Talk:Antonio Armijo

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Armijo and the party named the Las Vegas Valley "Las Vegas", Spanish for "the meadows" after following a tributary up from the Colorado River. While Armijo's caravan was camped on Christmas Day, about 100 miles northeast of present day Las Vegas, a scouting party rode west in search of water. Rafael Rivera, a young Mexican scout, wandered away from the rest of the group into the unexplored desert, in search of a shortcut. He headed west of the Colorado River and stumbled upon what is now known as the Las Vegas valley. Camping on top of a mesa that overlooked the valley, he could see springs and meadows thriving in the middle of the desert. After two weeks, Rivera rejoined the group and led them to the valley.

The Armijo party noted the unusual fertility of the plains surrounding the springs, and so they called it "Las Vegas," which in Spanish translates into "fertile plains." The fertility was due to the presence of the artesian springs in what otherwise would have been a desert landscape.

The Itinerary of Antonio Armijo has no such record in it. The route of Armijo's party passed along the Colorado River from the mouth of the Virgin River to the mouth of Las Vegas Wash. No one in his party found Las Vegas, it is never mentioned and I would have been if it had been found. Rafael Rivera was scouting down the Colorado to the Mohave villages to find the Mohave Trail from there to southern Alta California, which he did and returned to report it to Armijo. Armijo subsequently cut southwest to Resting Spring and then south to the Mojave River. He returned by the same route he came over, a foolish thing to do if he knew of the meadows of Las Vegas. Las Vegas was later found by others. This "news" article was complete fiction.Asiaticus (talk) 04:22, 11 December 2015 (UTC)