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Explore New Mexico in Google Earth.
See a county map of New Mexico on Google Maps with this free, interactive map tool. This New Mexico county map shows county borders and also has options to show county name labels, overlay city limits and townships and more.
This map shows cities, towns, counties, interstate highways, U.S. highways, state highways, main roads, secondary roads, rivers, lakes, airports, national parks, national forests, state parks, monuments, rest areas, indian reservations, points of interest, museums and ski areas in New Mexico.
New Mexico Map. Map of New Mexico: Click to see large. Description: This map shows boundaries of countries, states boundaries, the state capital, counties, county seats, cities, towns and national parks in New Mexico. Size: 1100x1237px / 196 Kb. Author: Ontheworldmap.com.
Physical map of New Mexico showing major cities, terrain, national parks, rivers, and surrounding countries with international borders and outline maps. Key facts about New Mexico.
New Mexico. Type: State with 2,060,000 residents. Description: state of the United States of America. Neighbors: Arizona, Chihuahua, Colorado, Oklahoma, Sonora, Texas and Utah. Categories: U.S. state and locality. Location: Southwest, United States, North America. View on OpenStreetMap. Latitude of center.
General Map of New Mexico, United States. The detailed map shows the US state of New Mexico with boundaries, the location of the state capital Santa Fe, major cities and populated places, rivers and lakes, interstate highways, principal highways, railroads and major airports.
Our New Mexico State Map shows major landmarks and places in New Mexico. You’ll see national forests, military bases, preserves, wildlife refuges, and federal lands. Carlsbad Caverns National Park is a collection of 119 caves hidden beneath the Chihuahuan Desert.
This map shows the major streams and rivers of New Mexico and some of the larger lakes. The Great Continental Divide crosses New Mexico. The western portion of the state is in the Pacific Ocean Watershed and most of the drainage leaves the state through the San Juan, San Francisco and Gila Rivers.