Eldorado Mountains

Eldorado Mountains
El Dorado Mountains

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Eldorado Mountains
in Nevada [1]

Highest point
Peak Ireteba Peak[2] (Eldorado Mountains)
Elevation 5,060 ft (1,540 m)
Geography
Country United States
State Nevada
District Clark County
Range coordinates 35°48′27″N 114°46′58″W / 35.8075°N 114.7828°WCoordinates: 35°48′27″N 114°46′58″W / 35.8075°N 114.7828°W
Topo map USGS Boulder City SE

The Eldorado Mountains, also called the El Dorado Mountains, are a north-south trending mountain range in southeast Nevada bordering west of the south-flowing Colorado River; the endorheic Eldorado Valley borders the range to the west, and the range is also on the western border of the Colorado River's Black Canyon of the Colorado, and El Dorado Canyon on the river. The range is 50 miles (80 km) southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada; and the Eldorado Mountains connect with the Highland and Newberry mountains.[3]

The name El Dorado is taken from the name of a legendary gold mine, and the ghost town-mining location of Nelson in Nelson Canyon, transects the central portion of the range. The Nelson Overlook is a viewing point over the Colorado River's El Doroado Canyon.

The mountain range contains the El Dorado Wilderness of 31,950 acres (12,930 ha) in the north, where the southwest of the wilderness area is in the El Dorado Mountains. In the south, Ireteba Peaks Wilderness of 32,745 acres (13,251 ha) is composed of the Ireteba Ridge at 5,013 feet (1,528 m),[4] that overlooks to the east, the northern portions of Lake Mohave and the El Dorado Canyon. The high point of the El Dorado Mountains is Ireteba Peak at 5,060 feet (1,542 m), which is named for the Mohave Indian guide Ireteba.

Some communities associated with the range, are in the south, Searchlight on US 95 and Cottonwood Cove, on the river. Nelson is in the center of the range, and the nearest community north is Boulder City.

References

  1. "Eldorado Mountains". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  2. Nevada Atlas & Gazetteer, Delorme, c. 2010, p. 72.
  3. Tracy, C. Richard; Hagerty, Bridgette E (6 April 2010). "Defining population structure for the Mojave desert tortoise". p. 1803. Retrieved 2010-10-29. Searchlight Pass, a connection point for the Eldorado, Newberry, and Highland mountain ranges.
  4. "Ireteba Peaks". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2009-05-04.

External links