Pinnacle Mountain (Arkansas) Explained

Pinnacle Mountain
Elevation Ft:1011
Elevation Ref:[1]
Map:Arkansas
Label Position:right
Location:Pulaski County, Arkansas, U.S.
Range:Ouachita Mountains, U.S. Interior Highlands
Coordinates:34.8414°N -92.4858°W
Topo:USGS Pinnacle Mountain

Pinnacle Mountain is a 1011feet summit and the second-highest natural point in Pulaski County, Arkansas, United States; it is also the primary attraction of the 2356acres Pinnacle Mountain State Park.[2] Located in the foothills of the Ouachita Mountains approximately 13miles northwest of downtown Little Rock, Arkansas, Pinnacle Mountain is one of the most iconic landforms of the U.S. Interior Highlands.

Geography

Pinnacle Mountain is located between the Maumelle River to the north and the Little Maumelle River to the south. The Maumelle River empties into the Arkansas River at Maumelle Park approximately 2.8miles east of Pinnacle Mountain. The Little Maumelle River empties into the Arkansas River at Two Rivers Park approximately 6.6miles east of Pinnacle Mountain.

The United States Board on Geographic Names once defined a mountain as any landform greater than 1000feet of local relief and a hill as any landform less than 1000feet of local relief. Though Pinnacle Mountain is 1011feet above mean sea level, it is only 761feet of local relief, i.e., 761feet higher than the nearby Arkansas River, which is 250feet above mean sea level. Due to broad disagreement over this naming convention, the classification system was abandoned in the early 1970s. According to the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS), Pinnacle Mountain is a summit, which is defined as "a prominent elevation rising above the surrounding level of the Earth's surface", but does not include mountains or hills, among other things.[3] [4] Its proximity to the Arkansas River and steep south slopes make Pinnacle Mountain a prominent landform observable from many areas in Pulaski County.

Geology

Pinnacle Mountain is not a volcano. Despite resembling a cinder cone (a small conical volcano), Pinnacle Mountain is composed of sedimentary rock, the Jackfork Sandstone.[5] Named after Jackfork Mountain in Oklahoma, the Jackfork Sandstone is an exceptionally hard quartzitic sandstone; weathered surfaces are usually beige in color, while fresh surfaces tend to be much lighter.[6] The Jackfork Sandstone can exhibit conchoidal fracturing, a defining characteristic of quartz, which, along with its great hardness, suggests the possibility of a metasandstone.

The sediment that eventually formed the Jackfork Sandstone was deposited in the ocean prior to the Ouachita Orogeny, the event that formed the Ouachita Mountains.[7] During the early Pennsylvanian, slope collapse on the edge of the continental shelf emptied vast quantities of sand into a deep trough, which was slowly buried and transformed into sandstone. During the middle Pennsylvanian, the collision of two continents, Laurasia and Llanoria, resulted in uplift of the Ouachita Mountains, completing the assemblage of the supercontinent Pangea. The Ouachita Mountains have been above sea level undergoing erosion since the late Pennsylvanian, approximately 300 million years ago. Pinnacle Mountain is a remnant of the rock deep within this ancient mountain range.[8]

Hiking

Two routes ascend Pinnacle Mountain: the 1.5miles West Summit Trail (designated by yellow markers), which starts at the West Summit parking lot off of Arkansas Highway 300, and the 1.5miles East Summit Trail (designated by red and white markers), which starts at the East Summit parking lot off of Pinnacle Valley Road.[9] The West Summit Trail tends to see considerably more foot traffic than the East Summit Trail, primarily because the East Summit Trail involves difficult class 2 scrambling (i.e., the use of hands is frequently required for balance and to test the stability of boulders). Both, however, receive a large number of visitors due to their proximity to Little Rock. The 3miles Base Trail (designated by light green markers) loops completely around the base of Pinnacle Mountain and connects the West Summit and East Summit trailheads.[9] The 223miles Ouachita National Recreation Trail (designated by blue markers) overlaps a 0.5miles section of the Base Trail and continues another 1.5miles to the (now closed) Pinnacle Mountain State Park Visitor Center after crossing Pinnacle Valley Road at the East Summit parking lot.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. EJ1757. MAUMELLE RESET. 2017-10-30.
  2. Web site: Pinnacle Mountain State Park. Arkansas State Parks. 2017-10-30.
  3. 78021. Pinnacle Mountain. 2017-11-21.
  4. Web site: Feature Class Definitions. United States Geological Survey. 2017-11-21.
  5. Web site: Geologic Map of Arkansas. Arkansas Geological Survey. 2017-10-22.
  6. Web site: Stratigraphic Summary of the Arkansas River Valley and Ouachita Mountains. Arkansas Geological Survey. 2017-10-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20180529114957/http://www.geology.ar.gov/geology/strat_arkvalley_ouachita.htm. 2018-05-29. dead.
  7. Shanmugam. G.. Moiola. R.J.. 1995. Reinterpretation of Depositional Processes in a Classic Flysch Sequence (Pennsylvanian Jackfork Group), Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas and Oklahoma. AAPG Bulletin. 79. 5. 672–695.
  8. Morris. R.C.. 1974. Sedimentary and Tectonic History of the Ouachita Mountains. Special Publications of SEPM. 22. 120–142.
  9. Web site: Trails of Pinnacle Mountain State Park. Arkansas State Parks. 2017-10-31.