Santa Maria Mountains Explained

Santa Maria Mountains
Photo Size:295px
Country:United States
Subdivision1:Arizona
Subdivision2 Type:Region
Subdivision2:Arizona transition zone
Subdivision3:Yavapai
Subdivision3 Type:County
Settlement Type:Communities
Range Coordinates:34.8567°N -112.9094°W
Length Mi:16
Length Orientation:NW-SE
Highest:Hyde Creek Mountain
Highest Location:Santa Maria Mountains-(center-SW)
Elevation Ft:7272
Coordinates:34.8353°N -112.9185°W
Map:Arizona
Map Size:220

The Santa Maria Mountains are a 16-mi (26 km) long[1] mountain range in central-northwest Arizona, and in northwest Yavapai County. The range lies in a region of mesas and mountain ranges in the northwest of Arizona's transition zone. The Santa Maria Mountains lie east of the transition zone's northwest perimeter, the parallel Aquarius and Mohon Mountains.

The townsite of Tucker, Arizona lies 8 mi east, and is located just west of Chino Valley, AZ. Tucker lies in the center-east of the small Williamson Valley.

Description

The Santa Maria Mountains are northwest–southeast trending and attached to a smaller range on its south, the Cornell Mountains. The small Chino Valley north-trending tributary Williamson Valley Wash and Valley, border the range's east. Numerous hills, peaks, mesas, and flats are in the region. North Fork Creek and Juniper Mesa-(part of southeast Juniper Mountains), border north. Tailholt Mesa, borders southeast, east of the Cornell Mountains.

On the range's northwest, Sawmill and Johnson Flats merge west into the Mohon Mountains. Southwest are other various ridges and mesas, that are all part of smaller mountain areas just northeast of the mining district of Bagdad.

Mountain peaks

Various peaks are in the range. The northwest area has Bear Mountain, Janes Butte, and Dairy Mountain, 7165feet. The center-south of the range is at Granite Knob, 6625feet. Bald Mountain, 5900feet, is northeast; just southwest, closer to the Cornell Mountains, is the range highpoint, Hyde Creek Mountain, 7272feet.[2] The Apache Creek Wilderness is adjacent north of Hyde Creek Mountain.

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Arizona Road & Recreation Atlas, Benchmark Maps, 1998, pp. 66–67, 68.
  2. Arizona Road & Recreation Atlas, pp. 66–67, 68.