San Andres Mountains facts for kids
Quick facts for kids San Andres Mountains |
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Black and Bennett Mts. on the southeastern end of the San Andres Mountains
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Highest point | |
Peak | Salinas Peak |
Elevation | 8,965 ft (2,733 m) |
Dimensions | |
Length | 75 mi (121 km) N-S |
Width | 12 mi (19 km) W-E |
Geography | |
Country | United States |
State | New Mexico |
Borders on | Organ Mountains |
Geology | |
Type of rock | Limestone |
The San Andres Mountains are a mountain range in the southwestern U.S. state of New Mexico, in the counties of Socorro, Sierra, and Doña Ana. The range extends about 75 miles (120 km) north to south, but are only about 12 miles (19 km) wide at their widest. The highest peak in the San Andres Mountains is Salinas Peak, at 8,965 feet (2,733 m).
Contents
Geography
Though nearly contiguous with the Organ Mountains to the south, the two are very distinct geologically and botanically. The Oscura Mountains to the north are separated from the San Andres Mountains by Mockingbird Gap and the much lower Little Burro Mountains. The San Andres Mountains are comparatively dry and do not support any extensive woodlands. They are mostly closed to the public, lying almost entirely within the restricted White Sands Missile Range.
Geology
The San Andres Mountains form part of the eastern edge of the rift valley of the Rio Grande, and are made up of west-dipping fault blocks made primarily of San Andres Formation limestone, but also with extensive exposures of reddish Abo Formation sandstone on the western side, and quartz monzonite on the eastern side. Gypsum deposits washed from these mountains are the main source of the dunes in White Sands National Park.
Significant summits include:
Mountain | Height (ft) | Height (m) | Coordinates | Prominence (ft) |
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Salinas Peak | 8,965 | 2,733 | 33°17′55″N 106°31′53″W / 33.2986°N 106.5315°W | 3,625 |
San Andres Peak | 8,235 | 2,510 | 32°40′34″N 106°32′13″W / 32.6760°N 106.5369°W | 2,525 |
Chalk Hills High Point | 7,988 | 2,435 | 33°10′47″N 106°43′21″W / 33.1796°N 106.7226°W | 1,728 |
Unnamed Peak | 7,646 | 2,331 | 32°54′16″N 106°34′49″W / 32.9045°N 106.5803°W | 1,899 |
Gardner Peak | 7,534 | 2,296 | 32°49′27″N 106°33′45″W / 32.8242°N 106.5624°W | 2,052 |
Black Brushy Mountain | 7,521 | 2,292 | 32°35′51″N 106°31′08″W / 32.5976°N 106.5189°W | 1,701 |
Capitol Peak | 7,098 | 2,163 | 33°24′24″N 106°25′30″W / 33.4068°N 106.4249°W | 1,833 |
Desert bighorn sheep
The biggest and best desert bighorn sheep habitat in New Mexico is in the San Andres Mountains, which can host up to 400 bighorn. An area of 57,215 acres (231.54 km2) in the southern portion of the San Andres Mountain range was set aside in 1941 as the San Andres National Wildlife Refuge to help preserve the desert bighorn sheep, which at the time numbered 33. In the mid 1970s there were around 200 sheep in the refuge; however, in 1979, a scabies mite epizootic reduced the population from 200 to 75. Subsequent years brought further declines from scabies and other causes until the population consisted of one ewe in 1997. Reintroduction of desert bighorn sheep occurred in 2002 and the herd has now about 80 members.
See also
In Spanish: Sierra de San Andrés (Nuevo México) para niños