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San
Juan Mountains
The
San Juan Mountains are comprised of fourteen (14) counties that
share portions of the mountain region. Within the San Juans, there
are half a dozen mining towns that have transitioned from traditional
industries in resource extraction, specifically mining, to recreation
and tourism. The region is known for its geological, ecological,
hydrological and climatological diversity.
The San Juans have several unique attributes when compared with
mountain ranges world-wide. They are accessible, yet not close to
population centers. Their geologic history, ranging from mid-Proterozoic
metamorphic rock complexes to the extensive Phanerozoic sedimentary
sequences (16,000 ft. section), to the geologically relatively recent
San Juan volcanism (40-20 Ma), and finally to Pleistocene localized
glacial activites, is as varied as that of any mountain range in
the world.
They exhibit a wide diversity of ecological characteristics due
to their mid-latitude location, wide range of elevations, and widely
varying surficial geologic conditions (soils, slopes, rock types,
etc.).This mountain range includes habitats and sensitive species
found nowhere else in the world. The region is currently the last
known location of certain arctic mosses, relics of the last ice
age, and rare alpine fens. The range contains subalpine parks, grasslands
and wetlands; nine stratified ecosystems including alpine, sprucefir,
mixed conifer, ponderosa pine, oak and douglas fir; aspen forests;
parks and meadowlands; mountain shrub communities; pinon-juniper
woodlands; and shrub-steppe communities.
These ecological characteristics combined with their millennial
history of human involvement (ancestral Puebloan populations, early explorations,
extensive mining activties) means that they provde a wealth of opportunity
for scientific investigation of questions related to their physical,
biological and human environments. It also means there are a host
of challenges to land managers and communities, related to resource
use, recreation, remediation of past resource extraction, and other
ongoing activities in close proximity to hazardous physical environments
(rock slides, avalanches, forest fires). The San Juan Mountains
contain six wilderness areas and are the headwaters for the Rio
Grande, San Juan, Dolores and Animas Rivers.
The
San Juan Mountains and margins are characterized by
- seven
wilderness areas encompassing more than 800,000 acres (12 percent
of the range) including Weminuche, South San Juan, La Garita,
Mount Sneffels, Uncompahgre, Powderhorn and Lizard Head, including the most
active avalanche control and snow physics study areas in the United
States and is one of the most geologically diverse mountain regions in
the world,
- one
of the worlds largest Tertiary-age volcanic eruptions (La Garita
ash-flow eruption, ~ 4,000 km3 circa 27 million years ago),
- some
of the "cleanest" air found in the United States (U.S.
Forest Service, 1999),
- active
research in acid-mine drainage and water quality (Animas River
watershed, Rio Grande watershed, Summitville),
- mineral
resources that include uranium, gold, silver, copper, lead, zinc
and molybdenum,
- energy
resources that include, geothermal, coal, natural gas, and methane,
- Hesperus
Peak that is one of the four Navajo peoples sacred mountains and
adjacent Sleeping Ute Mountains,a sacred range of the Southern
Utes and Ute Mountain Utes,

- abundant
archeological sites at Mesa Verde National Park and proximal areas
to the southwest,
- the
first major mountain range for storm tracts moving from the southwest,
- on-going
study area for more than a dozen university and college field
camps.
- six
ski areas, and home to people whose identities are strongly rooted
in mountain history, culture and ways of living.
Most
of the San Juan Mountains are under the authority of the San Juan,
Rio Grande, Grand Mesa, Uncompaghre and Gunnison National Forests
managed by the the US Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management.
The remaining lands are owned by private landowners, mining interests,
cities, counties and the state of Colorado. This blend of diverse
stakeholder interests lends itself to studies of land use conflict
and how humans must resolve difficult issues associated with natural
resource such as water, timber and minerals.
MAPS
Interactive
Map of the San Juans
(requires patience with modems)
Detailed
Map of San Juan Mountains, CO (JPG, 720K)
Detailed Map of Public Land Ownership
in San Juan Mountains, CO (JPG, 708 KB)
Detailed
Map of the San Juan National Forest (JPG,
104 KB)
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