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Two major physical features of New Mexico:

The Rocky Mountains:

The Rocky Mountains broaden south into New Mexico; critical reaches incorporate the Jemez, Sangre de Cristo, and Zuni. Wetlands spread around 482,000 sections of land of New Mexico (0.6 percent) most are in the eastern and northern zones of the State. New Mexico's wetlands incorporate forested wetlands, base land shrublands, swamps, fens, elevated snow dells, wet and salt knolls, shallow lakes, and playa lakes.

New Mexico is a remainder of a novel and lessening living space. Referred to locally as the bosque a Spanish word for "woods," these riparian, or riverside, backwoods give important assets to creatures and plants living in the dry Southwest.  

Forested Wetlands:

The territory of New Mexico has forested Wetlands, These are otherwise called, go through northern New Mexico and into Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana. In Canada, the range extends along the fringe of Alberta and British Columbia. Actually, there are 88 named mountain extends in the territory of New Mexico.

These mountains run along the eastern edge of the Rio Grande River and incorporate Wheeler Peak, which arrives at the most noteworthy point in New Mexico at 13,161 feet above ocean level. The Sangre de Cristo Mountains (Spanish for "Blood of Christ") is the southernmost subrange of the Rocky Mountains. They are situated in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico in the United States.

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