Cañada del Oro
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cañada del Oro | |
---|---|
Origin | Mount Lemmon (north face) |
Mouth | Santa Cruz River |
Basin countries | United States (Arizona) |
Length | 77.25 km (48 miles) |
Source elevation | 2,768 m (9,080 ft) |
Avg. discharge | 792.87 m³/s (28,000 ft³/s) (peak) [1] |
Basin area | N/A km² (N/A mi²) |
The Cañada del Oro (Spanish for Canyon of Gold), is a primary watershed channel in the valley of Tucson, Arizona, USA. The word cañada has a tilde (ñ) and is pronounced [kaˈɲaða] in Spanish; in English it is pronounced [kəˈnjɑːdə] kuh-NYAH-duh, not like the country of Canada.
The Cañada del Oro originates in the remote Canyon del Oro in the Santa Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, fed by rainfall and melted snow from the northern face of Mount Lemmon and flows northward toward the town of Oracle. The Cañada del Oro is a perennial creek in Canyon del Oro while at higher altitudes. The Cañada del Oro then curves from flowing northward to southward through the town of Oro Valley north of Tucson, where it is usually a dry riverbed. In Oro Valley the Cañada del Oro collects watershed from the western face of the Santa Catalina Mountains. The Cañada del Oro ultimately feeds into the Santa Cruz River just northwest of Tucson, the principal watershed channel in the Tucson valley.
Historically, the Cañada del Oro was the focus of significant interest in gold mining, beginning with Spanish explorers in the 17th century. Following the Mexican-American War, American gold-rushers continued the search for the valuable mineral through the 1930s. Prospectors discovered minimal amounts of gold in the Cañada del Oro through placer mining operations, and reportedly mined gold in the lost Mine with the Iron Door [2]. The lost mine is the subject of a novel of the same name written by Harold Bell Wright in 1923 [3].