College Speed Dating Los Lunas Nm

SpeedCollege Speed Dating Los Lunas Nm
Phone505-865-7340
Fax505-865-5163
Emailllunas@nmsu.edu
Web pagehttp://loslunassc.nmsu.edu
Speed Dial2642
Physical Address1036 Miller St. S.W. Los Lunas 87031
InfoThis center supports research that serves small- and intermediate-size farms of the middle Rio Grande Valley. The revegetation of disturbed areas under arid conditions is a major part of its research program. It also is developing an urban horticulture research program, particularly using native plants.

Located with the center, the Plant Material Center is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service. The Plant Material Center serves New Mexico and Colorado by testing diverse ecotypes of plant species for adaptation to various conditions and suitability for commercial production. Grasses, forbs, and woody plants are released for improvement of wildlife habitats, rangelands, and recreational areas, as well as for highway beautification and stabilization.

NameTitlePhone
Giese, William 'Gill' Extension Viticulturist Specialist
Gonzalez , JoseLaborer - Sr.
505-865-7340
Havlik, CharlesSenior Research Assistant
Kersten, MirandaSr. Program Specialist
505-865-7340
Marsalis, MarkExtension Forage Specialist
Mendoza, Carl Laborer - Sr.
505-865-7340
Ortega, Dina L. Fiscal Assistant - Inter.
Place, Michael 'Tom'Interim Superintendent/Farm Ranch Manager
505-865-7340
Price, Dennis Facilities Coordinator
Salazar, Candace Administrative Assistant - Associate
505-865-7340
Skidmore, Amanda IPM Small Farm Specialist
Thompson, MarisaUrban Horticulture Specialist
505-865-7340
Wulf, JoleneLaborer - Sr.
Zhang, GePost Doc
505-865-7340

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College Speed Dating Los Lunas Nm New Mexico

​In an era of clues becoming unraveled daily about our human origins and ethnic ancestry, it's important to bring up research that has lately been swept under the rug. This is a topic that requires patience and attention to gain an honest understanding. I bring up this debate of worldviews amid our ever-present culture war in complete grace. My new large-scale historical non-fiction currently being written is titledProvidence and the North American Indian. It is a piece of work that brings a topic front-and-center that has not been thoroughly explored since early 20th century’s Edward S. Curtis wrote The North American Indian. Even further, it’s a topic not explored since John Eliot preached to the Indigenous tribes of New England in the early 1600s.
There is a special relationship, cloaked under a blanket of misinformation, between the nation of Israel and the North American Indian. Over four centuries ago (400 years), it was widely theorized that the Indigenous peoples of the New World were part of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. The unique relationship that is uncovered is shockingly similar. There is certain evidence that should be presented, and it will arguably be pushed back against by some individuals as well. Let's start by certain similarities in religious understanding that God indeed created the world, and also came down to destroy civilization.
Archaeologist Ron Wyatt explains, “The Aztec nation, located in southern Mexico, claimed they had lived somewhere in northwestern Mexico or the southwestern US for over 1,000 years before migrating south sometime in the 1000s or 1100s AD. Most of our knowledge of these people comes from the Aztec sacred books, known as ‘codices’, which were kept in their temples and which the native Aztec historians used when they wrote their chronicles. In the first half of the 1500’s, the Aztec chieftain Ixtlilxochitl, wrote Ixtlilxochitl Relaciones, a history relating the archives of his family and the ancient writings of his Aztec nation.” He claims they were descendants to the Toltecs, who had passed down the following tale. In this account, Ixtlilxochitl presents the most complete and accurate account of the flood and events at Babel that have ever been found in any ancient civilization other than the Biblical account:
“It is found in the histories of the Toltecs that this age and first world, as they call it, lasted 1716 years; that men were destroyed by tremendous rains and lightning from the sky, and even all the land without the exception of anything, and the highest mountains, were covered up and submerged in water ‘caxtolmolatli’ (translated to read ‘fifteen cubits’); and here they added other fables of how men came to multiply from the few who escaped from this destruction in a ‘toptlipetlocali;’ that this word nearly signifies a close chest; and how, after men had multiplied, they erected a very high ‘zacuali’, which is to-day a tower of great height, in order to take refuge in it should the second world (age) be destroyed. Presently their languages were confused, and not being able to understand each other, they went to different parts of the earth….” [1]