Arizona is one of the Four Corners states. It borders New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, California, touches Colorado, and has a 389-mile (626 km) international border with Mexico. Aside from the Grand Canyon, many other National Forests, Parks, Monuments, and Indian reservations are located in the state. Arizona was the 48th state admitted into the U.S. (1912), and the last of the contiguous states admitted.
Arizona is one of the Four Corners states. It borders New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, California, touches Colorado, and has a 389-mile (626 km) international border with Mexico. Arizona is the sixth largest state in area, after New Mexico and before Nevada. Aside from the Grand Canyon, a number of other National Forests, Parks, Monuments, and Indian reservations are located in the state. Of the state's 118,000 square miles, approximately 15% is privately owned. The remaining area is government forest and park land, recreation areas and Native American reservations. http://www.azot.com/public/facts.asp
Arizona is best known for its desertic landscape, which is rich in xerophyte plants such as cacti. It is also known for its climate, which presents exceptionally hot summers and mild winters. Less well known is the pine-covered high country of the Colorado Plateau in the north-central portion of the state, which contrasts with the desertic Basin and Range region in the southern portions of the state.
Like other states of the Southwest, Arizona has an abundance of topographical characteristics in addition to its desert climes. More than half of the state features mountains and plateaus and contains the largest stand of Ponderosa pine in the United States. The Mogollon Rim, a 2000-foot (600 m) escarpment, cuts across the central section of the state and marks the southwestern edge of the Colorado Plateau, where the state experienced its worst forest fire ever in 2002. Arizona belongs firmly within the Basin and Range province of North America. The region was shaped by prehistoric volcanism, followed by a cooling-off and related subsidence. The entire region is slowly sinking.
The Grand Canyon is a colorful, steep-sided gorge, carved by the Colorado River, in northern Arizona. The canyon is one of the seven natural wonders of the world and is largely contained in the Grand Canyon National Park—one of the first national parks in the United States. President Theodore Roosevelt was a major proponent of the Grand Canyon area, visiting on numerous occasions to hunt mountain lion and enjoy the scenery.
The Canyon, created by the Colorado River cutting a channel over millions of years, is about 277 miles (446 km) long, ranges in width from 4 to 18 miles (6 to 29 kilometers) and attains a depth of more than 1 mile (1.6 km). Nearly 2 billion years of the Earth's history has been exposed as the Colorado River and its tributaries cut through layer after layer of sediment as the Colorado Plateaus have uplifted.
Arizona does not observe Daylight Saving Time, except in the Navajo Nation located in the northeastern region of the state.
However, the northern third of Arizona is a plateau at significantly higher altitudes than the lower desert, and has an appreciably cooler climate, with cold winters and mild summers. Extreme cold temperatures are not unknown; cold air systems from the northern states and Canada occasionally push into the state, bringing temperatures below 0°F (–18°C) to the higher parts of the state.
Arizona has an average annual rainfall of 12.7 inches (322 mm), which comes during two rainy seasons, with cold fronts coming from the Pacific Ocean during the winter and a monsoon in the summer. The monsoon season occurs from the end of July through August and brings lightning, thunderstorms, wind, and torrential, if usually brief, downpours. It is rare for tornadoes and hurricanes to occur in Arizona, but there are records of both occurring.
Indicative of the variation in climate, Arizona is the state which has both the metropolitan area with the most days over 100°F (37.8°C) (Phoenix), and the metropolitan area in the lower 48 states with the most days with a low temperature below freezing (Flagstaff).
Historians disagree about the origin of the name "Arizona" and its attachment to the region. Three possible derivations are:
Meeting its original native inhabitants, Marcos de Niza, a Franciscan, explored the area in 1539. Coronado's expedition entered the area in 1540–42 during its search for Cíbola. Father Kino developed a chain of missions and taught the Indians Christianity in Pimería Alta (now southern Arizona and northern Sonora) in the 1690s and early 1700s. Spain founded fortified towns (presidios) at Tubac in 1752 and Tucson in 1775. All of what is now Arizona became part of Mexico's northwest frontier upon the Mexican assertion of independence from Spain in 1810. The United States took possession of most of Arizona at the end of the Mexican War in 1848, after paying the Mexican government. In 1853 the land below the Gila River was acquired from Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase. Arizona was administered as part of the Territory of New Mexico until it was organized into a separate territory on February 24, 1863.
Other names including "Gadsonia", "Pimeria", "Montezuma", "Arizuma", and "Arizonia" had been considered for the territory *, however when President Lincoln signed the final bill, it read "Arizona", and the name became permanent. Montezuma was not the Mexican Emperor, but the sacred name of a divine hero to the Pueblo people of the Gila valley, and was probably considered — and rejected — for its sentimental value, before the name "Arizona" was settled upon.
Brigham Young sent Mormons to Arizona in the mid-to-late 19th century. They founded Mesa, Snowflake, Heber, Safford and other towns. They also settled in the Phoenix Valley (or "Valley of the Sun"), Tempe, Prescott, among other areas.
Arizona became a U.S. state on February 14, 1912. Arizona was the 48th state admitted into the U.S. and the last of the contiguous states admitted.
Cotton farming and copper mining, two of Arizona's most important statewide industries, suffered heavily during the Great Depression, but it was during the 1920s and 1930s that tourism began to be the important Arizona industry it is today. Dude ranches such as the K L Bar and Remuda in Wickenburg, along with the Flying V and Tanque Verde in Tucson, gave tourists the chance to experience the flavor and life of the "old West." Several upscale hotels and resorts opened during this period, some of which are still top tourist draws to this day; they include the Arizona Biltmore in central Phoenix (opened 1929) and the Wigwam Resort on the west side of the Phoenix area (opened 1936).
Arizona was the site of German and Italian prisoner of war camps during WWII. The Phoenix area site was purchased after the war by the Maytag family (of major home appliance fame), and is currently utilized as the Phoenix Zoo. A Japanese American internment camp was located on Mount Lemmon, just outside of the state's southeastern city of Tucson. Another POW camp was located near the Gila River in eastern Yuma County.
Arizona's population grew tremendously after World War II, in part because of the development of air conditioning, which made the intense summers more comfortable. According to the Arizona Blue Book (published by the Secretary of State's office each year), the state population in 1910 was 294,353. By 1970 it was 1,752,122. The percentage growth each decade averaged about 20% in the earlier decades and about 60% each decade thereafter.
The 1960's saw the establishment of retirement communities, special age-restricted subdivisions catering exclusively to the needs of senior citizens who wanted to escape the harsh winters of the Midwest and the Northeast. Sun City, established by developer Del Webb and opened in 1960 was one of the first such communities. Green Valley, south of Tucson, was another such community designed to be a retirement subdivision for Arizona's teachers. (Many of these senior citizens arrive in Arizona each winter and stay only during the winter months; they are referred to as snowbirds.)
Three ships named USS Arizona have been named in honor of the state, although only USS Arizona (BB-39) was so named after statehood was achieved.
| Historical populations | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Census year | Population | Change | Percent Change |
| 1860 | 6,482 | - | - |
| 1870 | 9,658 | 3176 | 33% |
| 1880 | 40,440 | 30782 | 76% |
| 1890 | 88,243 | 47803 | 54% |
| 1900 | 122,931 | 34688 | 28% |
| 1910 | 204,354 | 81423 | 40% |
| 1920 | 334,162 | 129808 | 39% |
| 1930 | 435,573 | 101411 | 23% |
| 1940 | 499,261 | 63688 | 13% |
| 1950 | 749,587 | 250326 | 33% |
| 1960 | 1,302,161 | 552574 | 42% |
| 1970 | 1,770,900 | 468739 | 26% |
| 1980 | 2,718,215 | 947315 | 35% |
| 1990 | 3,665,228 | 947013 | 26% |
| 2000 | 5,130,632 | 1465404 | 29% |
As of 2005, Arizona had an estimated population of 5,939,292, which is an increase of 199,413, or 3.5%, from the prior year and an increase of 808,660, or 15.8%, since the year 2000. This includes a natural increase since the last census of 241,732 people (that is 462,739 births minus 221,007 deaths) and an increase due to net migration of 576,238 people into the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 168,078 people, and migration within the country produced a net increase of 408,160 people.
Arizona is projected to become a minority-majority state by the year 2035, if current population growth trends continue. In 2003, for the first time, there were more Hispanic births in the state than white (non-Hispanic) births.
As of 2000, 74.1% of Arizona residents age 5 and older speak only English at home and 19.5% speak Spanish. Navajo is the third most spoken language at 1.9%, followed by other Native North American languages at 0.6% and German at 0.5%.
49.9% of the population is male, 50.1% is female.
See also the list of Arizona Natives.
In 2001, 161,166 Arizonans were employed in the high-tech sector, accounting for about 8.3 percent of total private-sector employment of more than 1.9 million. High-tech payroll in 2001 was $2.2 billion, or 14.7 percent of the private-sector total. High-tech employment was led by software and computers, with 34,314; electronics components manufacturing, 30,358; aerospace manufacturing, 25,641; architectural and engineering services, 21,378; telecommunications, 21,224; and instruments manufacturing, 13,056.
The state rate on transient lodging (hotel/motel) is 7.27%. The state of Arizona does not levy a state tax on food for home consumption or on drugs prescribed by a licensed physician or dentist. However, some cities in Arizona do levy a tax on food for home consumption.
All fifteen Arizona counties levy a tax.
Incorporated municipalities also levy transaction privilege taxes which, with the exception of their hotel/motel tax, are generally in the range of 1-to-3 percent. These added assessments could push the combined sales tax rate to as high as 10.7 percent.
Phoenix is served by a network of freeways, many of which were initiated by a 1985 sales tax measure. Before this network, I-10 and I-17 handled almost all freeway traffic in Phoenix, placing a large burden on surface arterial streets, leading to increased traffic congestion as the area grew in size.
Much of the network as of this writing is nearing completion, with some new freeway routes under consideration south and west of the city to handle projected suburban population growth.
I-17 and I-10 remain the major interstate routes with US 60 being a major east-west route connecting Mesa and Tempe with Phoenix. State Route 101, commonly called "Loop 101", is a newer road with the most recent portions opened in 2000-2001. It comprises about 2/3 of a beltway, running north-south through West Phoenix and Glendale from I-10, then east-west through far north Phoenix, then north-south through Scottsdale and Tempe to meet with US 60. It then proceeds to meet with Loop 202, another beltline still under construction, which will serve Mesa, Gilbert and other southeast Phoenix suburbs.
State Route 51 (the Piestewa Freeway) connects downtown and central Phoenix with north Phoenix and Paradise Valley, and connects with the aforementioned Loop 101 at its northern end. 2/3 of this route was opened in 1999 and the remainder in 2003. It had been known as the Squaw Peak Parkway (for a nearby mountain), but this name was considered offensive to those in the Native American community. Both the road and the mountain were re-named in the spring of 2003 for US Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, a member of the Hopi tribe, the first woman to die in combat during the current Iraq War and the first Native American woman to die in combat while in the US Army.
Tucson is primarily served by I-10 and I-19. I-19 spilts off from I-10 in the southern part of Tucson, runs through southern Tucson (including an exit serving the historic Mission San Xavier) and the retirement community of Green Valley, and terminates in Nogales, in Santa Cruz County, at the international border with Mexico. Mileage signs have metric mileage figures in kilometers instead of standard miles.
State Route 210 (Barraza Aviation Parkway) is a limited-access parkway built in the early 1990's to connect downtown Tucson to the southeastern portion of the city. Few new limited-access roads are in the plans in Tucson due to strong community opposition to freeways.
As recently as 1959, many roads such as State Highway 87, the Beeline Highway between Phoenix and the small community of Payson in Gila County, were unpaved.
Yuma and Casa Grande are served by I-8; Flagstaff is served by I-17 and I-40. US Highway 95 parallels the Colorado River, from Las Vegas to the Mexican border near Yuma.
Historic U.S. Route 66, a major route for Midwestern emigrants prior to the advent of the interstate highway system, traversed the northern part of the state, passing through Flagstaff and Kingman. Route 66 in Arizona closely followed the route of what is now Interstate 40 except for an 88 mile stretch between Seligman and Kingman, now known as Arizona State Highway 66, where the route veered to the north passing through Peach Springs.
Other sizable airports without regularly scheduled commercial flights include Williams Gateway Airport (IWA) in Mesa, and Scottsdale Municipal Airport (IATA: SCF, ICAO: KSDL) in Scottsdale.
(See also: List of airports in Arizona)
The state capital of Arizona is in Phoenix. The original Capitol building, with its distinctive copper dome, was dedicated in 1901 (construction was completed for $136,000 in 1900), when the area was still a territory. Phoenix became the official state capital with Arizona's admission to the union in 1912.
Separate legislative buildings for the House of Representatives and Senate were dedicated in 1960, and an Executive Office Building was dedicated in 1974 (the ninth floor of this building is where the Office of the Governor is located). The original Capitol building was converted into a museum.
The Capitol complex is fronted and highlighted by the richly landscaped Wesley Bolin Memorial Park, named after Wesley Bolin, a governor who died in office in the 1970's. Numerous monuments and memorials are on the site, including the anchor and signal mast from the USS Arizona (one of the U.S. Navy ships sunk in Pearl Harbor); a granite version of the Ten Commandments; and the Arizona Vietnam Veterans' Memorial.
Arizona's legislature is bicameral (like the legislature of every other state except Nebraska) and consists of a thirty-member Senate and a 60-member House of Representatives. Legislators are elected for two-year terms.
Each Legislature covers a two-year period. The first session following the general election is known as the first regular session, and the session convening in the second year is known as the second regular session. Each regular session begins on the second Monday in January and adjourns sine die (terminates for the year) no later than Saturday of the week in which the 100th day from the beginning of the regular session falls. The President of the Senate and Speaker of the House, by rule, may extend the session up to seven additional days. Thereafter the session can only be extended by a majority vote of members present of each house.
The current majority party is the Republican Party, which has held power since 1950.
The 2002 budget of the Arizona Legislature was $14.3 billion, while the executive budget was $13.8 billion. Besides the money spent on state agencies, money has also been allocated for tax cuts, pay raises for government employees, and health insurance for government employees. The executive budget has allocated money to previously passed legislation. Arizona state senators and representatives are elected for two year terms and there are no terms limits. However, no more than four terms may be served consecutively.
Arizona's executive branch is headed by a governor elected for a four-year term. The governor may serve any number of terms, though no more than two in a row. The current governor of Arizona is Janet Napolitano, a Democrat. She has been governor since 2003.
The two U.S. Senators from Arizona are Senator John McCain (Republican) and Senator Jon Kyl (Republican).
Arizona's representatives in the United States House of Representatives are Rick Renzi (R-1), Trent Franks (R-2), John Shadegg (R-3), Ed Pastor (D-4), J.D. Hayworth (R-5), Jeff Flake (R-6), Raul Grijalva (D-7), and Jim Kolbe (R-8). Jim Kolbe announced his retirement from Congress in 2006, creating one of the few open seats in the nation in Arizona's Congressional District 8. Arizona gained two seats in the House of Representatives due to redistricting based on Census 2000.
While the Republican Party has traditionally dominated Arizona politics since the 1950s, the state's changing demographics reflect political changes. Arizona narrowly voted for Bill Clinton in 1996, the first Democrat to take the state in decades. In 2004, George W. Bush won the state's ten electoral votes by a margin of 11 percentage points with 54.9 percent of the vote. The state's concentration of Democrats is strongest in the city of Tucson (excluding Tucson's historically Republican-dominated suburbs) and the counties of Santa Cruz and Apache. Maricopa County, home of Phoenix and the fourth-most populous in the country, has voted Republican in every presidential election since at least 1952. On the other hand, the current mayor of Phoenix, Phil Gordon, is a Democrat. The current state attorney general and governor are also both Democrats. Both Governor Napolitano and Attorney General Terry Goddard are widely expected to win their up-coming elections, with no serious contenders having appeared yet for the Republican Party.
''See also : United States presidential election, 2004, in Arizona
See: List of cities in Arizona, List of cities in Arizona (by population), List of Arizona counties
Phoenix, the largest city in the state, is the capital. The Phoenix metro area includes Mesa, Glendale, Chandler, Tempe and Scottsdale, with a total population of nearly 3.9 million.
Tucson is the state's second largest city, located 135 miles (220 km) southeast of the Phoenix metropolitan area. The Tucson metropolitan area has a population rapidly nearing 1 million.
Each city named in bold has a population greater than 100,000.
| City | Income | City | Income |
| 1 Paradise Valley, Arizona | $81,290 | 14 Sedona, Arizona | $31,350 |
| 2 Carefree, Arizona | $62,433 | 15 Green Valley, Arizona | $31,138 |
| 3 Rio Verde, Arizona | $58,783 | 16 Oro Valley, Arizona | $31,134 |
| 4 Tubac, Arizona | $46,643 | 17 Williamson, Arizona | $30,232 |
| 5 Catalina Foothills, Arizona | $42,006 | 18 Big Park, Arizona | $30,026 |
| 6 Scottsdale, Arizona | $39,158 | 19 Queen Valley, Arizona | $28,886 |
| 7 Cave Creek, Arizona | $38,070 | 20 Corona de Tucson, Arizona | $28,304 |
| 8 Litchfield Park, Arizona | $37,793 | 21 Elgin, Arizona | $27,909 |
| 9 Tanque Verde, Arizona | $36,467 | 22 Sonoita, Arizona | $27,312 |
| 10 Gold Camp, Arizona | $35,010 | 23 Sun City, Arizona | $25,935 |
| 11 Sun Lakes, Arizona | $33,394 | 24 New River, Arizona | $25,932 |
| 12 Fountain Hills, Arizona | $32,230 | 25 Tortolita, Arizona | $25,550 |
| 13 Sun City West, Arizona | $32,049 | See complete list of Arizona places | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Club | Sport | League |
|---|---|---|
| Arizona Cardinals | Football | National Football League |
| Arizona Diamondbacks | Baseball | Major League Baseball |
| Arizona Rattlers | Arena Football | Arena Football League |
| Arizona Sting | Lacrosse | National Lacrosse League |
| Mesa Miners | Baseball | Golden Baseball League |
| Phoenix Coyotes | Ice hockey | National Hockey League |
| Phoenix Mercury | Basketball | Women's National Basketball Association |
| Phoenix Roadrunners | Ice Hockey | East Coast Hockey League |
| Phoenix Suns | Basketball | National Basketball Association |
| Surprise Fightin’ Falcons | Baseball | Golden Baseball League |
| Tucson Sidewinders | Baseball | Minor League Baseball |
| Yuma Scorpions | Baseball | Golden Baseball League |
Many tourist souvenirs produced in Arizona or by its residents display characteristic images, such as sunsets, coyotes, and desert plants. Several major Hollywood films, such as U-Turn, Waiting to Exhale, Just One of the Guys, Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, Scorpion King, The Banger Sisters, Used Cars, and Raising Arizona have been made there (as indeed have many Westerns). The Jeff Foxworthy comedy documentary movie Blue Collar Comedy Tour was filmed almost entirely at the Dodge Theatre. Arguably one of the most famous examples could be Alfred Hitchcock's classic film Psycho. Not only was some of the film shot in Phoenix, but the main character is from there as well. Some of the television shows filmed in Arizona include Insomniac with Dave Attell, COPS, and America's Most Wanted.
See also List of films shot in Arizona
Arizona notables in culture and the arts include:
For a complete list, see List of people from Arizona.
One of the most famous UFO sightings in Arizona are the infamous Phoenix Lights. These are one of the most heavily witnessed UFO sightings ever. The sightings occurred on March 13, 1997. The five lights in a "V"-shape were first spotted in Henderson, Nevada, and then moved to Paulden, on to Prescott Valley, to Dewey, and then finally to Phoenix. After the lights left Phoenix, they moved toward Tucson, following Interstate 10 at a slow pace. UFO witnesses and investigators claim these lights have never been completely explained; at the time of the occurrence, the Arizona Air National Guard issued a public statement that the 'mysterious' lights were likely flares dropped by a Maryland Air National Guard training mission which was in the area and returning to Tucson at about the time the lights were reported.
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