Sacramento Mountains

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Sacramento Mountains
Range
none The western escarpment of the Sacramento Mountains, looking south from Dog Canyon.
The western escarpment of the Sacramento Mountains, looking south from Dog Canyon.
Country United States
State New Mexico
Borders on Guadalupe Mountains, Capitan Mountains
Highest point Cathey Peak
 - elevation 9,645 ft (2,940 m)
 - coordinates 32°48′27″N 105°47′59″W / 32.8075, -105.79972
Length 85 mi (137 km), N-S
Width 42 mi (68 km), W-E
Geology Limestone
Location of the Sacramento Mountains within New Mexico
Location of the Sacramento Mountains within New Mexico

The Sacramento Mountains are a mountain range in the south-central part of the U.S. state of New Mexico, lying just east of Alamogordo in Otero County (small portions of the range lie in Lincoln County and Chaves County). From north to south, the Sacramento Mountains extend for 85 miles (137 km), and from east to west they encompass 42 miles (68 km).[1]

The Sacramentos can be divided into two sections: a main, northern section, encompassing most of the land area and all of the terrain above 7,500 feet (2,290 m), and a smaller southeastern section, contiguous with the Guadalupe Mountains. Neighboring ranges and landforms include the Tularosa Basin, immediately to the west of the main section of the range; the Sierra Blanca and Capitan Mountains to the northwest and northeast; the Border Hills and the western edge of the broad Pecos River valley to the east; the Guadalupe Mountains to the southeast; and Otero Mesa, which lies south of the main section and southwest of the southeastern section. The Rio Tularosa and the Rio Ruidoso (and hence U.S. Route 70) separate the Sacramentos from the Sierra Blanca and the Capitan Mountains.[2]

The western edge of the main section of the Sacramento Mountains forms a series of dramatic escarpments leading up to a high ridge, which includes the highest point in the range, Cathey Peak, 9,645 feet (2,940 m). From this ridge the mountains slope gently down to the east, merging gradually with the plains to the west of Artesia. The range is a wide, gently east-dipping fault block, made up almost entirely of limestone. Gypsum deposits washed from the range are a main source of the gypsum sand that makes up the dunes in White Sands National Monument. The Sacramento Mountains form the easternmost part of the rift system centered on the rift valley of the Rio Grande. The rock strata in the Sacramentos were originally contiguous with those of the San Andres Mountains on the other side of the Tularosa Basin, and have been separated because of down-faulting of the basin. Unlike the Sacramento Mountains, the neighboring Sierra Blanca are an extrusive igneous complex.

Most of the main section of the Sacramento Mountains are part of the Lincoln National Forest, though the northern part of the range is included in the Mescalero Apache Indian Reservation. Evidence of Apache presence dates back to the fifteenth century.[3] The range includes the town of Cloudcroft, a popular resort; the town of Ruidoso, also popular for recreation, lies on its northern edge. The range also includes the National Solar Observatory on Sacramento Peak, midway down the western ridge, just southwest of Cathey Peak. There are numerous hiking trails in the portion of the range that lies within the Lincoln National Forest, although there is no officially designated wilderness.

[edit] References

  1. ^ These figures are derived from the official description of the range by the Board on Geographic Names, see the USGS GNIS: Sacramento Mountains for the range.
  2. ^ Some sources include the Sierra Blanca, Carrizo Mountain, and the Jicarilla Mountains under the term "Sacramento Mountains," but this usage is not official. See e.g. New Mexico Atlas and Gazetteer, DeLorme Mapping, 2000.
  3. ^ Butterfield, Mike, and Greene, Peter, Mike Butterfield's Guide to the Mountains of New Mexico, New Mexico Magazine Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-937206-88-1