairies but also include deciduous forests, buttes, and canyons. Precipitation averages 15 to 25 inches (380 to 640 mm) annually.[25] Eastern Colorado is presently mainly farmland and rangeland, along with small farming villages and towns. Corn, wheat, hay, soybeans, and oats are all typical crops. Most villages and towns in this region boast both a water tower and a grain elevator. Irrigation water is available from both surface and subterranean sources. Surface water sources include the South Platte, the Arkansas River, and a few other streams. Subterranean water is generally accessed through artesian wells. Heavy usage of these wells for irrigation purposes caused underground water reserves to decline in the region. Eastern Colorado also hosts a considerable amount and range of livestock, such as cattle ranches and hog farms. Front Range[edit] Front Range Peaks west of Denver Roughly 70% of Colorado's population resides along the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains in the Front Range Urban Corridor between Cheyenne, Wyoming, and Pueblo, Colorado. This region is partially protected from prevailing storms that blow in from the Pacific Ocean region by the high Rockies in the middle of Colorado. The "Front Range" includes Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, Loveland, Castle Rock, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Greeley, and other townships and municipalities in between. On the other side of the Rockies, the significant population centers in Western Colorado (which is not considered the "Front Range") are the cities of Grand Junction, Durango, and Montrose. Continental Divide[edit] The Continental Divide of the Americas extends along the crest of the Rocky Mountains. The area of Colorado to the west of the Continental Divide is called the Western Slope of Colorado. West of the Continental Divide, water flows to the southwest via the Colorado River and the Green River into the Gulf of California. Within the interior of the Rocky Mountains are several large parks which are high broad basins. In the north, on the east side of the Continental Divide is the North Park of Colorado. The North Park is drained by the North Platte River, which flows north into Wyoming and Nebraska. Just to the south of North Park, but on the western side of the Continental Divide, is the Middle Park of Colorado, which is drained by the Colorado River. The South Park of Colorado is the region of the headwaters of the South Platte River. Southern region[edit] In southmost Colorado is the large San Luis Valley, where the headwaters of the Rio Grande are located. The valley sits between the Sangre De Cristo Mountains and San Juan Mountains, and consists of large desert lands that eventually run into the mountains. The Rio Grande drains due south into New Mexico, Mexico, and Texas. Across the Sangre de Cristo Range to the east of the San Luis Valley lies the Wet Mountain Valley. These basins, particularly the San Luis Valley, lie along the Rio Grande Rift, a major geological formation of the Rocky Mountains, and its branches. The high desert lands that make up the San Luis Valley in Southern Colorado Colorado Western Slope[edit] The Western Slope area of Colorado includes the western face of the Rocky Mountains and all of the state to the western border. This area includes several terrains and climates from alpine mountains to arid deserts. The Western Slope includes many ski resort towns in the Rocky Mountains and towns west of the mountains. It is less populous than the Front Range but includes a large number of national parks and monuments. From west to east, the land of Colorado consists of desert lands, desert plateaus, alpine mountains, National Forests, relatively flat grasslands, scattered forests, buttes, and canyons in the western edge of the Great Plains. The famous Pikes Peak is located just west of Colorado Springs. Its isolated peak is visible from nearly the Kansas border on clear days, and also far to the north and the south.[26] The northwestern corner of Colorado is a sparsely populated region, and it contains part of the noted Dinosaur National Monument, which not only is a paleontological area, but is also a scenic area of rocky hills, canyons, arid desert, and streambeds. Here, the Green River briefly crosses over into Colorado. Desert lands in Colorado are located in and around areas such as the Pueblo, Canon City, Florence, Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve, San Luis Valley, Cortez, Canyon of the Ancients National Monument, Hovenweep National Monument, Ute Mountain, Delta, Grand Junction, Colorado National Monument, and other areas surrounding the Uncompahgre Plateau and Uncompahgre National Forest. The Western Slope of Colorado is drained by the Colorado River and its tributaries (primarily the Gunnison River, Green River, and the San Juan River), or by evaporation in its arid areas. The Colorado River flows through Glenwood Canyon, and then through an arid valley made up of desert from Rifle to Parachute, through the desert canyon of De Beque Canyon, and into the arid desert of Grand Valley, where the city of Grand Junction is located. Also prominent in or near the southern portion of the Western Slope are the Grand Mesa, which lies to the southeast of Grand Junction; the high San Juan Mountains, a rugged mountain range; and to the west of the San Juan Mountains, the Colorado Plateau, a high arid region that borders Southern Utah. The Colorado National Monument near Grand Junction is made up of high desert canyons and sandstone rock formations. Grand Junction, Colorado is the largest city on the Western Slope. Grand Junction and Durango are the only major centers of television broadcasting west of the Continental Divide in Colorado, though most mountain resort communities publish daily newspapers. Grand Junction is located along Interstate 70, the only major highway in Western Colorado. Grand Junction is also along the major railroad of the Western Slope, the Union Pacific. This railroad also provides the tracks for Amtrak's California Zephyr passenger train, which crosses the Rocky Mountains between Denver and Grand Junction via a route on which there are no continuous highways. The Western Slope includes multiple notable destinations in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, including Glenwood Springs, with its resort hot springs, and the ski resorts of Aspen, Breckenridge, Vail, Crested Butte, Steamboat Springs, and Telluride. Higher education in and near the Western Slope can be found at Colorado Mesa University in Grand Junction, Western Colorado University in Gunnison, Fort Lewis College in Durango, and Colorado Mountain College in Glenwood Springs and Steamboat Springs. The Four Corners Monument in the southwest corner of Colorado marks the common boundary of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah; the only such place in the United States. See also: List of cities and towns in Colorado, List of counties in Colorado, List of rivers of Colorado, and Four Corners Monument Climate[edit] Köppen climate types of Colorado The climate of Colorado is more complex than states outside of the Mountain States region. Unlike most other states, southern Colorado is not always warmer than northern Colorado. Most of Colorado is made up of mountains, foothills, high plains, and desert lands. Mountains and surrounding valleys greatly affect local climate. As a general rule, with an increase in elevation comes a decrease in temperature and an increase in precipitation. Northeast, east, and southeast Colorado are mostly the high plains, while Northern Colorado is a mix of high plains, foothills, and mountains. Northwest and west Colorado are predominantly mountainous, with some desert lands mixed in. Southwest and southern Colorado are a complex mixture of desert and mountain areas. Eastern Plains[edit] The climate of the Eastern Plains is semiarid (Köppen climate classification: BSk) with low humidity and moderate precipitation, usually from 15 to 25 inches (380 to 640 millimeters) annually. The area is known for its abundant sunshine and cool, clear nights, which give this area a great average diurnal temperature range. The difference between the highs of the days and the lows of the nights can be considerable as warmth dissipates to space during clear nights, the heat radiation not being trapped by clouds. The Front Range urban corridor, where most of the population of Colorado resides, lies in a pronounced precipitation shadow as a result of being on the lee side of the Rocky Mountains.[27] In summer, this area can have many days above 95 °F (35 °C) and often 100 °F (38 °C).[28] On the plains, the winter lows usually range from 25 to −10 °F (−4 to −23 °C). About 75% of the precipitation falls within the growing season, from April to September, but this area is very prone to droughts. Most of the precipitation comes from thunderstorms, which can be severe, and from major snowstorms that occur in the winter and early spring. Otherwise, winters tend to be mostly dry and cold.[29] In much of the region, March is the snowiest month. April and May are normally the rainiest months, while April is the wettest month overall. The Front Range cities closer to the mountains tend to be warmer in the winter due to Chinook winds which warm the area, sometimes bringing temperatures of 70 °F (21 °C) or higher in the winter.[29] The average July temperature is 55 °F (13 °C) in the morning and 90 °F (32 °C) in the afternoon. The average January temperature is 18 °F (−8 °C) in the morning and 48 °F (9 °C) in the afternoon, although variation between consecutive days can be 40 °F (20 °C). Front Range foothills[edit] Just west of the plains and into the foothills, there are a wide variety of climate types. Locations merely a few miles apart can experience entirely different weather depending on the topography. Most valleys have a semi-arid climate not unlike the eastern plains, which transitions to an alpine climate at the highest elevations. Microclimates also exist in local areas that run nearly the entire spectrum of climates, including subtropical highland (Cfb/Cwb), humid subtropical (Cfa), humid continental (Dfa/Dfb), Mediterranean (Csa/Csb) and subarctic (Dfc).[30] Extreme weather[edit] Snow highlights the rugged mountains, as well as the urban and agricultural landscapes of the Colorado plains Extreme weather changes are common in Colorado, although a significant portion of the extreme weather occurs in the least populated areas of the state. Thunderstorms are common east of the Continental Divide in the spring and summer, yet are usually brief. Hail is a common sight in the mountains east of the Divide and across the eastern Plains, especially the northeast part of the state. Hail is the most commonly reported warm-season severe weather hazard, and occasionally causes human injuries, as well as significant property damage.[31] The eastern Plains are subject to some of the biggest hail storms in North America.[25] Notable examples are the severe hailstorms that hit Denver on July 11, 1990[32] and May 8, 2017, the latter being the costliest ever in the state.[33] The Eastern Plains are part of the extreme western portion of Tornado Alley; some damaging tornadoes in the Eastern Plains include the 1990 Limon F3 tornado and the 2008 Windsor EF3 tornado, which devastated the small town.[34] Portions of the eastern Plains see especially frequent tornadoes, both those spawned from mesocyclones in supercell thunderstorms and from less intense landspouts, such as within the Denver convergence vorticity zone (DCVZ).[31] The Plains are also susceptible to occasional floods and particularly severe flash floods, which are caused both by thunderstorms and by the rapid melting of snow in the mountains during warm weather. Notable examples include the 1965 Denver Flood,[35] the Big Thompson River flooding of 1976 and the 2013 Colorado floods. Hot weather is common during summers in Denver. The city's record in 1901 for the number of consecutive days above 90 °F (32 °C) was broken during the summer of 2008. The new record of 24 consecutive days surpassed the previous record by almost a week.[36] Much of Colorado is very dry, with the state averaging only 17 inches (430 millimeters) of precipitation per year statewide. The state rarely experiences a time when some portion is not in some degree of drought.[37] The lack of precipitation contributes to the severity of wildfires in the state, such as the Hayman Fire of 2002. Other notable fires include the Fourmile Canyon Fire of 2010, the Waldo Canyon Fire and High Park Fire of June 2012, and the Black Forest Fire of June 2013. Even these fires were exceeded in severity by the Pine Gulch Fire, Cameron Peak Fire and East Troublesome Fire in 2020, all being the three largest fires in Colorado history (see 2020 Colorado wildfires). The Yampa River However, some of the mountainous regions of Colorado receive a huge amount of moisture from winter snowfalls. The spring melts of these snows often cause great waterflows in the Yampa River, the Colorado River, the Rio Grande, the Arkansas River, the North Platte River, and the South Platte River. Water flowing out of the Colorado Rocky Mountains is a very significant source of water for the farms, towns, and cities of the southwest states of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada, as well as the Midwest, such as Nebraska and Kansas, and the southern states of Oklahoma and Texas. A significant amount of water is also diverted for use in California; occasionally (formerly naturally and consistently), the flow of water reaches northern Mexico. Climate change[edit] This section is an excerpt from Climate change in Colorado[edit] This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry. Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations. Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote. (June 2020) Köppen climate types in Colorado showing half the state to be cold semi-arid, and the remainder to be a mix of other types. EPA map of changing snowpack levels in Colorado and New Mexico. Climate change in Colorado encompasses the effects of climate change, attributed to man-made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, in the U.S. state of Colorado. The Denver Post has reported that "[i]ndividuals living in southeastern Colorado are more vulnerable to potential health effects from climate change than residents in other parts of the state".[38] The United States Environmental Protection Agency has more broadly reported: "Colorado's climate is changing. Most of the state has warmed one or two degrees (F) in the last century. Throughout the western United States, heat waves are becoming more common, snow is melting earlier in spring, and less water flows through the Colorado River.[39][40] Rising temperatures[41] and recent droughts[42] in the region have killed many trees by drying out soils, increasing the risk of forest fires, or enabling outbreaks of forest insects. In the coming decades, the changing climate is likely to decrease water availability and agricultural yields in Colorado, and further increase the risk of wildfires".[43] Records[edit] The highest official ambient air temperature ever recorded in Colorado was 115 °F (46.1 °C) on July 20, 2019, at John Martin Dam. The lowest official air temperature was −61 °F (−51.7 °C) on February 1, 1985, at Maybell.[44][45] Monthly normal high and low temperatures for various Colorado cities[46] (°F) (°C) City Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Alamosa 34/−2 2/−19 40/6 4/−14 50/17 10/−8 59/24 15/−4 69/33 21/1 79/41 26/5 82/47 28/8 80/46 27/8 73/40 23/4 62/25 17/−4 47/12 8/−11 35/1 2/−17 Colorado Springs 43/18 6/−8 45/20 7/−7 52/26 11/−3 60/33 16/1 69/43 21/6 79/51 26/11 85/57 29/14 82/56 28/13 75/47 24/8 63/36 17/2 51/25 11/−4 42/18 6/−8 Denver 49/20 9/−7 49/21 9/−6 56/29 13/−2 64/35 18/2 73/46 23/8 84/54 29/12 92/61 33/16 89/60 32/16 81/50 27/10 68/37 20/3 55/26 13/−3 47/18 8/−8 Grand Junction 38/17 3/−8 45/24 7/−4 57/31 14/-1 65/38 18/3 76/47 24/8 88/56 31/13 93/63 34/17 90/61 32/16 80/52 27/11 66/40 19/4 51/28 11/−2 39/19 4/−7 Pueblo 47/14 8/−10 51/17 11/−8 59/26 15/−3 67/34 19/1 77/44 25/7 87/53 31/12 93/59 34/15 90/58 32/14 82/48 28/9 69/34 21/1 56/23 13/−5 46/14 8/−10 Earthquakes[edit] Despite its mountainous terrain, Colorado is relatively quiet seismically. The U.S. National Earthquake Information Center is located in Golden. On August 22, 2011, a 5.3 magnitude earthquake occurred 9 miles (14 km) west-southwest of the city of Trinidad.[47] There were no casualties and only a small amount of damage was reported. It was the second-largest earthquake in Colorado's history. A magnitude 5.7 earthquake was recorded in 1973.[48] In early morning hours of August 24, 2018, four minor earthquakes rattled the State of Colorado ranging from magnitude 2.9 to 4.3.[49] Colorado has recorded 525 earthquakes since 1973, a majority of which range 2 to 3.5 on the Richter scale.[50] History[edit] Main articles: History of Colorado and Timeline of Colorado history Ruins of Cliff Palace at Mesa Verde National Park. Photo by Gustaf Nordenskiöld, 1891 Great Kiva at Chimney Rock in the San Juan Mountains of Southwestern Colorado. It is said to have been built by the Ancient Pueblo peoples. The region that is today the State of Colorado has been inhabited by Native Americans for more than 13,000 years. The Lindenmeier Site in Larimer County contains artifacts dating from approximately 11200 BC to 3000 BC. The eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains was a major migration route that was important to the spread of early peoples throughout the Americas. The Ancient Pueblo peoples lived in the valleys and mesas of the Colorado Plateau.[51] The Ute Nation inhabited the mountain valleys of the Southern Rocky Mountains and the Western Rocky Mountains, even as far east as the Front Range of present day. The Apache and the Comanche also inhabited Eastern and Southeastern parts of the state. At times, the Arapaho Nation and the Cheyenne Nation moved west to hunt across the High Plains. The Spanish discovering the Colorado River, namesake of the state, in 1540, by Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau. García López de Cárdenas can be seen overlooking the Grand Canyon. The Spanish Empire claimed Colorado as part of its New Mexico province prior to U.S. involvement in the region. The U.S. acquired a territorial claim to the eastern Rocky Mountains with the Louisiana Purchase from France in 1803. This U.S. claim conflicted with the claim by Spain to the upper Arkansas River Basin as the exclusive trading zone of its colony of Santa Fé de Nuevo México. In 1806, Zebulon Pike led a U.S. Army reconnaissance expedition into the disputed region. Colonel Pike and his men were arrested by Spanish cavalrymen in the San Luis Valley the following February, taken to Chihuahua, and expelled from Mexico the following July. The U.S. relinquished its claim to all land south and west of the Arkansas River and south of 42nd parallel north and west of the 100th meridian west as part of its purchase of Florida from Spain with the Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819. The treaty took effect February 22, 1821. Having settled its border with Spain, the U.S. admitted the southeastern portion of the Territory of Missouri to the Union as the state of Missouri on August 10, 1821. The remainder of Missouri Territory, including what would become northeastern Colorado, became unorganized territory, and remained so for 33 years over the question of slavery. After 11 years of war, Spain finally recognized the independence of Mexico with the Treaty of Córdoba signed on August 24, 1821. Mexico eventually ratified the Adams-Onís Treaty in 1831. The Texian Revolt of 1835–36 fomented a dispute between the U.S. and Mexico which eventually erupted into the Mexican–American War in 1846. Mexico surrendered its northern territory to the U.S. with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo at the conclusion of the war in 1848. Map of the Mexican Cession, with the white representing the territory the United States received from Mexico (plus land ceded to the Republic of Texas) after the Mexican–American War. Well over half of Colorado was received during this treaty. Most American settlers traveling overland west to the Oregon Country, the new goldfields of California, or the new Mormon settlements of the State of Deseret in the Salt Lake Valley, avoided the rugged Southern Rocky Mountains, and instead followed the North Platte River and Sweetwater River to South Pass (Wyoming), the lowest crossing of the Continental Divide between the Southern Rocky Mountains and the Central Rocky Mountains. In 1849, the Mormons of the Salt Lake Valley organized the extralegal State of Deseret, claiming the entire Great Basin and all lands drained by the rivers Green, Grand, and Colorado. The federal government of the U.S. flatly refused to recognize the new Mormon government, because it was theocratic and sanctioned plural marriage. Instead, the Compromise of 1850 divided the Mexican Cession and the northwestern claims of Texas into a new state and two new territories, the state of California, the Territory of New Mexico, and the Territory of Utah. On April 9, 1851, Mexican American settlers from the area of Taos settled the village of San Luis, then in the New Mexico Territory, later to become Colorado's first permanent Euro-American settlement. The Anasazi Heritage Center in Dolores In 1854, Senator Stephen A. Douglas persuaded the U.S. Congress to divide the unorganized territory east of the Continental Divide into two new organized territories, the Territory of Kansas and the Territory of Nebraska, and an unorganized southern region known as the Indian territory. Each new territory was to decide the fate of slavery within its boundaries, but this compromise merely served to fuel animosity between free soil and pro-slavery factions. The gold seekers organized the Provisional Government of the Territory of Jefferson on August 24, 1859, but this new territory failed to secure approval from the Congress of the United States embroiled in the debate over slavery. The election of Abraham Lincoln for the President of the United States on November 6, 1860, led to the secession of nine southern slave states and the threat of civil war among the states. Seeking to augment the political power of the Union states, the Republican Party-dominated Congress quickly admitted the eastern portion of the Territory of Kansas into the Union as the free State of Kansas on January 29, 1861, leaving the western portion of the Kansas Territory, and its gold-mining areas, as unorganized territory. Territory act[edit] Main articles: Organic act § List of organic acts, New Mexico Territory, Utah Territory, Kansas–Nebraska Act, Kansas Territory, Nebraska Territory, Colorado Territory, and Pike's Peak Gold Rush The territories of New Mexico, Utah, Kansas, and Nebraska before the creation of the Territory of Colorado Thirty days later on February 28, 1861, outgoing U.S. President James Buchanan signed an Act of Congress organizing the free Territory of Colorado.[12] The original boundaries of Colorado remain unchanged except for government survey amendments. The name Colorado was chosen because it was commonly believed that the Colorado River originated in the territory.[52] In 1776, Spanish priest Silvestre Vélez de Escalante recorded that Native Americans in the area knew the river as el Rio Colorado for the red-brown silt that the river carried from the mountains.[53] In 1859, a U.S. Army topographic expedition led by Captain John Macomb located the confluence of the Green River with the Grand River in what is now Canyonlands National Park in Utah.[54] The Macomb party designated the confluence as the source of the Colorado River. On April 12, 1861, South Carolina artillery opened fire on Fort Sumter to start the American Civil War. While many gold seekers held sympathies for the Confederacy, the vast majority remained fiercely loyal to the Union cause. In 1862, a force of Texas cavalry invaded the Territory of New Mexico and captured Santa Fe on March 10. The object of this Western Campaign was to seize or disrupt the gold fields of Colorado and California and to seize ports on the Pacific Ocean for the Confederacy. A hastily organized force of Colorado volunteers force-marched from Denver City, Colorado Territory, to Glorieta Pass, New Mexico Territory, in an attempt to block the Texans. On March 28, the Coloradans and local New Mexico volunteers stopped the Texans at the Battle of Glorieta Pass, destroyed their cannon and supply wagons, and dispersed 500 of their horses and mules.[55] The Texans were forced to retreat to Santa Fe. Having lost the supplies for their campaign and finding little support in New Mexico, the Texans abandoned Santa Fe and returned to San Antonio in defeat. The Confederacy made no further attempts to seize the Southwestern United States. In 1864, Territorial Governor John Evans appointed the Reverend John Chivington as Colonel of the Colorado Volunteers with orders to protect white settlers from Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors who were accused of stealing cattle. Colonel Chivington ordered his men to attack a band of Cheyenne and Arapaho encamped along Sand Creek. Chivington reported that his troops killed more than 500 warriors. The militia returned to Denver City in triumph, but several officers reported that the so-called battle was a blatant massacre of Indians at peace, that most of the dead were women and children, and that bodies of the dead had been hideously mutilated and desecrated. Three U.S. Army inquiries condemned the action, and incoming President Andrew Johnson asked Governor Evans for his resignation, but none of the perpetrators was ever punished. This event is now known as the Sand Creek massacre. Mount of the Holy Cross, photographed by William Henry Jackson in 1874 In the midst and aftermath of Civil War, many discouraged prospectors returned to their homes, but a few stayed and developed mines, mills, farms, ranches, roads, and towns in Colorado Territory. On September 14, 1864, James Huff discovered silver near Argentine Pass, the first of many silver strikes. In 1867, the Union Pacific Railroad laid its tracks west to Weir, now Julesburg, in the northeast corner of the Territory. The Union Pacific linked up with the Central Pacific Railroad at Promontory Summit, Utah, on May 10, 1869, to form the First Transcontinental Railroad. The Denver Pacific Railway reached Denver in June the following year, and the Kansas Pacific arrived two months later to forge the second line across the continent. In 1872, rich veins of silver were discovered in the San Juan Mountains on the Ute Indian reservation in southwestern Colorado. The Ute people were removed from the San Juans the following year. Statehood[edit] Main articles: Admission to the Union, List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union, Colorado Silver Boom, and Cripple Creek Gold Rush The Georgetown Loop of the Colorado Central Railroad as photographed by William Henry Jackson in 1899 The United States Congress passed an enabling act on March 3, 1875, specifying the requirements for the Territory of Colorado to become a state.[56] On August 1, 1876 (four weeks after the Centennial of the United States), U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant signed a proclamation admitting Colorado to the Union as the 38th state and earning it the moniker "Centennial State".[2] The discovery of a major silver lode near Leadville in 1878 triggered the Colorado Silver Boom. The Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 invigorated silver mining, and Colorado's last, but greatest, gold strike at Cripple Creek a few months later lured a new generation of gold seekers. Colorado women were granted the right to vote on November 7, 1893, making Colorado the second state to grant universal suffrage and the first one by a popular vote (of Colorado men). The repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act in 1893 led to a staggering collapse of the mining and agricultural economy of Colorado, but the state slowly and steadily recovered. Between the 1880s and 1930s, Denver's floriculture industry developed into a major industry in Colorado.[57][58] This period became known locally as the Carnation Gold Rush.[59] Poor labor conditions and discontent among miners resulted in several major clashes between strikers and the Colorado National Guard, including the 1903-1904 Western Federation of Miners Strike and Colorado Coalfield War, the latter of which included the Ludlow massacre that killed a dozen women and children.[60][61] Both the 1913-1914 Coalfield War and the Denver streetcar strike of 1920 resulted in federal troops intervening to end the violence.[62] In 1927, the Columbine Mine massacre resulted in six dead strikers following a confrontation with Colorado Rangers.[63] More than 5,000 Colorado miners—many immigrants—are estimated to have died in accidents since records began to be formally collected following an accident in Crested Butte that killed 59 in 1884.[64] Colorado became the first western state to host a major political convention when the Democratic Party met in Denver in 1908. By the U.S. Census in 1930, the population of Colorado first exceeded one million residents. Colorado suffered greatly through the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, but a major wave of immigration following World War II boosted Colorado's fortune. Tourism became a mainstay of the state economy, and high technology became an important economic engine. The United States Census Bureau estimated that the population of Colorado exceeded five million in 2009. Three warships of the U.S. Navy have been named the USS Colorado. The first USS Colorado was named for the Colorado River and served in the Civil War and later the Asiatic Squadron, where it was attacked during the 1871 Korean Expedition. The later two ships were named in honor of the state, including the battleship USS Colorado which served in World War II in the Pacific beginning in 1941. At the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, this USS Colorado was located at the naval base in San Diego, Calif. and hence went unscathed. On September 11, 1957, a plutonium fire occurred at the Rocky Flats Plant, which resulted in the significant plutonium contamination of surrounding populated areas.[65] Fauna[edit] Photograph of Gray Wolf from kill in the Colorado Rockies ca. 1890–1900 in the Edwin Carter (Taxidermist) Collection, Breckenridge, Colorado Since extirpation by trapping and poisoning of the gray wolf (Canis lupus) from Colorado in the 1930s, a wolf pack recolonized Moffat County, Colorado in northwestern Colorado in 2019.[66] Demographics[edit] Colorado population density map Historical population Census Pop. %± 1860 34,277 — 1870 39,864 16.3% 1880 194,327 387.5% 1890 413,249 112.7% 1900 539,700 30.6% 1910 799,024 48.0% 1920 939,629 17.6% 1930 1,035,791 10.2% 1940 1,123,296 8.4% 1950 1,325,089 18.0% 1960 1,753,947 32.4% 1970 2,207,259 25.8% 1980 2,889,964 30.9% 1990 3,294,394 14.0% 2000 4,301,262 30.6% 2010 5,029,196 16.9% 2019 (est.) 5,758,736 14.5% Sources: Census 1910–2010[67] 2018 estimate[11] The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of Colorado was 5,758,736 as of 2019, a 14.51% increase since the 2010 United States Census.[11] Colorado's most populous city and capital, is Denver. The Greater Denver Metropolitan Area, with an estimated 2017 population of 3,515,374, is considered the largest metropolitan area within the state and is found within the larger Front Range Urban Corridor, home to about five million. The largest increases are expected in the Front Range Urban Corridor, especially in the Denver metropolitan area. The state's fastest-growing counties are Douglas and Weld.[68] The center of population of Colorado is located just north of the village of Critchell in Jefferson County.[69] According to the 2010 United States Census, Colorado had a population of 5,029,196. Racial composition of the state's population was: 81.3% White American (70.0% Non-Hispanic White, 11.3% Hispanic white) 7.2% Some Other Race 4.0% Black or African American 3.4% Multiracial American 2.8% Asian American 1.1% American Indian and Alaska Native 0.1% Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Colorado racial breakdown of population Racial composition 1970[70] 1990[70] 2000[71] 2010[72] White (includes White Hispanics) 95.7% 88.2% 82.8% 81.3% Black 3.0% 4.0% 3.8% 4.0% Asian 0.5% 1.8% 2.2% 2.8% Native 0.4% 0.8% 1.0% 1.1% Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander – – 0.1% 0.1% Other race 0.4% 5.1% 7.2% 7.2% Two or more races – – 2.8% 3.4% People of Hispanic and Latino American (of any race made) heritage made up 20.7% of the population.[73] According to the 2000 Census, the largest ancestry groups in Colorado are German (22%) including of Swiss and Austrian nationalities, Mexican (18%), Irish (12%), and English (12%). Persons reporting German ancestry are especially numerous in the Front Range, the Rockies (west-central counties), and Eastern parts/High Plains. Colorado has a high proportion of Hispanic, mostly Mexican-American, citizens in Metropolitan Denver, Colorado Springs, as well as the smaller cities of Greeley and Pueblo, and elsewhere. Southern, Southwestern, and Southeastern Colorado has a large number of Hispanos, the descendants of the early settlers of colonial Spanish origin. In 1940, the Census Bureau reported Colorado's population as 8.2% Hispanic and 90.3% non-Hispanic white.[74] The Hispanic population of Colorado has continued to grow quickly over the past decades. By 2019, Hispanics made up 22% of Colorado's population, and Non-Hispanic Whites made up 70%.[75] Spoken English in Colorado has many Spanish idioms.[76] Colorado also has some large African-American communities located in Denver, in the neighborhoods of Montbello, Five Points, Whittier, and many other East Denver areas. The state has sizable numbers of Asian-Americans of Mongolian, Chinese, Filipino, Korean, Southeast Asian, and Japanese descent. The highest population of Asian Americans can be found on the south and southeast side of Denver, as well as some on Denver's southwest side. The Denver metropolitan area is considered more liberal and diverse than much of the state when it comes to political issues and environmental concerns. There were a total of 70,331 births in Colorado in 2006. (Birth rate of 14.6 per thousand.) In 2007, non-Hispanic whites were involved in 59.1% of all the births.[77] Some 14.06% of those births involved a non-Hispanic white person and someone of a different race, most often with a couple including one Hispanic. A birth where at least one Hispanic person was involved counted for 43% of the births in Colorado.[78] As of the 2010 Census, Colorado has the seventh highest percentage of Hispanics (20.7%) in the U.S. behind New Mexico (46.3%), California (37.6%), Texas (37.6%), Arizona (29.6%), Nevada (26.5%), and Florida (22.5%). Per the 2000 census, the Hispanic population is estimated to be 918,899 or approximately 20% of the state total population. Colorado has the 5th-largest population of Mexican-Americans, behind California, Texas, Arizona, and Illinois. In percentages, Colorado has the 6th-highest percentage of Mexican-Americans, behind New Mexico, California, Texas, Arizona, and Nevada.[79] Birth data[edit] In 2011, 46% of Colorado's population younger than the age of one were minorities, meaning that they had at least one parent who was not non-Hispanic white.[80][81] Note: Births in table don't add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number. Live Births by Single Race/Ethnicity of Mother Race 2013[82] 2014[83] 2015[84] 2016[85] 2017[86] 2018[87] White: 57,491 (88.4%) 58,117 (88.3%) 58,756 (88.2%) ... ... ... > Non-Hispanic White 39,872 (61.3%) 40,629 (61.7%) 40,878 (61.4%) 39,617 (59.5%) 37,516 (58.3%) 36,466 (58.0%) Black 3,760 (5.8%) 3,926 (6.0%) 4,049 (6.1%) 3,004 (4.5%) 3,110 (4.8%) 3,032 (4.8%) Asian 2,863 (4.4%) 3,010 (4.6%) 2,973 (4.5%) 2,617 (3.9%) 2,611 (4.1%) 2,496 (4.0%) American Indian 793 (1.2%) 777 (1.2%) 803 (1.2%) 412 (0.6%) 421 (0.7%) 352 (0.6%) Pacific Islander ... ... ... 145 (0.2%) 145 (0.2%) 155 (0.2%) Hispanic (of any race) 17,821 (27.4%) 17,665 (26.8%) 18,139 (27.2%) 18,513 (27.8%) 18,125 (28.2%) 17,817 (28.3%) Total Colorado 65,007 (100%) 65,830 (100%) 66,581 (100%) 66,613 (100%) 64,382 (100%) 62,885 (100%) Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race. In 2017, Colorado recorded the second-lowest fertility rate in the United States outside of New England, after Oregon, at 1.63 children per woman.[86] Significant, contributing factors to the decline in pregnancies were the Title X Family Planning Program and an Intrauterine device grant from Warren Buffett's family.[88][89] Language[edit] Spanish is the second-most spoken language in Colorado, after English.[90] There is one Native Coloradan language still spoken in Colorado, Colorado River Numic (Ute). Religion[edit] The Cadet Chapel at the United States Air Force Academy near Colorado Springs Major religious affiliations of the people of Colorado are 64% Christian, of whom there are 44% Protestant, 16% Roman Catholic, 3% Mormon, and 1% Eastern Orthodox.[91] Other religious breakdowns are 1% Jewish, 1% Muslim, 1% Buddhist and 4% other. The religiously unaffiliated make up 29% of the population.[92] The largest denominations by number of adherents in 2010 were the Catholic Church with 811,630; non-denominational Evangelical Protestants with 229,981; and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 151,433.[93] Religion in Colorado (2014)[94] Religion Percent Protestant   44% No Religion   29% Catholic   16% Mormon   3% Eastern Orthodox   1% Jewish   1% Muslim   1% Buddhist   1% Other   4% Health[edit] Obesity[edit] According to several studies, Coloradans have the lowest rates of obesity of any state in the US.[95] As of 2018[update], 24% of the population was considered medically obese, and while the lowest in the nation, the percentage had increased from 17% in 2004.[96][97] Life expectancy[edit] According to a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association, residents of Colorado had a 2014 life expectancy of 80.21 years, the longest of any U.S. state.[98] Culture[edit] History Colorado Center in Denver Street art in Denver Arts and film[edit] List of museums in Colorado Music of Colorado Theater in Colorado A number of film productions have shot on location in Colorado, especially prominent Westerns like True Grit, The Searchers, and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. A number of historic military forts, railways with trains still operating, mining ghost towns have been utilized and transformed for historical accuracy in well known films. There are also a number of scenic highways and mountain passes that helped to feature the open road in films such as Vanishing Point, Bingo and Starman. Some Colorado landmarks have been featured in films, such as The Stanley Hotel in Dumb and Dumber and The Shining and the Sculptured House in Sleeper. In 2015, Furious 7 was to film driving sequences on Pikes Peak Highway in Colorado. The TV series Good Luck Charlie was being filmed in Denver, Colorado. The Colorado Office of Film and Television has noted that more than 400 films have been shot in Colorado.[99] There are also a number of established film festivals in Colorado, including Aspen Shortsfest, Boulder International Film Festival, Castle Rock Film Festival, Denver Film Festival, Festivus Film Festival (ended in 2013), Mile High Horror Film Festival, Moondance International Film Festival, Mountainfilm in Telluride, Rocky Mountain Women's Film Festival, and Telluride Film Festival. Cuisine[edit] Colorado is known for its Southwest and Rocky Mountain cuisine. Mexican restaurants are prominent throughout the state. Boulder, Colorado was named America's Foodiest Town 2010 by Bon Appétit.[100] Boulder, and Colorado in general, is home to a number of national food and beverage companies, top-tier restaurants and farmers' markets. Boulder, Colorado also has more Master Sommeliers per capita than any other city, including San Francisco and New York.[101] The Food & Wine Classic is held annually each June in Aspen, Colorado. Aspen also has a reputation as the culinary capital of the Rocky Mountain region.[102] Denver is known for steak, but now has a diverse culinary scene with many restaurants.[103] Wine and beer[edit] Main articles: Colorado wine and Colorado beer Colorado wines include award-winning varietals that have attracted favorable notice from outside the state.[104] With wines made from traditional Vitis vinifera grapes along with wines made from cherries, peaches, plums and honey, Colorado wines have won top national and international awards for their quality.[105] Colorado's grape growing regions contain the highest elevation vineyards in the United States,[106] with most viticulture in the state practiced between 4,000 and 7,000 feet (1,219 and 2,134 m) above sea level. The mountain climate ensures warm summer days and cool nights. Colorado is home to two designated American Viticultural Areas of the Grand Valley AVA and the West Elks AVA,[107] where most of the vineyards in the state are located. However, an increasing number of wineries are located along the Front Range.[108] In 2018, Wine Enthusiast Magazine named Colorado's Grand Valley AVA in Mesa County, Colorado, as one of the Top Ten wine travel destinations in the world.[109] Colorado is home to many nationally praised microbreweries,[110] including New Belgium Brewing Company, Odell Brewing Company, Great Divide Brewing Company, and Bristol Brewing Company. The area of northern Colorado near and between the cities of Denver, Boulder, and Fort Collins is known as the "Napa Valley of Beer" due to its high density of craft breweries.[111] Marijuana and hemp[edit] Colorado is open to cannabis (marijuana) tourism.[112] With the adoption of their 64th state amendment in 2013, Colorado became the first state in the union to legalize the medicinal (2000), industrial (2013), and recreational (2014) use of marijuana. Colorado's marijuana industry sold $1.31 billion worth of marijuana in 2016 and $1.26 billion in the first three-quarters of 2017.[113] The state generated tax, fee, and license revenue of $194 million in 2016 on legal marijuana sales.[114] Colorado regulates hemp as any part of the plant with less than 0.3% THC.[115] Amendment 64, adopted by the voters in the 2012 general election, forces the Colorado state legislature to enact legislation governing the cultivation, processing and sale of recreational marijuana and industrial hemp.[116] On April 4, 2014, Senate Bill 14–184 addressing oversight of Colorado's industrial hemp program was first introduced, ultimately being signed into law by Governor John Hickenlooper on May 31, 2014.[117] Medicinal use[edit] On November 7, 2000, 54% of Colorado voters passed Amendment 20, which amends the Colorado State constitution to allow the medical use of marijuana.[118] A patient's medical use of marijuana, within the following limits, is lawful: (I) No more than 2 ounces (57 g) of a usable form of marijuana; and (II) No more than twelve marijuana plants, with six or fewer being mature, flowering plants that are producing a usable form of marijuana.[119] Currently Colorado has listed "eight medical conditions for which patients can use marijuana—cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, muscle spasms, seizures, severe pain, severe nausea and cachexia, or dramatic weight loss and muscle atrophy".[120] While governor, John Hickenlooper allocated about half of the state's $13 million "Medical Marijuana Program Cash Fund"[121] to medical research in the 2014 budget.[122] By 2018, the Medical Marijuana Program Cash Fund was the "largest pool of pot money in the state" and was used to fund programs including research into pediatric applications for controlling autism symptoms.[123] Recreational use[edit] On November 6, 2012, voters amended the state constitution to protect "personal use" of marijuana for adults, establishing a framework to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol.[124] The first recreational marijuana shops in Colorado, and by extension the United States, opened their doors on January 1, 2014.[125] Sports[edit] Main article: Sports in Colorado The Colorado Rockies baseball club at Coors Field Broncos Stadium at Mile High, home of the Denver Broncos and the Denver Outlaws Ball Arena, home of the Denver Nuggets, the Colorado Avalanche, and the Colorado Mammoth Dick's Sporting Goods Park, home of the Colorado Rapids Colorado has five major professional sports leagues, all based in the Denver metropolitan area. Colorado is the least populous state with a franchise in each of the major professional sports leagues. The Pikes Peak International Hill Climb is a major hillclimbing motor race held at the Pikes Peak Highway. The Cherry Hills Country Club has hosted several professional golf tournaments, including the U.S. Open, U.S. Senior Open, U.S. Women's Open, PGA Championship and BMW Championship. Professional sports teams[edit] Team Home First game Sport League Boulder County Bombers Boulder November 2011 Roller derby Women's Flat Track Derby Association Colorado Avalanche Denver October 6, 1995 Ice hockey National Hockey League Colorado Eagles Loveland October 17, 2003 Ice hockey American Hockey League Colorado Mammoth Denver January 3, 2003 Lacrosse National Lacrosse League Colorado Rapids Commerce City April 13, 1996 Soccer Major League Soccer Colorado Rockies Denver April 5, 1993 Baseball Major League Baseball Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC Colorado Springs March 28, 2015 Soccer USL Championship Denver Barbarians Denver Spring 1967 Rugby union Pacific Rugby Premiership Denver Broncos Denver September 9, 1960 American football National Football League Denver Nuggets Denver September 27, 1967 Basketball National Basketball Association Denver Outlaws Denver May 20, 2006 Lacrosse Major League Lacrosse Glendale Raptors Glendale Fall 2006 Rugby union Major League Rugby Grand Junction Rockies Grand Junction June 18, 2012 Baseball Pioneer League (Rookie, Minor League Baseball) Rocky Mountain Rollergirls Denver July 2005 Roller derby Women's Flat Track Derby Association Rocky Mountain Vibes Colorado Springs June 2019 Baseball Pioneer League (Rookie, Minor League Baseball) ^ Situated in Lake County.[3][4][5][6] ^ Situated at the border with Kansas.[4][5] College athletics[edit] Main article: List of college athletic programs in Colorado The following universities and colleges participate in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I. The most popular college sports program is the University of Colorado Buffaloes, who used to play in the Big-12 but now play in the Pac-12. They have won the 1957 and 1991 Orange Bowl, 1995 Fiesta Bowl, and 1996 Cotton Bowl Classic. NCAA Division I athletic programs in Colorado Team School City Conference Air Force Falcons United States Air Force Academy Colorado Springs Mountain West[126] Colorado Buffaloes University of Colorado Boulder Boulder Pac-12[127] Colorado State Rams Colorado State University Fort Collins Mountain West Denver Pioneers University of Denver Denver NCHC / Summit[128] Northern Colorado Bears University of Northern Colorado Greeley Big Sky[129] Economy[edit] Main article: Economy of Colorado See also: Colorado locations by per capita income Denver Energy Center lies in the Denver financial district along 17th Street, known as the Wall Street of the West Corn growing in Larimer County Total employment (2016): 2,318,190 Number of employer establishments: 165,264[130] CNBC's list of "Top States for Business for 2010" has recognized Colorado as the third-best state in the nation, falling short only to Texas and Virginia.[131] The total state product in 2015 was $318.6 billion.[132] Median Annual Household Income in 2016 was $70,666, 8th in the nation.[133] Per capita personal income in 2010 was $51,940, ranking Colorado 11th in the nation.[134] The state's economy broadened from its mid-19th-century roots in mining when irrigated agriculture developed, and by the late 19th century, raising livestock had become important. Early industry was based on the extraction and processing of minerals and agricultural products. Current agricultural products are cattle, wheat, dairy products, corn, and hay. The federal government is also a major economic force in the state with many important federal facilities including NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command), United States Air Force Academy, Schriever Air Force Base located approximately 10 miles (16 kilometers) east of Peterson Air Force Base, and Fort Carson, both located in Colorado Springs within El Paso County; NOAA, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder; U.S. Geological Survey and other government agencies at the Denver Federal Center near Lakewood; the Denver Mint, Buckley Air Force Base, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the Byron G. Rogers Federal Building and United States Courthouse in Denver; and a federal Supermax Prison and other federal prisons near Cañon City. In addition to these and other federal agencies, Colorado has abundant National Forest land and four National Parks that contribute to federal ownership of 24,615,788 acres (99,617 km2) of land in Colorado, or 37% of the total area of the state.[135] In the second half of the 20th century, the industrial and service sectors have expanded greatly. The state's economy is diversified, and is notable for its concentration of scientific research and high-technology industries. Other industries include food processing, transportation equipment, machinery, chemical products, the extraction of metals such as gold (see Gold mining in Colorado), silver, and molybdenum. Colorado now also has the largest annual production of beer of any state.[136] Denver is an important financial center. The state's diverse geography and majestic mountains attract millions of tourists every year, including 85.2 million in 2018. Tourism contributes greatly to Colorado's economy, with tourists generating $22.3 billion in 2018.[137] A number of nationally known brand names have originated in Colorado factories and laboratories. From Denver came the forerunner of telecommunications giant Qwest in 1879, Samsonite luggage in 1910, Gates belts and hoses in 1911, and Russell Stover Candies in 1923. Kuner canned vegetables began in Brighton in 1864. From Golden came Coors beer in 1873, CoorsTek industrial ceramics in 1920, and Jolly Rancher candy in 1949. CF&I railroad rails, wire, nails, and pipe debuted in Pueblo in 1892. Holly Sugar was first milled from beets in Holly in 1905, and later moved its headquarters to Colorado Springs. The present-day Swift packed meat of Greeley evolved from Monfort of Colorado, Inc., established in 1930. Estes model rockets were launched in Penrose in 1958. Fort Collins has been the home of Woodward Governor Company's motor controllers (governors) since 1870, and Waterpik dental water jets and showerheads since 1962. Celestial Seasonings herbal teas have been made in Boulder since 1969. Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory made its first candy in Durango in 1981. Colorado has a flat 4.63% income tax, regardless of income level. On Nov. 3, 2020 voters authorized an initiative to lower that income tax rate to 4.55 percent. Unlike most states, which calculate taxes based on federal adjusted gross income, Colorado taxes are based on taxable income—income after federal exemptions and federal itemized (or standard) deductions.[138][139] Colorado's state sales tax is 2.9% on retail sales. When state revenues exceed state constitutional limits, according to Colorado's Taxpayer Bill of Rights legislation, full-year Colorado residents can claim a sales tax refund on their individual state income tax return. Many counties and cities charge their own rates, in addition to the base state rate. There are also certain county and special district taxes that may apply. Real estate and personal business property are taxable in Colorado. The state's senior property tax exemption was temporarily suspended by the Colorado Legislature in 2003. The tax break was scheduled to return for assessment year 2006, payable in 2007. As of December 2018[update], the state's unemployment rate was 4.2%.[140] The West Virginia teachers' strike in 2018 inspired teachers in other states, including Colorado, to take similar action.[141] Natural resources[edit] An oil well in western Colorado Colorado has significant hydrocarbon resources. According to the Energy Information Administration, Colorado hosts seven of the Nation's hundred largest natural gas fields, and two of its hundred largest oil fields. Conventional and unconventional natural gas output from several Colorado basins typically account for more than five percent of annual U.S. natural gas production. Colorado's oil shale deposits hold an estimated 1 trillion barrels (160 km3) of oil—nearly as much oil as the entire world's proven oil reserves; the economic viability of the oil shale, however, has not been demonstrated.[142] Substantial deposits of bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite coal are found in the state. Uranium mining in Colorado goes back to 1872, when pitchblende ore was taken from gold mines near Central City, Colorado. The Colorado uranium industry has seen booms and busts, but continues to this day. Not counting byproduct uranium from phosphate, Colorado is considered to have the third-largest uranium reserves of any U.S. state, behind Wyoming and New Mexico. Uranium price increases from 2001 to 2007 prompted a number of companies to revive uranium mining in Colorado. Price drops and financing problems in late 2008 forced these companies to cancel or scale back uranium-mining project. Currently, there are no uranium producing mines in Colorado. Colorado's high Rocky Mountain ridges and eastern plains offer wind power potential, and geologic activity in the mountain areas provides potential for geothermal power development. Much of the state is sunny, and could produce solar power. Major rivers flowing from the Rocky Mountains offer hydroelectric power resources. Corn grown in the flat eastern part of the state offers potential resources for ethanol production. Transportation[edit] Main article: Transportation in Colorado A Colorado state welcome sign Colorado's primary mode of transportation (in terms of passengers) is its highway system. Interstate 25 (I-25) is the primary north–south highway in the state, connecting Pueblo, Colorado Springs, Denver, and Fort Collins, and extending north to Wyoming and south to New Mexico. I-70 is the primary east–west corridor. It connects Grand Junction and the mountain communities with Denver, and enters Utah and Kansas. The state is home to a network of US and Colorado highways that provide access to all principal areas of the state. Many smaller communities are connected to this network only via county roads. The main terminal of Denver International Airport evokes the peaks of the Front Range. Denver International Airport (DIA) is the fifth-busiest domestic U.S. airport and twentieth busiest airport in the world by passenger traffic.[143] DIA handles by far the largest volume of commercial air traffic in Colorado, and is the busiest U.S. hub airport between Chicago and the Pacific coast, making Denver the most important airport for connecting passenger traffic in the western United States. Extensive public transportation bus services are offered both intra-city and inter-city—including the Denver metro area's extensive RTD services. The Regional Transportation District (RTD) operates the popular RTD Bus & Rail transit system in the Denver Metropolitan Area. As of January 2013[update] the RTD rail system had 170 light-rail vehicles, serving 47 miles (76 km) of track. The westbound and eastbound California Zephyrs meet in the Glenwood Canyon. Amtrak operates two passenger rail lines in Colorado, the California Zephyr and Southwest Chief. Colorado's contribution to world railroad history was forged principally by the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad which began in 1870 and wrote the book on mountain railroading. In 1988 the "Rio Grande" acquired, but was merged into, the Southern Pacific Railroad by their joint owner Philip Anschutz. On September 11, 1996, Anschutz sold the combined company to the Union Pacific Railroad, creating the largest railroad network in the United States. The Anschutz sale was partly in response to the earlier merger of Burlington Northern and Santa Fe which formed the large Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway (BNSF), Union Pacific's principal competitor in western U.S. railroading. Both Union Pacific and BNSF have extensive freight operations in Colorado. Colorado's freight railroad network consists of 2,688 miles of Class I trackage. It is integral to the U.S. economy, being a critical artery for the movement of energy, agriculture, mining, and industrial commodities as well as general freight and manufactured products between the East and Midwest and the Pacific coast states.[144] In August 2014, Colorado began to issue driver licenses to aliens not lawfully in the United States who lived in Colorado.[145] In September 2014, KCNC reported that 524 non-citizens were issued Colorado driver licenses that are normally issued to U.S. citizens living in Colorado.[146] Government[edit] Main article: Government of Colorado State Executive Officers Office Name Party Governor Jared Polis Democrat Lieutenant Governor Dianne Primavera Democrat Secretary of State Jena Griswold Democrat Attorney General Phil Weiser Democrat Treasurer Dave Young Democrat State government[edit] Like the federal government and all other U.S. states, Colorado's state constitution provides for three branches of government: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial branches. The Governor of Colorado heads the state's executive branch. The current governor is Jared Polis, a Democrat. Colorado's other statewide elected executive officers are the Lieutenant Governor of Colorado (elected on a ticket with the Governor), Secretary of State of Colorado, Colorado State Treasurer, and Attorney General of Colorado, all of whom serve four-year terms. The seven-member Colorado Supreme Court is the state's highest court, with seven justices. The Colorado Court of Appeals, with 22 judges, sits in divisions of three judges each. Colorado is divided into 22 judicial districts, each of which has a district court and a county court with limited jurisdiction. The state also has a water court, which sits in seven distinct divisions around the state and which decides matters relating to water rights and the use and administration of water. The state legislative body is the Colorado General Assembly, which is made up of two houses - the House of Representatives and the Senate. The House has 65 members and the Senate has 35. As of 2018[update], the Democratic Party holds a 19 to 16 majority in the Senate and a 41 to 24 majority in the House. Most Coloradans are native to other states (nearly 60% according to the 2000 census),[147] and this is illustrated by the fact that the state did not have a native-born governor from 1975 (when John David Vanderhoof left office) until 2007, when Bill Ritter took office; his election the previous year marked the first electoral victory for a native-born Coloradan in a gubernatorial race since 1958 (Vanderhoof had ascended from the Lieutenant Governorship when John Arthur Love was given a position in Richard Nixon's administration in 1973). In the 2016 election, the Democratic party won the Colorado electoral college votes. Tax is collected by the Colorado Department of Revenue. Counties[edit] Main article: List of counties in Colorado An enlargeable map of the 64 counties of the State of Colorado The State of Colorado is divided into 64 counties.[148] Counties are important units of government in Colorado since the state has no secondary civil subdivisions such as townships. Two of these counties, the City and County of Denver and the City and County of Broomfield, have consolidated city and county governments. Nine Colorado counties have a population in excess of 250,000 each, while eight Colorado counties have a population of less than 2,500 each. The ten most populous Colorado counties are all located in the Front Range Urban Corridor. The 15 Colorado counties with a population of at least 50,000 Rank County 2017 Estimate 2010 Census Change 1 City and County of Denver 704,621 600,158 +17.41% 2 El Paso County 699,232 622,263 +12.37% 3 Arapahoe County 643,052 572,003 +12.42% 4 Jefferson County 574,613 534,543 +7.50% 5 Adams County 503,167 441,603 +13.94% 6 Larimer County 343,976 299,630 +14.80% 7 Douglas County 335,299 285,465 +17.46% 8 Boulder County 322,514 294,567 +9.49% 9 Weld County 304,633 252,825 +20.49% 10 Pueblo County 166,475 159,063 +4.66% 11 Mesa County 151,616 146,723 +3.33% 12 City and County of Broomfield 68,341 55,889 +22.28% 13 Garfield County 59,118 56,389 +4.84% 14 La Plata County 55,589 51,334 +8.29% 15 Eagle County 54,772 52,197 +4.93% Metropolitan areas[edit] Main article: Colorado statistical areas Map of the 14 Core Based Statistical Areas in Colorado The United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has defined one combined statistical area (CSA),[149] seven Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs),[150] and seven Micropolitan Statistical Areas (μSAs)[151] in the State of Colorado.[152] The most populous of the 14 Core Based Statistical Areas in Colorado is the Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area. This area had an estimated population of 2,888,227 on July 1, 2017, an increase of +13.55% since the 2010 United States Census.[153] The more extensive Denver-Aurora-Boulder, CO Combined Statistical Area had an estimated population of 3,515,374 on July 1, 2017, an increase of +13.73% since the 2010 United States Census.[153] The most populous extended metropolitan region in Rocky Mountain Region is the Front Range Urban Corridor along the northeast face of the Southern Rocky Mountains. This region with Denver at its center had an estimated population of 4,495,181 on July 1, 2012, an increase of +3.73% since the 2010 United States Census.[153] Municipalities[edit] Main article: List of cities and towns in Colorado The State of Colorado currently has 271 active incorporated municipalities, including 196 towns, 73 cities, and two consolidated city and county governments.[154][155] Colorado municipalities operate under one of five types of municipal governing authority. Colorado has one town with a territorial charter, 160 statutory towns, 12 statutory cities, 96 home rule municipalities (61 cities and 35 towns), and two consolidated city and county governments. The skyline of downtown Denver with Speer Boulevard in the foreground The 27 Colorado municipalities with a population of at least 25,000 Rank Municipality 2017 Estimate 2010 Census Change 1 City and County of Denver 704,621 600,158 +17.41% 2 City of Colorado Springs 464,474 416,427 +11.54% 3 City of Aurora 366,623 325,078 +12.78% 4 City of Fort Collins 165,080 143,986 +14.65% 5 City of Lakewood 154,958 142,980 +8.38% 6 City of Thornton 136,978 118,772 +15.33% 7 City of Arvada 118,807 106,433 +11.63% 8 City of Westminster 112,812 106,114 +6.31% 9 City of Pueblo 111,127 106,595 +4.25% 10 City of Centennial 110,250 100,377 +9.84% 11 City of Boulder 107,125 97,385 +10.00% 12 City of Greeley 105,448 92,889 +13.52% 13 City of Longmont 94,341 86,270 +9.36% 14 City of Loveland 76,701 66,859 +14.72% 15 City and County of Broomfield 68,341 55,889 +22.28% 16 City of Grand Junction 62,475 58,566 +6.67% 17 Town of Castle Rock 62,276 48,231 +29.12% 18 City of Commerce City 55,923 45,913 +21.80% 19 Town of Parker 54,202 45,297 +19.66% 20 City of Littleton 47,734 41,737 +14.37% 21 City of Brighton 40,562 33,352 +21.62% 22 City of Northglenn 38,928 35,789 +8.77% 23 City of Englewood 34,407 30,255 +13.72% 24 City of Wheat Ridge 31,294 30,166 +3.74% 25 City of Fountain 29,804 25,846 +15.31% 26 City of Lafayette 28,328 24,453 +15.85% 27 Town of Windsor 25,330 18,644 +35.86% Unincorporated communities[edit] Main article: List of census-designated places in Colorado See also: Places in Colorado In addition to its 271 municipalities, Colorado has 187 unincorporated Census Designated Places and many other small communities. The 16 Census Designated Places in Colorado with a population of at least 10,000 Rank Census Designated Place 2010 Census 2000 Census Change 1 Highlands Ranch 96,713 70,931 +36.35% 2 Security-Widefield 32,882 29,845 +10.18% 3 Ken Caryl 32,438 30,887 +5.02% 4 Dakota Ridge 32,005 32,005 0.00% 5 Pueblo West 29,637 16,899 +75.38% 6 Columbine 24,280 24,095 +0.77% 7 Clifton 19,889 17,345 +14.67% 8 Sherrelwood 18,287 17,657 +3.57% 9 Cimarron Hills 16,161 15,194 +6.36% 10 Welby 14,846 12,973 +14.44% 11 Fort Carson 13,813 10,566 +30.73% 12 Black Forest 13,116 13,247 −0.99% 13 Berkley 11,207 10,743 +4.32% 14 Cherry Creek 11,120 11,120 0.00% 15 The Pinery 10,517 7,253 +45.00% 16 Edwards 10,266 8,257 +24.33% Special districts[edit] The State of Colorado has more than 3,000 districts with taxing authority. These districts may provide schools, law enforcement, fire protection, water, sewage, drainage, irrigation, transportation, recreation, infrastructure, cultural facilities, business support, redevelopment, or other services. Some of these districts have authority to levy sales tax and well as property tax and use fees. This has led to a hodgepodge of sales tax and property tax rates in Colorado. There are some street intersections in Colorado with a different sales tax rate on each corner, sometimes substantially different. Some of the more notable Colorado districts are: The Regional Transportation District (RTD), which affects the counties of Denver, Boulder, Jefferson, and portions of Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, and Douglas Counties The Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD), a special regional tax district with physical boundaries contiguous with county boundaries of Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, and Jefferson Counties It is a 0.1% retail sales and use tax (one penny on every $10). According to the Colorado statute, the SCFD distributes the money to local organizations on an annual basis. These organizations must provide for the enlightenment and entertainment of the public through the production, presentation, exhibition, advancement or preservation of art, music, theater, dance, zoology, botany, natural history or cultural history. As directed by statute, SCFD recipient organizations are currently divided into three "tiers" among which receipts are allocated by percentage. Tier I includes regional organizations: the Denver Art Museum, the Denver Botanic Gardens, the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, the Denver Zoo, and the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. It receives 65.5%. Tier II currently includes 26 regional organizations. Tier II receives 21%. Tier III has more than 280 local organizations such as small theaters, orchestras, art centers, and natural history, cultural history, and community groups. Tier III organizations apply for funding to the county cultural councils via a grant process. This tier receives 13.5%. An 11-member board of directors oversees the distributions in accordance with the Colorado Revised Statutes. Seven board members are appointed by county commissioners (in Denver, the Denver City Council) and four members are appointed by the Governor of Colorado. The Football Stadium District (FD or FTBL), approved by the voters to pay for and help build the Denver Broncos' stadium Sports Authority Field at Mile High Local Improvement Districts (LID) within designated areas of southeast Jefferson and Boulder counties The Metropolitan Major League Baseball Stadium District, approved by voters to pay for and help build the Colorado Rockies' stadium Coors Field Regional Transportation Authority (RTA) taxes at varying rates in Basalt, Carbondale, Glenwood Springs, Gunnison County Politics[edit] Main article: Politics of Colorado See also: Political party strength in Colorado and United States presidential elections in Colorado Colorado registered voters as of April 1, 2016[update][156] Party Number of Voters Percentage Unaffiliated 1,315,973 36.51% Democratic 1,119,655 31.06% Republican 1,117,244 30.99% Libertarian 32,450 0.9% Green 9,916 0.28% American Constitution 9,193 0.26% UNI 271 0.007% Total 3,604,702 100% Colorado is considered a swing state or (more recently) a blue state in both state and federal elections. In presidential elections, it had not been won until 2020 by double digits since 1984, and has backed the winning candidate in 9 of the last 11 elections. Coloradans have elected 17 Democrats and 12 Republicans to the governorship in the last 100 years. In presidential politics, Colorado was considered a reliably Republican state during the post-World War II era, voting for the Democratic candidate only in 1948, 1964, and 1992. However, it became a competitive swing state in the 1990s. Since the mid-2000s, it has swung heavily to the Democrats, voting for Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012, Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020. Colorado politics has the contrast of conservative cities such as Colorado Springs and Grand Junction and liberal cities such as Boulder and Denver. Democrats are strongest in metropolitan Denver, the college towns of Fort Collins and Boulder, southern Colorado (including Pueblo), and a number of western ski resort counties. The Republicans are strongest in the Eastern Plains, Colorado Springs, Greeley, and far Western Colorado near Grand Junction. Colorado is represented by two United States Senators: United States Senate Class 2, John Hickenlooper (Democratic) 2021– United States Senate Class 3, Michael Bennet (Democratic) 2009– Colorado is represented by seven Representatives to the United States House of Representatives: Colorado's 1st congressional district, Diana DeGette (Democratic) 1997– Colorado's 2nd congressional district, Joe Neguse (Democratic) 2019- Colorado's 3rd congressional district, Lauren Boebert (Republican) 2021– Colorado's 4th congressional district, Ken Buck (Republican) 2015– Colorado's 5th congressional district, Doug Lamborn (Republican) 2007– Colorado's 6th congressional district, Jason Crow (Democratic) 2019– Colorado's 7th congressional district, Ed Perlmutter (Democratic) 2007– Significant Initiatives and Legislation Enacted in Colorado[edit] In 1881 Colorado voters approved a referendum that selected Denver as the state capital. Colorado was the first state in the union to enact, by voter referendum, a law extending suffrage to women. That initiative was approved by the state's voters on Nov. 7, 1893.[157] On the November 8, 1932 ballot, Colorado approved the repeal of alcohol prohibition more than a year before the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified. Colorado has banned, via C.R.S. section 12-6-302, the sale of motor vehicles on Sunday since at least 1953.[158] In 1972 Colorado voters rejected a referendum proposal to fund the 1976 Winter Olympics, which had been scheduled to be held in the state. Denver had been chosen by the International Olympic Committee as host city on May 12, 1970.[159] In 2006 voters passed Amendment 43, which purported to ban gay marriage in Colorado.[160] That initiative was nullified by the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 decision in Obergefell v. Hodges. In 2012, voters amended the state constitution protecting "personal use" of marijuana for adults, establishing a framework to regulate cannabis in a manner similar to alcohol. The first recreational marijuana shops in Colorado, and by extension the United States, opened their doors on January 1, 2014.[125] On May 29, 2019, Governor Jared Polis signed House Bill 1124 immediately prohibiting law enforcement officials in Colorado from holding undocumented immigrants solely on the basis of a request from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.[161] Education[edit] Main article: List of colleges and universities in Colorado See also: List of colleges and universities in Colorado, Table of Colorado school districts, and Table of Colorado charter schools Colorado College Colorado School of Mines Colorado State University The United States Air Force Academy The University of Colorado Boulder The University of Denver Adams State University Aims Community College Arapahoe Community College Art Institute of Colorado Belleview Christian College & Bible Seminary Colorado Christian University Colorado College Colorado Mesa University Colorado Mountain College Colorado Northwestern Community College Colorado School of Mines Colorado State University System Colorado State University Colorado State University-Pueblo CSU–Global Campus Colorado Technical University Community College of Aurora Community College of Denver Denver Seminary DeVry University Emily Griffith Opportunity School Ecotech Institute Fort Lewis College Front Range Community College Iliff School of Theology Johnson & Wales University Lamar Community College Metropolitan State University of Denver Morgan Community College Naropa University Nazarene Bible College Northeastern Junior College Otero Junior College Pikes Peak Community College Pueblo Community College Red Rocks Community College Regis University Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine Trinidad State Junior College United States Air Force Academy University of Colorado System University of Colorado Boulder University of Colorado Colorado Springs University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus Auraria Campus University of Denver University of Northern Colorado Western Colorado University[162] Military installations[edit] Fort Carson Peterson Air Force Base Air Reserve Personnel Center Buckley Air Force Base Fort Carson (U.S. Army) Piñon Canyon Maneuver Site Peterson Air Force Base Cheyenne Mountain Division Pueblo Chemical Depot (U.S. Army) Schriever Air Force Base United States Air Force Academy Former Military installations and outposts include: Camp Collins (1862–1870) Camp Hale (1942–1945) Fitzsimons Army Hospital (1918–1999) Fort Garland (1858–1883) Fort Logan (1887–1946) Lowry Air Force Base (1938–1994) Protected areas[edit] Lowry Pueblo in Canyons of the Ancients National Monument Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve Spruce Tree House in Mesa Verde National Park Main articles: List of federal lands in Colorado and Colorado State Parks See also: Colorado trails and Colorado scenic and historic byways See also: List of the prehistoric life of Colorado Colorado is home to 4 national parks, 8 national monuments, 2 national recreation areas, 2 national historic sites, 3 national historic trails, a national scenic trail, 11 national forests, 2 national grasslands, 42 national wilderness areas, 2 national conservation areas, 8 national wildlife refuges, 44 state parks, 307 state wildlife areas, and numerous other scenic, historic, and recreational areas. Units of the National Park System in Colorado: Arapaho National Recreation Area[163] Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park Browns Canyon National Monument[164] Canyons of the Ancients National Monument[165] Chimney Rock National Monument[163] Colorado National Monument Continental Divide National Scenic Trail[166] Curecanti National Recreation Area Dinosaur National Monument Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve Hovenweep National Monument Mesa Verde National Park and UNESCO World Heritage Site Old Spanish National Historic Trail Pony Express National Historic Trail Rocky Mountain National Park Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site Santa Fe National Historic Trail Yucca House National Monument See also[edit] Geography portal North America portal United States portal Colorado portal Outline of Colorado Index of Colorado-related articles Bibliography of Colorado Climate change in Colorado Colorado statistical areas Front Range Urban Corridor North Central Colorado Urban Area South Central Colorado Urban Area Geography of Colorado Geology of Colorado History of Colorado National Register of Historic Places listings in Colorado Prehistory of Colorado Territorial evolution of Colorado Timeline of Colorado history List of cities and towns in Colorado List of adjectivals and demonyms for Colorado cities List of census-designated places in Colorado List of city nicknames in Colorado List of Colorado municipalities by county Commons:Category:Cities in Colorado List of counties in Colorado Commons:Category:Counties of Colorado List of forts in Colorado List of ghost towns in Colorado List of places in Colorado Paleontology in Colorado References[edit] ^ "Lawmakers name 'Rocky Mountain High' second state song | 9news.com". 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"National Vital Statistics Reports" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. ^ a b https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr67/nvsr67_08-508.pdf ^ "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved December 2, 2019. ^ Seaman, Jessica (March 22, 2019). "Colorado teen pregnancies dropped 20 percent near these clinics. Now their funding is at risk". The Denver Post. Retrieved May 21, 2019. By increasing access to long-term birth control such as intrauterine devices, Colorado has reduced teen pregnancies by about 20 percent in zip codes near clinics that receive federal funding ... Statewide, the birth rate for ... ages 15 and 19 dropped 59 [%] ... in 2017 ^ Brown, Jennifer (November 30, 2017). "IUD program leads to big decline in teen pregnancies, abortions in Colorado". The Denver Post. Retrieved May 21, 2019. The steep drop in teen pregnancies and abortions in Colorado since 2009 is mainly due to one thing: free, low-cost access to IUDs ... Thanks to a grant from billionaire Warren Buffett's family, Colorado spent $28 million ^ "Languages—Colorado". www.city-data.com. ^ Adkins, Amy. "Mississippi and Alabama Most Protestant States in U.S". Gallup.com. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ "Religion in America: U.S. Religious Data, Demographics and Statistics | Pew Research Center". Religions.pewforum.org. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ "The Association of Religion Data Archives | State Membership Report". www.thearda.com. Retrieved November 7, 2013. ^ "Religious Landscape Study". May 11, 2015. ^ "Percentage of Obese Adult Population" (GIF). Calorielab.com. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ https://stateofchildhoodobesity.org/adult-obesity/ ^ "Fattest States 2010: CalorieLab's Annual Obesity Map—State Obesity Rankings | CalorieLab—Health News & Information Blog". CalorieLab. June 28, 2010. Archived from the original on July 13, 2012. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ Dwyer-Lindgren, Laura (May 8, 2017). "Inequalities in Life Expectancy Among US Counties, 1980 to 2014". JAMA Internal Medicine. 177 (7): 1003–1011. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.0918. PMC 5543324. PMID 28492829. ^ Cangialosi, Jason. "Scenic Memorabilia: Colorado's Film Locations". Yahoo! Movies. Retrieved March 4, 2013. ^ Knowlton, Andrew. "America's Foodiest Town 2010: Boulder, Colorado: In the Magazine". bonappetit.com. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ Harkins, Jacob (March 2011). "Master Class: The Coloradans who've passed the Master Sommelier test that 97 percent fail". Denver Magazine. Archived from the original on March 15, 2011. ^ Arnold, Katie (June 8, 2008). "As Skiers Depart Aspen, Chowhounds Take Their Place". Aspen (Colo): Travel.nytimes.com. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "Colorado Travel Guide". Travelandleisure.com. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ Jackenthal, Stefani (October 5, 2008). "Biking Colorado's Wine Country". Colorado: Travel.nytimes.com. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "The Jefferson Cup Invitational Wine Competition". Thejeffersoncup.com. November 24, 2010. Archived from the original on May 1, 2011. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "Wine Industry Feature Articles—Is Colorado the New Washington?". Winesandvines.com. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau : U.S. Department of the Treasury : Tables" (PDF). Ttb.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 19, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ "Colorado Wine Industry Development Board". Coloradowine.com. Archived from the original on April 28, 2011. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "Grand Valley, Colorado—Top 10 Wine Getaways 2018—Wine Enthusiast Magazine". ^ "Colorado beer.org". coloradobeer.org. Retrieved January 24, 2013. ^ "The Denver Beer Triangle". Denver.org. Retrieved June 18, 2013. ^ Land Water People Time (Cultural Guide) (February 11, 2014). "A new Rocky Mountain high: Colorado open for cannabis tourism—The Santa Fe New Mexican: Travel". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ "Marijuana Sales Reports—Department of Revenue". www.colorado.gov. ^ "Marijuana Tax Data—Department of Revenue". www.colorado.gov. ^ "Industrial Hemp | Department of Agriculture—Plants". Colorado.gov. March 30, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ Amendment 64: (6).j ^ "Colorado Senate Bill 14-184". Retrieved October 13, 2014. ^ "Active State Medical Marijuana Programs—NORML". norml.com. Archived from the original on May 3, 2008. Retrieved June 4, 2008. ^ "Full Text of Colorado Amendment 20—Medical Use of Marijuana 2000". Nationalfamilies.org. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ Young, Saundra (August 7, 2013), Marijuana stops child's severe seizures, CNN, retrieved January 1, 2014 ^ Colorado laws pertaining to Medical Marijuana, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, 2014, retrieved January 1, 2014 Several links are found, including .PDF documents to download. ^ Markus, Ben (November 26, 2013), Colorado to spend millions researching medical marijuana benefits, Colorado Public Radio, archived from the original on January 8, 2014, retrieved January 1, 2014 ^ "Almost half of Colorado's marijuana money can go wherever lawmakers wish". The Denver Post. December 30, 2018. Retrieved November 11, 2020. ^ "ACLU Joins Campaign To Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol—ACLU—Colorado". Aclu-co.org. Retrieved April 1, 2016. ^ a b Healy, Jack. "Colorado Stores Throw Open Their Doors to Pot Buyers". The New York Times. Retrieved January 1, 2014. ^ Several Air Force teams participate in other conferences, or as independents, in sports that the MW does not sponsor: Boxing, a men-only sport which is not sanctioned by the NCAA, competes as an independent. Fencing, a coeducational sport with men's and women's squads, also competes as an independent. Men's and women's gymnastics both compete in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. Men's ice hockey competes in Atlantic Hockey. Men's lacrosse competes in the Southern Conference. Rifle, which at Air Force is a coeducational sport, competes in the Patriot Rifle Conference. Men's soccer and women's swimming & diving compete in the Western Athletic Conference. Wrestling, a men-only sport, competes in the Big 12 Conference. ^ Several Colorado teams participate in other conferences in sports that the Pac-12 does not sponsor: Men's and women's indoor track & field compete in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. Skiing, a coeducational sport with men's and women's squads, competes in the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association. ^ Several Denver teams participate in other conferences in sports that The Summit League does not sponsor: Women's gymnastics competes in the Big 12 Conference. Men's ice hockey competes in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference. Men's and women's lacrosse compete in the Big East Conference. Skiing, a coeducational sport with men's and women's squads, competes in the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association. ^ Several Northern Colorado teams participate in other conferences in sports that the Big Sky does not sponsor: Baseball (a men-only sport) and women's swimming & diving compete in the Western Athletic Conference. Wrestling, a men-only sport, competes in the Big 12 Conference. ^ https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/CO ^ "America's Top States for Business: Overall Rankings—2010". CNBC. Archived from the original on December 26, 2011. Retrieved July 24, 2011. ^ Analysis, US Department of Commerce, BEA, Bureau of Economic. "Bureau of Economic Analysis". www.bea.gov. Archived from the original on December 30, 2017. Retrieved April 24, 2018. ^ "Median Annual Household Income". The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. September 22, 2017. Retrieved October 11, 2018. ^ "References" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 12, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010. ^ Frank, Tony (January 1997). "Colorado Land Ownership by County (acres)". Colorado Department of Agriculture. Archived from the original (Excel) on January 16, 2006. Retrieved July 15, 2007. ^ "Colorado rides on Fat Tire to beer heights". Rockymountainnews.com. November 24, 2007. Retrieved June 5, 2011. ^ "News Release: Colorado Tourism Sets All-time Visitor Spending Record in 2018 | Colorado.com". www.colorado.com. Retrieved April 13, 2020. ^ Colorado individual income tax return (2005) Revenue.state.co.us Archived December 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved September 26, 2006. ^ U.S. Individual Income Tax Return (2005) online copy. Retrieved September 26, 2006. ^ "Local Area Unemployment Statistics Home Page". Bls.gov. Retrieved February 4, 2019. ^ "Inspired by West Virginia Strike, Teachers in Oklahoma and Kentucky Plan Walk Out". KTLA. April 2, 2018. ^ "EIA State Energy Profiles: Colorado". June 12, 2008. Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved June 24, 2008. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 19, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) ^ "Railroads and States". Aar.org. Archived from the original on June 6, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013. ^ Nicholson, Kieran (August 1, 2014). "Immigrants here illegally begin receiving Colorado driver licenses". Denver Post. Retrieved August 1, 2014. ^ "524 Non-Citizens Received Regular Colorado Driver's Licenses, DMV Says". KCNC. Denver. September 12, 2014. Retrieved February 19, 2015. ^ "State of Residence in 2000 by State of Birth". US Census Bureau. Retrieved October 10, 2009. ^ "Colorado Counties". State of Colorado, Department of Local Affairs. January 8, 2007. Archived from the original on February 2, 2007. Retrieved January 30, 2007. ^ The United States Office of Management and Budget defines a combined statistical area (CSA) as an aggregate of adjacent Core Based Statistical Areas that are linked by commuting ties. ^ The United States Office of Management and Budget defines a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) as a Core Based Statistical Area having at least one urbanized area of 50,000 or more population, plus adjacent territory that has a high degree of social and economic integration with the core as measured by commuting ties. ^ The United States Office of Management and Budget defines a Micropolitan Statistical Area (μSA) as a Core Based Statistical Area having at least one urban cluster of at least 10,000 but less than 50,000 population, plus adjacent territory that has a high degree of social and economic integration with the core as measured by commuting ties. ^ "OMB Bulletin No. 10-02: Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses" (PDF). United States Office of Management and Budget. December 1, 2009. Retrieved January 7, 2010. ^ a b c "American Factfinder". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved February 9, 2019. ^ "Active Colorado Municipalities". State of Colorado, Department of Local Affairs. Archived from the original on December 12, 2009. Retrieved May 11, 2011. ^ "Colorado Local Government by Type". State of Colorado, Department of Local Affairs. February 27, 2007. Archived from the original on February 2, 2007. Retrieved May 11, 2011. ^ "Total Registered Voters By Party Affiliation and Status As of Fri Apr 01 2016 03:07:45 GMT-0600 (MDT)" (PDF). ^ "Notice of General Election". 4 (41). Silverton Standard. August 19, 1893. Retrieved November 28, 2020. ^ "Colorado Revised Statutes 2017" (PDF). Colorado General Assembly. State of Colorado. Retrieved November 30, 2020. ^ Sanko, John (October 12, 1999). "Colorado only state ever to turn down Olympics". Rocky Mountain News. Archived from the original on June 1, 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2020. ^ Simpson, Kevin (November 8, 2006). "Colorado Amendment 43: Gay marriage banned; domestic partnerships also defeated". The Denver Post. The Denver Post. Retrieved November 28, 2020. ^ "Protect Colorado Residents From Federal Government Overreach | Colorado General Assembly". leg.colorado.gov. Retrieved May 30, 2019. ^ By legislative act enacted August 1, 2012, approved by Governor John Hickenlooper. ^ a b Managed by the United States Department of Agriculture, National Forest Service. ^ Jointly managed by the United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management and the United States Department of Agriculture, National Forest Service. ^ Managed by the United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. ^ Jointly managed by the United States Department of Agriculture, National Forest Service, and the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management. Further reading[edit] Explore Colorado, A Naturalist's Handbook, The Denver Museum of Natural History and Westcliff Publishers, 1995, ISBN 1-56579-124-X for an excellent guide to the ecological regions of Colorado. The Archeology of Colorado, Revised Edition, E. Steve Cassells, Johnson Books, Boulder, Colorado, 1997, trade paperback, ISBN 1-55566-193-9. Chokecherry Places, Essays from the High Plains, Merrill Gilfillan, Johnson Press, Boulder, Colorado, trade paperback, ISBN 1-55566-227-7. Gunther, John (1947). "–But Scenery Is Not Enough". Inside U.S.A. New York, London: Harper & Brothers. pp. 213–226. The Tie That Binds, Kent Haruf, 1984, hardcover, ISBN 0-03-071979-8, a fictional account of farming in Colorado. Railroads of Colorado: Your Guide to Colorado's Historic Trains and Railway Sites, Claude Wiatrowski, Voyageur Press, 2002, hardcover, 160 pages, ISBN 0-89658-591-3 Study Finds Legal Marijuana Motivates Many Tourists to Visit Colorado, (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_29225304/marijuana-has-huge-influence-colorado-tourism-state-survey External links[edit] This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links, and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references. (April 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Coloradoat Wikipedia's sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Wikimedia Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel guide from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity State government[edit] Colorado state government website Colorado Department of Transportation Colorado Department of Local Affairs Colorado tourism List of searchable databases produced by Colorado state agencies hosted by the American Library Association Government Documents Roundtable Federal government[edit] Energy & Environmental Data for Colorado USGS Colorado state facts, real-time, geographic, and other scientific resources of Colorado United States Census Bureau Colorado QuickFacts 2000 Census of Population and Housing for Colorado USDA ERS Colorado state facts Other[edit] History Colorado Colorado County Evolution Ask Colorado Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection (CHNC) Mountain and Desert Plants of Colorado and the Southwest, Climate of Colorado Colorado at Curlie Geographic data related to Colorado at OpenStreetMap Holocene Volcano in Colorado (Smithsonian Institution Global Volcanism Program) Preceded by Nebraska List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union Admitted on August 1, 1876 (38th) Succeeded by North Dakota Topics related to Colorado The Centennial State v t e  State of Colorado Denver (capital) Topics Index Coloradans Elections Federal lands Geography Government Highways History Timeline Images Law Military Mountains Museums Public Defender Paleontology Rivers Symbols Transportation Tourist attractions Seal of Colorado Society Crime Culture Demographics Economy Education Politics Sports Regions Central Colorado Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area Eastern Plains Front Range Grand Valley High Plains High Rockies Mineral Belt Northern Colorado Northwestern Colorado Piedmont Plateau Roan Plateau Roaring Fork Valley San Luis Valley Sangre de Cristo Mountains South-Central Colorado Southwest Colorado Uinta Mountains Uinta Basin Western Slope Municipalities Akron Alamosa Arvada Aspen Aurora Boulder Breckenridge Brighton Broomfield Cañon City Castle Rock Centennial Colorado Springs Commerce City Cortez Craig Delta Denver Durango Englewood Erie Evans Fairplay Federal Heights Fort Collins Fort Morgan Fountain Golden Glenwood Springs Grand Junction Greeley Greenwood Village Gunnison La Junta Lafayette Lakewood Lamar Leadville Littleton Longmont Louisville Loveland Montrose Northglenn Parker Platteville Pueblo Salida Steamboat Springs Sterling Superior Thornton Trinidad Vail Westminster Wheat Ridge Windsor Counties Adams Alamosa Arapahoe Archuleta Baca Bent Boulder Broomfield Chaffee Cheyenne Clear Creek Conejos Costilla Crowley Custer Delta Denver Dolores Douglas Eagle El Paso Elbert Fremont Garfield Gilpin Grand Gunnison Hinsdale Huerfano Jackson Jefferson Kiowa Kit Carson La Plata Lake Larimer Las Animas Lincoln Logan Mesa Mineral Moffat Montezuma Montrose Morgan Otero Ouray Park Phillips Pitkin Prowers Pueblo Rio Blanco Rio Grande Routt Saguache San Juan San Miguel Sedgwick Summit Teller Washington Weld Yuma v t e Mayors of cities with populations exceeding 100,000 in Colorado Michael Hancock (Denver) John Suthers (Colorado Springs) Mike Coffman (Aurora) Wade Troxell (Fort Collins) Adam Paul (Lakewood) Jan Kulmann (Thornton) Marc Williams (Arvada) Herb Atchinson (Westminster) Nick Gradisar (Pueblo) Stephanie Piko (Centennial) Sam Weaver (Boulder) John Gates (Greeley) v t e Protected areas of Colorado Federal National Parks Black Canyon of the Gunnison Great Sand Dunes Mesa Verde Rocky Mountain National monuments Browns Canyon (BLM-USFS) Canyons of the Ancients (BLM) Chimney Rock (USFS) Colorado Dinosaur Florissant Fossil Beds Hovenweep Yucca House National Recreation Areas Arapaho (USFS) Curecanti National Historic Sites Bent's Old Fort Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Trails Old Spanish Trail Oregon Trail Pony Express Trail Santa Fe Trail National Scenic Trail Continental Divide Trail National Forests Arapaho Grand Mesa Gunnison Pike Rio Grande Roosevelt Routt San Isabel San Juan Uncompahgre White River National Grasslands Comanche Pawnee National Wilderness Black Canyon of the Gunnison Black Ridge Canyons Buffalo Peaks Byers Peak Cache La Poudre Collegiate Peaks Comanche Peak Dominguez Eagles Nest Flat Tops Fossil Ridge Great Sand Dunes Greenhorn Mountain Gunnison Gorge Holy Cross Hunter-Fryingpan Indian Peaks James Peak La Garita Lizard Head Lost Creek Maroon Bells-Snowmass Mesa Verde Mount Evans Mount Massive Mount Sneffels Mount Zirkel Neota Never Summer Platte River Powderhorn Ptarmigan Peak Raggeds Rawah Rocky Mountain National Park Sangre de Cristo Sarvis Creek South San Juan Spanish Peaks Uncompahgre Vasquez Peak Weminuche West Elk National Conservation Areas Dominguez-Escalante Gunnison Gorge McInnis Canyons National Wildlife Refuges Alamosa Arapaho Baca Browns Park Monte Vista Rocky Flats Rocky Mountain Arsenal Two Ponds BLM ACECs 66 Areas of Critical Environmental Concern Wild and Scenic Rivers Cache la Poudre River State Colorado State Parks Arkansas Headwaters Barr Lake Boyd Lake Castlewood Canyon Chatfield Cherry Creek Cheyenne Mountain Crawford Eldorado Canyon Eleven Mile Elkhead Fishers Peak Golden Gate Canyon Harvey Gap Highline Lake Jackson Lake James M. Robb - Colorado River John Martin Reservoir Lake Pueblo Lathrop Lone Mesa Lory Mancos Mueller Navajo North Sterling Paonia Pearl Lake Ridgway Rifle Falls Rifle Gap Roxborough Spinney Mountain St. Vrain Stagecoach State Forest Staunton Steamboat Lake Sweitzer Lake Sylvan Lake Trinidad Lake Vega Yampa River Colorado Natural Areas Aiken Canyon Ant Hill Antero-Salt Creek Arikaree River Badger Wash Blacks Gulch Blue Mountain Bonny Prairie Boston Peak Fen Boulder Mountain Park Boulder Valley Heronry Brush Creek Fen California Park Castlewood Canyon Chalk Bluffs Colorado Tallgrass Prairie Comanche Grassland Copeland Willow Carr Cross Mountain Canyon Daves Draw Deep Creek Deer Gulch Dinosaur Ridge Dome Rock Droney Gulch Duck Creek Dudley Bluffs East Lost Park East Sand Dunes Elephant Rocks Elk River Escalante Canyon Escalante Creek Fairview Fourmile Creek Fruita Paleontological Garden Park Fossil Gateway Palisade Geneva Basin Iron Fens Gothic Gunnison Gravels Haviland Lake High Creek Fen High Mesa Grassland Hoosier Ridge Hurricane Canyon Indian Spring Indian Springs Trace Fossil Irish Canyon Jimmy Creek Ken-Caryl Ranch Kremmling Cretaceous Ammonite Lake Pasture Lake San Cristobal Limestone Ridge Lookout Mountain Lost Park Lower Greasewood Creek McElmo Mexican Cut Mini-Wheeler Miramonte Reservoir Mishak Lakes Moosehead Mountain Mount Callahan Mount Callahan Saddle Mount Emmons Iron Fen Mount Goliath Narraguinnep Needle Rock North Park Phacelia Orient Mine Owl Canyon Paradise Park Park Creek Hogback Park Mesa Pawnee Woodlands Pyramid Rock Rabbit Valley Rajadero Canyon Raven Ridge Redcloud Peak Rocky Mountain Woodfrog Pond Rough Canyon Roxborough Running Creek Ryan Gulch Saddle Mountain San Miguel River Sand Creek Shell Duck Creek Shell Rock Slumgullion Earthflow South Beaver Creek South Boulder Creek South Cathedral Bluffs Specimen Mountain Staunton Tabeguache Tamarack Ranch Tern Island Treasurevault Mountain Trinidad K-T Boundary Two Buttes Unaweep Seep Uncompahgre Fritillary Wacker Ranch West Creek Wheeler Geologic White Rocks Williams Creek Yanks Gulch/Upper Greasewood Creek Natural Area Zapata Falls State Wildlife Areas 307 Colorado State Wildlife Areas Other Trails American Discovery Trail Colorado Trail Continental Divide Trail Great Divide Trail Kokopelli Trail Paradox Trail Tabeguache Trail Colorado Department of Natural Resources (web) v t e Western United States Regions Rocky Mountains Great Basin West Coast Pacific Northwest Mountain States States Alaska Arizona California Colorado Hawaii Idaho Montana Nevada New Mexico Oregon Utah Washington Wyoming Territories American Samoa Guam Northern Mariana Islands Major metropolitan areas Los Angeles Greater LA Phoenix San Francisco Bay Area San Jose–Oakland San Bernardino-Riverside Seattle San Diego Denver Portland Las Vegas Paradise Sacramento Salt Lake City Honolulu Oahu Albuquerque Santa Fe Anchorage Major cities Anchorage Albuquerque Denver Honolulu Las Vegas Los Angeles Long Beach Oakland Phoenix Portland Reno Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Jose Salt Lake City Seattle Spokane Tucson State capitals Boise Carson City Cheyenne Denver Helena Honolulu Juneau Olympia Phoenix Sacramento Salem Salt Lake City Santa Fe Territorial capitals Hagåtña Pago Pago Saipan v t e  New France (1534–1763) Subdivisions Acadia (1604–1713) Canada (1608–1763) Pays d'en Haut Domaine du roy Louisiana (1682–1763, 1801–1803) Illinois Country Ohio Country Newfoundland (1662–1713) Île Royale (1713–1763) The lesser coat of arms of France as used by the Government Towns and villages Acadia (Port Royal) Canada Quebec Trois-Rivières Montreal Détroit Île Royale Louisbourg Louisiana Mobile Biloxi New Orleans Newfoundland Plaisance Forts Fort Rouillé Fort Michilimackinac Fort de Buade Fort de Chartres Fort Detroit Fort Carillon Fort Condé Fort Duquesne Fortress of Louisbourg Castle Hill Fort St. Louis (Illinois) Fort St. Louis (Texas) List of Forts Government Canada Governor General Intendant Sovereign Council Bishop of Quebec Governor of Trois-Rivières Governor of Montreal Acadia Governor Lieutenant-General Newfoundland Governor Lieutenant-General Louisiana Governor Intendant Superior Council Île Royale Governor Intendant Superior Council Law Intendancy Superior Council Admiralty court Provostship Officiality Seigneurial court Bailiff Maréchaussée Code Noir Economy Seigneurial system Fur trade Company of 100 Associates Crozat's Company Mississippi Company Compagnie de l'Occident Chemin du Roy Coureur des bois Voyageurs Society Population 1666 census Habitants King's Daughters Casquette girls Métis Amerindians Slavery Plaçage Gens de couleur libres Religion Jesuit missions Récollets Grey Nuns Ursulines Sulpicians War and peace Military of New France Intercolonial Wars French and Iroquois Wars Great Upheaval Great Peace of Montreal Schenectady massacre Deerfield massacre Related French colonization of the Americas French colonial empire History of Quebec History of the Acadians History of the French-Americans French West Indies Carib Expulsion Atlantic slave trade Category v t e New Spain (1521–1821) Conflicts Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire → Spanish conquest of Guatemala → Spanish conquest of Yucatán → Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604) → Anglo-Spanish War (1625–1630) → Dutch Revolt → Anglo-Spanish War (1654–1660) → Piracy in the Caribbean → Queen Anne's War → War of Jenkins' Ear → Seven Years' War → Spanish involvement in the American Revolutionary War Conflicts with indigenous peoples during colonial rule Mixtón War → Yaqui Wars → Chichimeca War → Philippine revolts against Spain → Acaxee Rebellion → Spanish–Moro conflict → Acoma Massacre → Tepehuán Revolt → Tzeltal Rebellion → Pueblo Revolt → Pima Revolt → Spanish American wars of independence Central government and administration Habsburg Spain Charles I Joanna of Castile Philip II Philp III Philip IV Charles II Bourbon Spain Philip V (also reigned after Louis I) Louis I Ferdinand VI Charles III Charles IV Ferdinand VII of Spain (also reigned after Joseph I) Viceroys of New Spain List of viceroys of New Spain Audiencias Guadalajara Captaincy General of Guatemala Manila Mexico Santo Domingo Captancies General Cuba Guatemala Philippines Puerto Rico Santo Domingo Yucatán Provincias Internas Intendancy Havana New Orleans State of Mexico Chiapas Comayagua Nicaragua Camagüey Santiago de Cuba Guanajuato Valladolid Guadalajara Zacatecas San Luis Potosí Veracruz Puebla Oaxaca Durango Sonora Mérida, Yucatán La Florida Politics Viceroy Gobernaciones Adelantado Captain general Corregidor (position) Cabildo Encomienda Treaties Treaty of Tordesillas Treaty of Zaragoza Peace of Westphalia Treaty of Ryswick Treaty of Utrecht Congress of Breda Treaty of Fontainebleau (1762) Treaty of Paris (1783) Treaty of Córdoba Adams–Onís Treaty Notable cities, provinces, and territories Cities Mexico City Veracruz Xalapa Puebla Toluca Cuernavaca Oaxaca Morelia Acapulco Campeche Mérida Guadalajara Durango Monterrey León Guanajuato Zacatecas Pachuca Querétaro Saltillo San Luis Potosí Los Ángeles Yerba Buena (San Francisco) San José San Diego Santa Fe Albuquerque El Paso Los Adaes San Antonio Tucson Pensacola St. Augustine Havana Santo Domingo San Juan Antigua Guatemala Cebu Manila Provinces and territories La Florida Las Californias Santa Fe de Nuevo México Alta California Baja California Tejas Nueva Galicia Nueva Vizcaya Nueva Extremadura New Kingdom of León Cebu Bulacan Pampanga Other areas Spanish Formosa Explorers, adventurers and conquistadors Pre-New Spain explorers Christopher Columbus Ferdinand Magellan Juan Sebastián Elcano Vasco Núñez de Balboa Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar Explorers and conquistadors Hernán Cortés Juan Ponce de León Nuño de Guzmán Bernal Díaz del Castillo Pedro de Alvarado Pánfilo de Narváez Hernando de Soto Francisco Vásquez de Coronado Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo Miguel López de Legazpi Ángel de Villafañe Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca Pedro Menéndez de Avilés Luis de Carabajal y Cueva Juan de Oñate Juan José Pérez Hernández Gaspar de Portolà Manuel Quimper Cristóbal de Oñate Andrés de Urdaneta Ruy López de Villalobos Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (Yucatán conquistador) Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (founder of Nicaragua) Gil González Dávila Francisco de Ulloa Juan José Pérez Hernández Dionisio Alcalá Galiano Bruno de Heceta Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra Alonso de León Ignacio de Arteaga y Bazán José de Bustamante y Guerra José María Narváez Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa Antonio Gil Y'Barbo Alexander von Humboldt Thomas Gage Catholic Church in New Spain Spanish missions in the Americas Spanish missions in Arizona Spanish missions in Baja California Spanish missions in California Spanish missions in the Carolinas Spanish missions in Florida Spanish missions in Georgia Spanish missions in Louisiana Spanish missions in Mexico Spanish missions in New Mexico Spanish missions in the Sonoran Desert Spanish missions in Texas Spanish missions in Virginia Spanish missions in Trinidad Friars, fathers, priests, and bishops Pedro de Gante Gerónimo de Aguilar Toribio de Benavente Motolinia Bernardino de Sahagún Juan de Zumárraga Alonso de Montúfar Vasco de Quiroga Bartolomé de las Casas Alonso de Molina Diego Durán Diego de Landa Gerónimo de Mendieta Juan de Torquemada Juan de Palafox y Mendoza Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora Eusebio Kino Francisco Javier Clavijero Junípero Serra Francisco Palóu Fermín Lasuén Esteban Tápis José Francisco de Paula Señan Mariano Payeras Sebastián Montero Marcos de Niza Francisco de Ayeta Antonio Margil Francisco Marroquín Manuel Abad y Queipo Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla José María Morelos Other events Our Lady of Guadalupe Suppression of the Jesuits California mission clash of cultures Cargo system Indian Reductions Society and culture Indigenous peoples Mesoamerican Aztec Maya Huastec Mixtec P'urhépecha Totonac Pipil Kowoj K'iche' Kaqchikel Zapotec Poqomam Mam Caribbean Arawak Ciboney Guanajatabey California Mission Indians Cahuilla Chumash Cupeño Juaneño Kumeyaay Luiseño Miwok Mohave Ohlone Serrano Tongva Southwestern Apache Coahuiltecan Cocopa Comanche Hopi Hualapai La Junta Navajo Pima Puebloan Quechan Solano Yaqui Zuni North-Northwest Mexico Acaxee Chichimeca Cochimi Kiliwa Ópata Tepehuán Florida and other Southeastern tribes Indigenous people during De Soto's travels Apalachee Calusa Creek Jororo Pensacola Seminole Timucua Yustaga Filipino people Negrito Igorot Mangyan Peoples of Palawan Ati Panay Lumad Bajau Tagalog Cebuano Others Taiwanese aborigines Chamorro people Architecture Spanish Colonial style by country Colonial Baroque style Forts Missions Trade and economy Real Columbian Exchange Manila galleon Triangular trade People and classes Casta Peninsulars Criollo Indios Mestizo Castizo Coyotes Pardos Zambo Negros People Juan Bautista de Anza Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo Francis Drake Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Eusebio Kino La Malinche Fermín Lasuén Limahong Moctezuma II Junípero Serra Hasekura Tsunenaga Category v t e Political divisions of the United States States Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Federal district Washington, D.C. 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