- White Mountains (California)
Geobox|Range
name=White Mountains
image_caption=White Mountain Peak from access road
country=United States
state=California
state1=Nevada
parent=Basin and Range Province| border=Sierra Nevada
length_imperial=60
width_imperial=10
highest=White Mountain Peak
highest_elevation_imperial=14252
highest_lat_d=37|highest_lat_m=38|highest_lat_s=02|highest_lat_NS=N
highest_long_d=118|highest_long_m=15|highest_long_s=20|highest_long_EW=W
map_caption=The White Mountains along the east side of the Owens ValleyThe White Mountains of
California are a triangular fault blockmountain range facing the Sierra Nevada across the upperOwens Valley . They extend for approximately 60 miles (100 km) as a greatly elevated plateau about 20 miles (30 km.) wide on the south, narrowing to a point at the north, with elevations generally increasing south to north. The range's broad southern end is near the community of Big Pine, whereWestgard Pass andDeep Springs Valley separate it from theInyo Mountains . The narrow northern end is at Montgomery Pass, whereU.S. Route 6 crosses.Fish Lake Valley, Nevada lies east of the range.Ecology
Ecologically, the White Mountains are like the other ranges in the
Basin and Range Province ; they are dry, but the upper slopes from 2,800 to 3,500 meters hold opensubalpine forests ofGreat Basin Bristlecone Pine on permeabledolomite and certaingranite substrates andLimber pine on less permeable rocky substrates. Middle slopes from 2,000 to 2,500 meters have somewhat denser stands of Piñon pine and Utah juniper. These upper and lower conifer zones are often separated by a zone ofMountain-mahogany brush. Various subspecies of Sagebrush extend from surrounding valleys to the lower alpine zone.A
bristlecone pine in the southern part of the range is the oldest known living tree in the world, about 4,700 years old, nicknamed "Methuselah" after the Biblical figure who was said to have lived to be 969 years of age, which would have made him the oldest human ever. Pine nuts from Piñon pine stands were harvested as a winter staple food by Paiute Indians whose descendants still live in adjacent valleys.The White Mountains also have small remnant groves of
Lodgepole pine ,Jeffrey pine ,Ponderosa pine ,Sierra juniper and Aspen including an unusual dwarf variety. These species are common in the nearby and wetter Sierra Nevada range west of the Owens Valley and must have been more widespread in the White Mountains untilholocene droughts extirpated them in most of this drier range.Fauna include two herds of Bighorn (mountain) sheep,
mule deer ,marmots and feral horses. Permanent streams have no native fish, but there are naturalized populations of trout including rarePaiute cutthroat trout which is protected from angling. Birds includeClark's Nutcracker and otherNutcracker Corvidae which eat and cache pine nuts.History
Cattle fromranches in surrounding valleys are still grazed under permit as high as the alpine zone. Historically sheep were also grazed in large numbers, introducing diseases from which the native Bighorn Sheep populations are still slowly recovering. Before European colonization of surrounding valleys in the mid 19th centuryPaiute Indians occupied summer hunting camps up to about 4,000 meters, leaving ruins of archeological interest.Geography
The highest point in the range is White Mountain Peak, which at 14,252 feet (4,344 m) [http://www.ngs.noaa.gov] is the third-highest summit in California. This peak is actually an extinct volcano rising about 1,600' (500 meters) above the plateau surface.
The White Mountains are the highest range completely inside the
Great Basin , although the adjacent Sierra Nevada Range along the basin's western edge has two higher summits.The entire range is within the
Inyo National Forest .Hiking
A
four-wheel drive road reaches the summit from the south to service the "Summit Laboratory" of theWhite Mountain Research Station . The road is normally gated seven miles from the summit at an elevation of 11,680 feet, making this California's easiest 14,000' (4,268 meter) summit. North of White Mountain Peak, two sharparête s alternate along the crest with broad "whalebacks" and high plateaus with about six more summits over 13,000' (4,000 meters). The crest crosses the California-Nevada state line just south of a final high summitBoundary Peak (Nevada) 13,147' (4,007 meters), Nevada's high point. Boundary Peak is the "prow" of the triangular fault block. It has views directly down into valleys to the west, north and east that are hidden by the increasing width of the high plateau to the south. North of Boundary Peak the range rapidly loses altitude and ends at Montgomery Pass.The west face of the White Mountains rises steeply out of Owens Valley. Climbing to any summit from this direction is a scramble with about 8,000 feet of elevation gain. Eastern slopes are somewhat gentler and have numerous
cirque s left byPleistocene glaciers and even a few snowfields persisting through most summers. Most of these cirques are entered or approached by jeep roads and offer scenic yet non-technical routes to the crest.External links
* [http://www.peakbagger.com/range.aspx?rid=13354 Peakbagger info about the range]
* [http://www.summitpost.com/show/mountain_link.pl/mountain_id/38 White Mountain Peak climbing info]
* [http://www.wmrs.edu/ White Mountain Research Station homepage]
* [http://www.summitpost.org/trip-report/347400/counting-sheep-on-the-whites-traverse.html Traverse of White Mountains crest]
* [http://tom.grundy.tripod.com/basedir/whitetraverse.html Another traverse]
* [http://www.calwild.org/photos/content/es/whitemtnsmap1b.jpgProposed wilderness area under Boxer-Solis California Wild Heritage Act of 2006]
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