Navajo Mountain

Navajo Mountain
Navajo: Naatsisʼáán

Navajo Mountain and Lake Powell, looking southeast from the Kaiparowits Plateau
Highest point
Elevation 10,348 ft (3,154 m) NAVD 88[1]
Prominence 4,226 ft (1,288 m)[2]
Coordinates 37°02′03″N 110°52′10″W / 37.034253908°N 110.869576753°W / 37.034253908; -110.869576753Coordinates: 37°02′03″N 110°52′10″W / 37.034253908°N 110.869576753°W / 37.034253908; -110.869576753[1]
Geography
Navajo Mountain

Location in Utah
near the Arizona state line

Location
Topo map USGS Navajo Begay
Geology
Mountain type Laccolith
Climbing
Easiest route Radio Towers Road

Navajo Mountain (Navajo: Naatsisʼáán) is a peak in San Juan County, Utah, with its southern flank extending into Coconino County, Arizona. It holds an important place in the traditions of three local Native American tribes. The summit is the highest point on the Navajo Nation.[2]

Geologic history

Navajo Mountain is a prominent free-standing laccolith, a dome-shaped body of igneous rock that intruded into sedimentary layers and lifted up the overlying layer. The igneous rock at the core of the mountain is wrapped in sedimentary layers. Such igneous intrusions have been exposed by erosion and well studied in similar mountain ranges on the Colorado Plateau, such as the Henry Mountains, the Abajo Mountains, and the La Sal Range.[3]

Navajo Mountain from space

The Colorado Plateau is made of mostly flat-lying layers of sedimentary rock that record paleoclimate extremes ranging from oceans to widespread deserts over the last 1.8 billion years. The peak of Navajo Mountain, at approximately 10,388 feet (3,166 m), is made up of uplifted Dakota Sandstone deposited during the Cretaceous Period (approximately 66-138 million years ago).[3]

Cultural history

The Navajo Mountain region has special cultural significance to the Navajo people, who know it as Naatsisʼáán ("Earth Head" or "Pollen Mountain").[4] Together with Rainbow Bridge to the northwest, Navajo Mountain figures prominently as the first settlement area in western Navajo origin stories. Following the military defeat of the Diné (Navajo people) by United States forces in 1863, the political landscape was changed by new boundaries and major physical alterations. The establishment of Rainbow Bridge National Monument (1910), and the filling of Glen Canyon by Lake Powell in 1963, has facilitated tourism of this previously remote region. Access to Navajo Mountain is still regulated by the sovereign Navajo Nation, and a permit is required to hike in the region. Climbing the mountain itself is forbidden.[5]

Before becoming part of the Navajo Nation, the area was inhabited by the Anasazi, or Ancestral Puebloans. Their descendants, the Hopi, call Navajo Mountain Tokonave, or "Heart of the Earth".[6] Ruins in the area of Navajo Mountain are still strongly associated with certain Hopi clans, with priests still making pilgrimages to shrines in the area.[6]

Before 1933, when the area between the Colorado and San Juan Rivers and the Arizona border was added to the Navajo reservation, the area was known as the Paiute Strip, and the mountain itself was known as Paiute Mountain, due to the population of San Juan Paiutes living between the mountain and Monument Valley.[7]

Ecology

The Navajo Mountain beardtongue (Penstemon navajoa) is a rare plant limited mainly to the upper elevation slopes of Navajo Mountain.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 "San Juan". NGS data sheet. U.S. National Geodetic Survey. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  2. 1 2 "Navajo Mountain, Utah". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  3. 1 2 "Navajo Mountain, Utah". NASA Earth Observatory. Retrieved 2006-05-02.
  4. Houk, Rose (2003). The Mountains Know Arizona. Phoenix: Arizona Highways Books. ISBN 978-1893860872.
  5. "Travel Navajo Nation". Navajo Nation Parks and Recreation. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  6. 1 2 Courlander, Harold (1971). The Fourth World of the Hopis: the epic story of the Hopi Indians as preserved in their legends and traditions. Albuquerque: New Mexico University Press. p. 239. ISBN 978-0826310118.
  7. Trimble, Stephen (1993). The People: Indians of the American Southwest. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research. p. 536. ISBN 9780933452367.
  8. "Penstemon navajoa". The Nature Conservancy. Retrieved 2014-02-07.

External links

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