Black Hills (Yavapai County) Explained

Black Hills (Yavapai County)
Mingus Mountain
Photo Size:305px
Country:United States
Subdivision1:Arizona
Subdivision2 Type:Region
Subdivision2:Arizona transition zone
(north-central to Sonoran Desert)
Subdivision3 Type:County
Subdivision3:Yavapai
Settlement Type:Settlements
Subdivision4 Type:River
Subdivision4:Verde River
Range Coordinates:34.7497°N -112.1753°W
Length Mi:45
Length Orientation:NW-SE
Width Mi:15
Highest:Woodchute Mountain
Elevation Ft:7844
Coordinates:34.7497°N -112.1753°W
Map:USA Arizona

The Black Hills of Yavapai County (in Yavapai: Waulkayauayau – "pine tableland") are a large mountain range of central Arizona in southeast Yavapai County. It is bordered by the Verde Valley to the east. The northwest section of the range is bisected from the southeast section by Interstate 17, which is the main route connecting Phoenix to Sedona, Oak Creek Canyon, and Flagstaff. This bisection point is the approximate center of the mostly northwest by southeast trending range. The northwest section contains a steep escarpment on the northeast with the Verde Valley, the escarpment being the location of the fault-block that created the historic mining district at Jerome. The United Verde Mine was one of the largest copper mines in the United States, producing large quantities of copper, gold, silver and zinc.[1]

The range is also the first major fault-blocked range west of the Mogollon Rim on the southwest margin of the Colorado Plateau in Arizona. They are bordered to the east by the Verde Fault zone, and to the west by the Coyote Fault zone. The range is at the northwest-center of the Arizona transition zone which extends diagonally across central Arizona.[2]

Description

The highest point of the Black Hills (Arizona) is Woodchute Mountain at 7844feet.[3] Mingus Mountain lies south of Woodchute Mountain with historic Cherry further to the southeast.

Three wilderness areas are located in the range, the Woodchute Wilderness in the northwest,[4] and the Cedar Bench,[5] and Pine Mountain Wildernesses in the southeast.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United Verde mine . 2012 . state.az.us . 11 October 2020 . 1 December 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141201204953/http://www.admmr.state.az.us/Publications/ofr08-26.pdf . dead .
  2. Book: Lyman C. Huff. Elmer S. Santos. R. G. Raabe. Mineral Resources of the Sycamore Canyon Primitive Area, Arizona. 1966. U.S. Government Printing Office. 10–12. 2020-10-11. 2024-04-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20240429174151/https://books.google.com/books?id=P2guoJRhNFwC&pg=SL10-PA11#v=onepage&q&f=false. live.
  3. Hickey Mountain, Arizona and Munds Draw, Arizona, 7.5 Minute Topographic Quadrangles, USGS, 1971 and 1973
  4. Web site: Woodchute Wilderness. U.S. Forest Service. 11 October 2020. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074309/http://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/prescott/recreation/hiking/recarea/?recid=75186&actid=50. live.
  5. https://wilderness.net/visit-wilderness/?ID=107#general Cedar Bench Wilderness
  6. https://wilderness.net/visit-wilderness/?ID=458 Pine Mountain Wilderness