San Pitch Mountains

San Pitch Mountains

View NW toward Moroni, Utah.
North section of San Pitch Mountains on left of photo.
Highest point
Peak Salt Creek Peak ((north terminus)-San Pitch Mountains)
Elevation 9,997 ft (3,047 m)
Dimensions
Length 40 mi (64 km) N-S
Geography

San Pitch Mountains
in Utah

Country United States
State Utah
Counties Juab and Sanpete
Communities
Range coordinates 39°23′N 111°45′W / 39.39°N 111.75°W / 39.39; -111.75Coordinates: 39°23′N 111°45′W / 39.39°N 111.75°W / 39.39; -111.75
Borders on Juab Valley-W
East Tintic Mountains-NW
Wasatch Range-N-(attached)
Sanpete Valley (landform)-E
(Wasatch Plateau-E & SE)
Sevier River-SW
(Valley Mountains-SW)

The San Pitch Mountains are a 40-mile (64 km) long[1] mountain range located in Juab and Sanpete Counties, Utah, USA. The range's southwest lies adjacent a north-flowing stretch of the Sevier River, as it transitions north, northwest, west, and then southwest into the Sevier Desert. The river traverses around the adjacent mountain ranges of the Valley and Canyon Mountains.

The range is north-south trending and located between the Juab Valley west and the Sanpete Valley east. Yuba State Park is in the south of Juab Valley and borders the range's southwest, on the Sevier River.

The San Pitch Mountains are the location of Maple Canyon, which along with adjoining Box Canyon is an internationally famous rock climbing area, due to the composition of the rock walls being a conglomerate, with hundreds of routes of widely varying difficulty.

Mountain peaks

The highpoint of the range is Salt Creek Peak, 9,997 feet (3,047 m),[2] located at the north terminus of the range, and close to the Wasatch Range. The center of the range lies between Big Baldy, 8,775 feet (2,675 m) southeasterly, and Little Red Hill, 6,836 feet (2,084 m), at center-northwest.

Access

The west mountain perimeter is traversed by Utah Route 28 through Levan. The east side of the range through Sanpete Valley is traversed by Utah Route 132 and U.S. 89.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Pitch Mountains.
  1. Utah, DeLorme Atlas & Gazetteer, p. 34-35.
  2. DeLorme Atlas, p. 34-35.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/18/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.