Los Alamos, city, seat (1949) of Los Alamos county, north-central New Mexico, U.S. It lies on the Pajarito Plateau (elevation 7,300 feet [2,225 metres]) of the Jemez Mountains, 35 miles (56 km) northwest of Santa Fe. The site was named Los Alamos (Spanish: “the cottonwoods”) by Ashley Pond, founder of the Los Alamos Ranch School for Boys (1918–43).
In 1942 Los Alamos was chosen by the U.S. government (because of its comparative isolation and natural facilities) as the location for the Atomic Research Laboratory, then known as the Manhattan Project, which developed the first nuclear-fission, or atomic, bomb. After World War II, the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (later called Los Alamos National Laboratory) developed the first thermonuclear-fusion, or hydrogen, bomb. The laboratory, which is operated by the University of California under contract with the federal government, conducts solar and nuclear research and utilizes more than 300 buildings and a 77-square-mile (199-square-km) area.
A modern city was built by the government to house employees of the laboratory. It was made “open” in 1957, and in 1962 there was a transfer of property from federal to private ownership. The laboratory remains the city’s largest employer. The city has a science museum and a history museum. Bandelier National Monument, site of Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi) ruins, is nearby. Los Alamos was incorporated with a consolidated city-county government in 1969. Pop. (2000) 11,909; (2010) 12,019.