Yamsay Mountain Explained

Yamsay Mountain
Elevation:8200feet
Elevation Ref:[1]
Prominence Ft:3176
Prominence Ref:[2]
Location:Klamath County, Oregon, U.S.
Range:Cascade Range
Coordinates:42.9306°N -121.3607°W
Topo:USGS Yamsay Mountain
Type:Shield volcano
Easiest Route:Trail[3] (formerly a road)

Yamsay Mountain is a large shield volcano in the Cascade Range of south-central Oregon, located about 35miles east of Crater Lake on the border between Klamath County and Lake County. It is part of the Cascade Volcanic Arc but is located in a mountain range 30miles50miles behind the main Cascade volcanic front. The best known members of this enigmatic arc are the massive shields of Newberry Volcano, about 55miles farther north in Oregon, and Medicine Lake Volcano, about 80miles south in Northern California. Yamsay is the second highest volcano in the eastern arc, almost 300feet higher than Newberry and Medicine Lake.

A central part of Klamath mythology, the mountain offers activities such as hiking and horseback riding. Historically, the area around it has been inhabited by Native American tribes and settlers. Until the 1970s, a fire lookout tower sat on the summit of the mountain, and its foundation remains to this day.

Geography and geology

Like other volcanoes in the Cascade Range, Yamsay was produced by subduction of the oceanic Juan de Fuca Plate under the North American Plate.[4] Annual convergence between the two continues at a rate of 4cm (02inches) per year. The Cascades make up the majority of the North American West Coast volcanoes; they have been volcanically active for about 36 million years. The rock making up the Cascades is slightly older, dated between 55 and 42 million years old. In an attempt to organize the volcanoes by age, scientists typically divide them into two provinces: the High Cascadesthe younger volcanoesand the Western Cascades, comprising the older volcanoes.[5]

Yamsay, along with the Simcoe volcanic complex, Medicine Lake Highlands, and Newberry Volcano, make up a wayward range of shield volcanoes between 50km (30miles) and 60km (40miles) east of the main Cascade Range. Volcanism at these centers is unlike other eruptions in the Cascades, and it does not stem from fissures as would Basin and Range volcanism. The volcanoes appear to be isolated from the major volcanic ranges in the Northwestern United States,[6] although scientists group them as part of the Cascades.

Recent volcanism in the Cascades, lasting from 7 to 2 mya, produced largely basaltic and basaltic andesite-based material (up to 50 percent). On the eastern side of the High Cascades, however, volcanoes erupted dacite, andesite, and rhyolite. These materials made up several types of eruptions: lava flows, domes, and pyroclastic flows. In the most recent volcanic activity, andesite, basalt, and rhyolite have been erupted from High Cascades volcanoes, particularly the Three Sisters, Broken Top, Mount Hood, Mount Jefferson, and Crater Lake.[7]

History

The name Yamsay is a corruption of the Klamath (a Native American tribe of Southern Oregon) name Yamsi, a form of Yamash, meaning "north wind." This mountain was supposed to be the home of Kmukamtch, the supreme being of Klamath mythology.[8] Historically, the area by the mountain was inhabited by Klamath, Modoc, and Yahooskin Bands, all of the Snake Paiute people. The Yahooskins lived east of Yamsay Mountain, near modern-day Lakeview. Their group inhabited of land in Oregon and California. Traders entered the area at some point between 1825 and 1827, where they worked as trappers for the Hudson's Bay Company. After routes opened up in 1846, Fort Klamath was built (in 1863).[9]

The city of Klamath Falls (southwest of Yamsay) sprang up in the 1920s and featured the fastest-growing population in Oregon. Contributors to this new growth and development included the creation of the Southern Pacific Railroad, completed in 1909. This opened the area for logging and timber business, which became the focus of the profit of the area.[10]

The mountain features a United States Forest Service fire lookout tower with an 80feet steel tower, built on the summit of Yamsay in 1929. It was removed after the 1970s, and only remnants of the foundation remain today. A dirt road was built to the summit to service the lookout, but this was abandoned after the tower was removed. The upper 3.5miles now form a hiking trail to the summit.[11]

Climate and ecology

The Cascade Range is dramatically different in climate from west to east. The west side is heavily forested and features trees such as Douglas firs, western hemlock, Pacific silver firs, and Alaska yellow cedars.[12] East of the Cascades, where Yamsay lies, the climate becomes much drier, even arid. Precipitation significantly declines and vegetation becomes more sparse, with lodgepole pine, white fir, ponderosa pine, and juniper. To the south, chaparral plants such as beargrass and bitterbrush prevail.[13]

Diverse life exists within the range, including endangered species like Larch Mountain Salamanders and spotted owls. Amphibians like salamanders and frogs are common, as are birds. Mammals in the area consist of elk, mountain lions, deer, and black bears. Eastern Cascades fish include Lost River suckers and short suckers, which are both endemic species.[14]

Recreation

The Fremont National Recreation Trail passes through the area. It offers tourists excellent views of other Oregon Cascades landmarks, such as Mount Bachelor, the Three Sisters, Mount Thielsen, Mount Scott, and Mount Shasta, . Other activities along the trail include hiking, horseback riding, mountain biking. Yamsay Mountain is also part of a segment of the Oregon Timber Trail known as the Mazama Blowout.

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. NY0873 . Yamsay Mt . 2008-04-03.
  2. 3255 . Yamsay Mountain, Oregon . 2008-04-03.
  3. Web site: Yamsay Mountain . Fremont–Winema National Forest . United States Forest Service . 2005-05-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100209062820/http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/frewin/recreation/scenic-viewpts/fre-yamsymtn.shtml . 2010-02-09.
  4. Book: Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication . Brantley. 1994 . United States Geological Survey.
  5. Book: Swanson. United States Geological Survey . Cenozoic Volcanism in the Cascade Range and Columbia Plateau, Southern Washington and Northernmost Oregon: AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106 . 1989. etal.
  6. Spinel Lherzolite Xenoliths from Lorena Butte, Simcoe Mountains, Southern Washington (USA) . Draper, David S. . The Journal of Geology . 100 . 6 . November 1992 . 766–775 . . 1992JG....100..766D . 10.1086/629627 . 128694354 .
  7. Web site: Geologic Map Of Upper Eocene To Holocene Volcanic And Related Rocks Of The Cascade Range, Oregon . Sherrod, David R. . Smith, James G. . United States Geological Survey . 2000 . 2010-04-24 . 2010-08-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100805051143/http://pubs.usgs.gov/imap/i-2569/i2569_pamphlet.pdf . live .
  8. Book: McArthur , Lewis A. . Lewis L. McArthur . Oregon Geographic Names . 1928 . Seventh . 2003 . Oregon Historical Society Press . . 0-87595-277-1 .
  9. Zilverberg, p. 3.
  10. Zilverberg, p. 4.
  11. 222875 . Yamsay Mountain (OR) . 2011-05-07.
  12. Wuerthner, p. 74.
  13. Wuerthner, p. 76.
  14. Wuerthner, p. 77.