Hello and welcome!
Your tvfool report was only resolved to a city level. Since your area is surrounded by mountains, it's really important to get a more accurate analysis for the location of your house. The generic city-level analysis might not show the same results as your true location.
Address lookups don't always work, so the best thing to do is to use the Interactive Maps feature (link is
here). This will bring up a map of your area and allow you to move the point being analyzed. If you switch the map to "satellite" view, you can zoom in to see house-level details. To adjust the location being analyzed, just drag and drop the orange marker. You can also edit the value for antenna height to experiment with making the antenna higher or lower.
When you have the marker and height settings the where you want them, you can press the "Make Radar Plot" button to generate a radar plot report with the current settings. If you post the URL for that analysis, we can get a better look at your signal situation.
Just based on the city-level analysis, it does look like you have a handful of translator stations serving your area. The channels you picked up are probably one of the translator stations (channels with numbers in their callsign) rebroadcasting content from the major stations around Santa Fe and Albuquerque.
Not all translator stations have fully converted to digital signals yet, but most of them should be done sometime this year.
Each digital channel is capable of sending multiple sub-channels. That is, one physical channel (e.g., RF channel 33) might contain multiple sub-channels with different programming (e.g., x.1, x.2, etc.). All the sub-channels are carried on the same signal, so if you get one of them, you can get them all.
Just FYI, all the channels ending in .0 are analog stations, and the rest are digital.
The major channel number (the value before the decimal point) on digital stations is a "virtual" channel number. That is, even if a channel shows up on your screen as 7.1 and 7.2, it might actually be broadcast on a different channel number like 33. When you turn your TV to channel 7.1, it is actually tuning to the true RF frequency of the broadcast, which might be different than the major channel number you see. I suspect that the digital channels you are seeing (KASA, KOAT, and KRQE) are actually coming from some of the digital translator stations in your area (maybe channels 33, 38, and 23).
If you want to find out what real RF channel you are watching, most TVs have the ability to show you both the real and virtual channel numbers for the station you are watching. That option might be hidden somewhere in the menus, but there's a good chance it's in there. That will help you identify exactly which transmitters are active and receivable from your house.