Bridger Mountains (Montana)

For the mountain range in Wyoming, see Bridger Mountains (Wyoming).
Bridger Mountains

West face of the Bridger Range
Highest point
Peak Sacagawea Peak[1]
Elevation 9,665 ft (2,946 m)
Geography

Location within the state of Montana

Country United States
State Montana
Range coordinates 45°53′N 110°58′W / 45.89°N 110.96°W / 45.89; -110.96Coordinates: 45°53′N 110°58′W / 45.89°N 110.96°W / 45.89; -110.96
Parent range Rocky Mountains

The Bridger Range (highest point: Sacagawea Peak 9,665 feet (2,946 m)) is a subrange of the Rocky Mountains, in southwestern Montana in the United States. The range runs mostly in a north - south direction between Bozeman and Maudlow and is separated from the Gallatin Range to the south by Bozeman Pass, the Horseshoe Hills to the west by Dry Creek, the Crazy Mountains to the east by the Shields River valley and the Big Belt Mountains to the north by Sixteen Mile Creek. Bozeman Pass, el. 5,712 feet (1,741 m), is a narrow pass that lies between Bozeman and Livingston. Sacagawea Peak is a prominent peak visible to the northeast from Bozeman. The entire range is within Gallatin National Forest. Although the range is for the most part in Gallatin County a small portion of the range extends into Park County, Montana.

History

The Native American Sacagawea led the Lewis and Clark Expedition through Bozeman Pass and some have suggested the pass should have been named after her instead of John Bozeman.

The range is named after Jim Bridger, who pioneered the Bridger Trail through mountains in southern Wyoming into the Bighorn Basin in 1864.

On January 10, 1938, Northwest Airlines Flight 2 crashed in the Bridger Mountains, killing all 10 aboard. This was the first fatal crash of a Northwest Airlines aircraft.

Prominent peaks

The most prominent peaks in the Bridgers include:

East face of Bridger Range
Northwest face of Bridger Range

Skiing

The Bridger Range is also home to ski area Bridger Bowl. With the first rope tow installed in 1951, Bridger Bowl became a primarily locals mountain, the area has a top elevation of 8700 ft and a base elevation of 6100 ft. On average the ski area receives 350 inches of snow every year. Backcountry skiing is also very popular with snow being available on peaks such as Sacagawea from early November until late May/early June. Beginning the 2008-2009 ski season, Bridger Bowl started to allow backcountry travel from the ski area via access gates on the northern and southern boundaries.

Hiking

Though many hiking trails exist, Sacagawea Peak is a favorite hiking area in the Bridgers. The hike is a short, yet rather strenuous, 2.2 mile one-way trek through pine forest, alpine tundra and scree fields to the top of Sacagawea Peak. The Bridger Ridge Run is a 20-mile race which takes place mid-August. The race follows the ridge line from Fairy Lake to the southern end of the range.

Images of the Bridger Range
Bridger Range as seen from Bozeman, January 2009 
Ross Peak, Bridger Range, April 2010 
Sacagwawea Peak (right) and Naya Nuki Peak (left), April 2010 
View of the Bridger Range looking south from the summit of Sacagawea Peak 

See also

Notes

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bridger Range.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.