Hogup Mountains Explained

Hogup Mountains
Country:United States
State:Utah
District:Box Elder
District Type:County
Length Mi:25
Length Orientation:N-S
Width Mi:9
Highest:Tangent Peak
Elevation Ft:7047
Coordinates:41.4805°N -113.1744°W
Map:USA Utah
Map Size:200

The Hogup Mountains are a small 25-mile (40 km) long mountain range located in central Box Elder County, Utah, United States. The range lies on the northwest perimeter of the Great Salt Lake, and also lies surrounded by the Great Salt Lake Desert; it lies in the desert's northeast.

Three major peaks are found in the mountain's center, Tangent and Scorpio Peaks, and Shelter Mountain. Also, 3 mi east in the Great Salt Lake, an outlying peak is named Dolphin Island.

Description

The Hogup Mountains have a central section containing the three major peaks; the mountain range narrows both northerly and southerly into the Great Salt Lake Desert, but the northeast does have another small 7 mi ridgeline that trends exactly NNW x SSE.

Mountain peaks

Broom Mountain, 4782feet,[1] anchors the southern mountain section on the named Hogup Ridge. The central peaks are Scorpio Peak (southeast), 6560feet, and due west, Shelter Mountain, 5964feet. In the center-north lies the range highpoint, Tangent Peak, 7047feet.[1]

Access

The south of the Hogup Mountains can be accessed from Lakeside, 14 mi ESE, though this route passes through railroad private property. The north of the range can be accessed legally from Kelton; also Park Valley on Utah State Route 30.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Utah Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme, 2014, pp. 10 and 15