• INAH/Mauricio Marat
    INAH/Mauricio Marat
  • Archivo INAH
    Archivo INAH
  • INAH/Mauricio Marat
    INAH/Mauricio Marat
  • Archivo INAH
    Archivo INAH
Cerro de Trincheras
The site's name (“Mountain of trenches”) comes from the resemblance of its walls and terraces with military fortifications.
Twelve centuries ago, a mountain enabled a thousand farmers, craftsmen and leaders to establish a city in the Sonora desert. They levelled out more than 900 hillside terraces, raised walls of river stones, built a plaza on the peak and marked out a shell form. Its traces still remain.
About the site
The American continent’s first settlers arrived to the modern-day territory of Sonora 13,000 years ago. When the Sonora desert formed 10,000 years ago, these hunters and gatherers adapted to its conditions and enriched their diet with the desert plants. The region’s natural richness allowed this archaic way of life to endure for several millennia.

Approximately 3,500 years ago, the settlers learned how to cultivate maize and used canals for irrigation. The care required for farming led to the emergence of the first permanent settlements or villages. These had common cultural characteristics such as the production of purple-on-red pottery, the construction of walls or “pens” on the peak of some hills and building terraces or “trenches” on the hillsides. As a result, these villages are known as belonging to the “Trenchiras” tradition.

Seven hundred years ago, the site became the governing center of the farming villages scattered around the valleys of the Magdalena, Altar and Concepción rivers. It was home to a population of more than 1,000 inhabitants from 1300 to 1450. When controlling the valleys from this town became impossible, the communities went back to living in isolated villages.

In this pre-Hispanic settlement, stone-walled terraces were built. They were used to build houses and shelters by the ancient inhabitants, where they carried out all of their daily activities. They also had areas dedicated to certain activities. Some were used for public or communal ceremonies and others for private rituals, exclusively for certain groups or the head family.
1300-1450

Preclásico Tardío a Posclásico Tardío

Did you know...
  • The name of this settlement is attributed to Captain Mateo Manje, who accompanied Father Francisco Kino to the Magdalena valley. Upon seeing the terraces, the soldier observed that they looked like military trenches.
An expert point of view
Elisa Villalpando Canchola
Elisa Villalpando Canchola
Centro INAH Sonora
Archeological site
Cerro de Trincheras
Practical information
Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to 18:00 hrs.

Free entry


  • Extra fee for video cameras
  • No Smoking
  • No entry with food
  • Pets not allowed
Blvd. Joaquín Murrieta y Calle Sonora, Trincheras, Sonora

From the city of Hermosillo, take Federal Highway 15 in the direction of Nogales. Continue on Federal Highway 2, Santa Ana-Caborca, until the toll booth located at km 40 and, a little further on, take the exit for the town of Trincheras, which is 42 km away.

Services
  • Centro de atención al visitante
  • Estacionamiento
  • Sanitarios
  • +52 (662) 217 2580
  • This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Directory
Administración del Centro INAH Sonora
Anabell Hernández Bedolla
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
+52 (662) 212 63 64 y 217 4222
1816
2_El_caracol
Trincheras_MauricioMarat_4
INAH/Mauricio Marat
The soccer pitch
340_A_cerro_de_las_trincheras_2
Archivo INAH
portada_cerro_de_trincheras
INAH/Mauricio Marat
1_Corral_prehispanico_y_Cerro_de_Trincheras
Archivo INAH
3_Cerro_de_Trincheras,_Sonora_S
Norte
En el desierto de Sonora, una montaña permitió que, hace doce siglos, mil agricultores, artesanos y gobernantes fundaran una ciudad. Aplanaron en las laderas más de 900 terrazas, levantaron muros de piedra rodada, en la cima abrieron una plaza y trazaron un gran caracol. Su huella persiste.
Twelve centuries ago, a mountain enabled a thousand farmers, craftsmen and leaders to establish a city in the Sonora desert. They levelled out more than 900 hillside terraces, raised walls of river stones, built a plaza on the peak and marked out a shell form. Its traces still remain.
Recibe este nombre porque sus muros y terrazas son semejantes a las "trincheras", término empleado para las fortificaciones en la época colonial.
The site's name (“Mountain of trenches”) comes from the resemblance of its walls and terraces with military fortifications.

LEGAL NOTICE

The contents of this website belong to the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México, and may be downloaded and shared without alterations, provided that the author is acknowledged and if is not for commercial purposes.

Footer MediatecaINAH

Guardar
Lugares INAH

Idioma