This site describes the first European exploration of the modern American
Southwest by the Coronado expedition and associated parties in the 1530s
and 1540s.
The route for the expedition was reconnoitered in 1539 by Father Marcos de
Niza, who first recorded the seven cities of Cíbola (now known to be the
modern
pueblo of Zuni, New Mexico. In 1540 Coronado led a huge expedition of
around 1000 Spanish and native allies from Compostela, Mexico, north
through Sonora
and southeast Arizona, to Zuni. Side parties discovered the Grand Canyon,
the Colorado river crossing near Yuma, and the Hopi pueblos or northern
Arizona.
Disappointed by lack of gold or transportable wealth, the army reached and
occupied the pueblos near Albuquerque, New Mexico, and eventually traveled
as far as
Kansas, in 1541-42. Ironically, the expedition was regarded as a failure
because it brought back no gold.
This site describes the circumstances of the expedition, the route, the
personalities of the main players, several recently discovered campsites
of the expedition,
artifacts left by the expedition, and ongoing mysteries about the location
of their route.