Buckskin Mountain (Arizona-Utah)

Buckskin Mountain is a 16-mile (26 km) mountain ridge that spans from Coconino County, Arizona to Kane County, Utah in the United States,[1][2]:58–59 [3]:28 & 62 that is divided almost equally between the two counties.

Buckskin Mountain
Buckskin Mountain
Buckskin Mountain of Arizona and Utah
Highest point
Elevation6,668 ft (2,032 m)
Coordinates36°58′33″N 112°06′16″W
Dimensions
Length15 mi (24 km) NNESSW
Geography
CountryUnited States
StatesArizona and Utah
RegionsKaibab Plateau and Vermilion Cliffs
CountiesCoconino County, AZ and Kane County, UT
Borders on
Topo mapUSGS Buckskin Mountain

Description

Buckskin Gulch region at the northeast end of Buckskin Mountain, August 2009

The ridge lies at the north end of the Kaibab Plateau, of the North Rim of the Grand Canyon; the Kanab and Paria[4] plateaus of Arizona, lie southwest, and southeast. Buckskin Mountain borders the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, southeast. The north portion of the ridge in Utah was located in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, but was in one of the sections that was later removed from the monument. The northeast ridge terminus is Buckskin Gulch. To the ridge's east, across the narrow Coyote Valley,[5] of the north-flowing Coyote Wash,[6] lies the Coyote Buttes of Arizona. The ridge trends approximately north-northeast, and descends steeply on its southeast flank to Coyote Wash. The ridge's highpoint is located just south of the state border in Arizona at 6,668 feet (2,032 m).[3]:62

Prior to 1989, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) had identified three difference mountains in the area named Buckskin Mountain: two in northern Coconino County, Arizona.[1][7] and one near the southern edge of central Kane County Utah.[8] While the USGS database still lists all three, a decision card for one of the Coconino County landforms, dated February 9, 1989, indicates two significant changes.<ref."Buckskin Mountain" (PDF). geonames.usgs.gov. United States Geological Survey. February 9, 1989. Retrieved June 5, 2020.</ref> First, it defined the landform as a ridge, rather than a summit. Second, it provided a description (with associated coordinates) that ran from the Rock Canyon[9] immediately north of the border of the Kaibab National Forest northeasterly to western part of the Kaibab Gulch (which is also known as the Buckskin Gulch). This new description and the new coordinates encompass the locations of the three summits—effectively combining the three into a single landform.

Access

The northeast, east, and south of Buckskin Mountain can be accessed from U.S. Route 89A (US 89A) from House Rock, Arizona, via the House Rock Road (BLM Road 1065). The road is almost due-north trending, and in Utah, the road becomes the House Rock Valley Road, connecting to U.S. Route 89 (US‑89), 17 miles (27 km) west of Big Water.[2]:59

Regions around the west and northwest of Buckskin Mountain can be accessed from Kanab, and Canyon Point, Utah, 8 miles (13 km) east of Kanab, on US‑89. At the ridges northwest flank, US‑89 turns northeasterly, with access by unimproved roads.

The unimproved routes on the west, and southeast also connect to an improved route at the south terminus of the ridge. The route comes from House Rock Valley Road, east, and its west route terminus, at US 89A, 7 miles (11 km) east[2]:58 of Fredonia, Arizona.

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gollark: Weird. Why is that? If it's just labour and materials, which drives the most of the increase?
gollark: Also, less pollution.
gollark: I live in some random place in the middle of nowhere, and while that's generally annoying it means housing is cheap, if little else.
gollark: In a sane system, there would be more houses built to compensate for demand. Unfortunately in a lot of places there seem to be weird obstacles to this, like zoning stuff and people living there saying "no development, we must have high housing prices".

See also

References


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