Vail Pass
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vail Pass | |
---|---|
Rest area on Interstate 70 on the east side of Vail Pass |
|
Elevation | 10,662 ft./3249 m. |
Location | Colorado, United States |
Range | Rocky Mountains |
Coordinates | |
Topo map | Terraserver map |
Traversed by | Interstate 70 |
Vail Pass (10,662 feet, 3249 m) is a high mountain pass in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado. The pass was named for Charles Vail, a highway engineer.
Vail Pass lies on the boundary between Eagle and Summit counties, between Vail on the west and Dillon on the east. It provides the route of Interstate 70 (and earlier U.S. Highway 6) between the upper basins of the Eagle River and the Blue River, both tributaries of the Colorado River. Black Gore Creek, a tributary of Gore Creek, in the watershed of the Eagle, descends from the north side of the pass towards the town of Vail. West Tenmile Creek, in the watershed of the Blue, descends from the south side. The pass is significantly steep on either side (7 to 8%), and runaway truck ramps prevent disasters for truckers.
The pass was not a traditional historical route of the Rockies. Prior to 1940, the most common route westward was over nearby Shrine Pass, just to the south, which leads to the town of the Red Cliff in the upper Eagle Valley.
In 1940, the construction of U.S. Highway 6 bypassed Shrine Pass in favor of the current route to the valley of Gore Creek.
[edit] External links