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Notch Peak
Mountain in Utah, United States
Mountain in Utah, United States
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Notch Peak |
| photo | NotchPeakFromSawtooth.JPG |
| photo_caption | Notch Peak, from the canyon below the notch |
| elevation_ft | 9658 |
| elevation_ref | |
| prominence_ft | 3414 |
| prominence_ref | |
| map | USA Utah |
| map_caption | Location in Utah |
| map_size | 210 |
| label_position | right |
| location | Millard County, Utah, U.S. |
| range | House Range |
| listing | Great Basin Peaks List |
| coordinates | |
| coordinates_ref | |
| topo | USGS Notch Peak |
| easiest_route | Hike |
Notch Peak is a distinctive summit located on Sawtooth Mountain in the House Range, west of Delta, Utah, United States. The peak and the surrounding area are part of the Notch Peak Wilderness Study Area (WSA). Bristlecone pines, estimated to be 3,000 to 4,000 years old, are located on the ridges surrounding Notch Peak.
The Cliff
Notch Peak is one of the highest peaks in the House Range, reaching 9658 ft . The northwest face of the mountain is a massive carbonate rock (limestone and dolomite) cliff with 2200 ft of vertical rise, making it among the highest cliff faces in North America. Overall, the summit rises about 4450 ft above Tule Valley.
It is the second-highest pure vertical drop in the United States after El Capitan. as well as the highest carbonate rock cliff in North America.
Recreation
One of the more popular uses of the area is the hike to Notch Peak so you can look down the notch in person. The summit can be reached by following a trail from the east side of the mountain in Sawtooth Canyon. The hike is about 7.5 miles round trip (12 km), with 2,600 ft elevation gain.
Climbing
The north face of Notch Peak is divided by a large shelf into an upper and lower wall. There are several big wall climbing routes on the limestone cliffs. The Swiss Route (never repeated), Direct North West Ridge (or Pillars of Faith), and Book of Saturdays ascend the upper wall. On the lower wall Appetite for Destruction and Western Hardman at over 900 ft of vertical height. Climbing on all of these routes is adventurous with rockfall hazards and loose flakes of widely varying sizes.
Geology
This part of the House Range is chiefly made up of a passive margin sequence of Cambrian to Ordovician carbonate rocks. The top of the range is the type section for the aptly named Notch Peak Dolomite. At the base of the range is the pink/orange Notch Peak granite and monzonite, which is Jurassic in age (143 to 169 million years old). Around Notch Peak, especially from the west side (Tule Valley side), white Lake Bonneville fossiliferous marls occur.
Because of the intrusion, a hike up the canyon below the notch can clearly show a well-developed metamorphic (contact) aureole and even inter-fingering textures between the intrusion and the bedrock. Also, small quantities of tungsten and placer gold have been found around the Notch Peak area.
Gallery
Image:NotchPeakUtahByPhilKonstantin.jpg|Notch Peak as seen from the southwest on the Tule Valley floor. Image:NotchPeakSunset.JPG|Notch Peak sunset. Image:NotchPeak.jpg|Grey carbonate rocks, pink monzonite, white marl Image:NotchPeak2004.jpg|Notch Peak in 2004.
References
References
- {{cite ngs
- {{cite peakbagger
- "Great Basin Peaks List". Toiyabe Chapter, Sierra Club.
- "Utah Wilderness Inventory, 1999". Bureau of Land Management.
- Millard County Tourism brochure, "Notch Peak Scenic Drive"
- Utah Geological Survey 2009 Calendar, July caption
- "Notch Peak Trail". Wikiloc.com.
- (2023). "Notch Peak Rock Climbing".
- "The Notch Peak Granitic Stock, Utah: Origin of Reverse Zoning and Petrogenesis". Oxford University Press.
- Lee et al., 1986, U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1622, p. 31-40.
- Stokes, 1986, Geology of Utah, {{ISBN. 0-940378-05-1
- Hintze and Davis, 2002, Geologic Map of the Tule Valley 30' x 60' Quadrangle
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