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What is the story behind the creation of the land grant that became the Baca Location #1 (i.e. the Baca Ranch) and later the Valles Caldera National Preserve?

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What is the story behind the creation of the land grant that became the Baca Location #1 (i.e. the Baca Ranch) and later the Valles Caldera National Preserve?

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The main boundaries of the piece of land that became the Valles Caldera National Preserve exist partially because of an historical event that happened in Spain in the 13th century AD: the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, which took place on July 12, 1212. This was a decisive battle of the Reconquista, the long period in the Middle Ages in which various European kingdoms gradually expelled the Moors from the Iberian Peninsula. In 1212, the Moorish army was situated to the south of the Sierra Morena mountains in Andalucia (southern Spain). The Moors had blocked the DespeƱaperros Pass through the mountains, and consequently the Sierra Morenas served as a seemingly impenetrable fortress defending the Moors from the Spanish army to the north. However, a local shepherd named Martin de Alhaja knew of a pass through the Sierra Morenas unknown to the Moors, through which the Spanish army might penetrate the mountains and surprise the Moorish army on the other side. Alhaja informed the Spanish of

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The main boundaries of the piece of land that became the Valles Caldera National Preserve exist partially because of an historical event that happened in Spain in the 13th century AD: the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, which took place on July 12, 1212. This was a decisive battle of the Reconquista, the long period in the Middle Ages in which various European kingdoms gradually expelled the Moors from the Iberian Peninsula. In 1212, the Moorish army was situated to the south of the Sierra Morena mountains in Andalucia (southern Spain). The Moors had blocked the DespeƱaperros Pass through the mountains, and consequently the Sierra Morenas served as a seemingly impenetrable fortress defending the Moors from the Spanish army to the north. However, a local shepherd named Martin de Alhaja knew of a pass through the Sierra Morenas unknown to the Moors, through which the Spanish army might penetrate the mountains and surprise the Moorish army on the other side. Alhaja informed the Spanish of

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