Fish Springs Range

The Fish Springs Range is a 16-mile (26 km) long narrow, and north-trending mountain range located in center-west Juab County, Utah. The northeast of the range borders the Fish Springs National Wildlife Refuge; the entire east of the range borders the Fish Springs Flat, where the east region of the flat borders the Thomas Range.

Fish Springs Range
northeast hills of Fish Springs Range (from Fish Springs)
Highest point
PeakGeorge H. Hansen Peak, Fish Springs Range-(center, slightly south)
Elevation5,686 ft (1,733 m)
Coordinates39°43′30″N 112°26′25″W
Dimensions
Length16 mi (26 km) N-S
Width4 mi (6.4 km) (at center-south, elsewhere 3-mi
surrounded by salt flats or flatlands)
Geography
Fish Springs Range
Fish Springs Range in Utah
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
Regions(Great Basin Desert)
(southern)-Great Salt Lake
Desert
CountyJuab
CommunityFish Springs (site)
Borders onSnake Valley-NW
(Deep Creek Range-NW)
Great Salt Lake Desert-NNW, N & NNE
Fish Springs
National Wildlife Refuge-NE-(attached)
(Dugway Range-NE)
Fish Springs Flat-E
(Thomas Range-E)
House Range-SSE
Tule Valley-S
Snake Valley-W

The Fish Springs Range lies at the south of the Great Salt Lake Desert; southwards, as well as southwest and southeastwards, north-trending valleys and mountain ranges drain northwards to the Great Salt Lake Desert. The sequence of these landforms west-to-east, are Snake Valley (Great Basin), Confusion Range, Tule Valley-(Fish Springs Range-north), House Range, Whirlwind Valley, and Drum Mountains.

The south of the range borders the north of Tule Valley.

Range description

The Fish Springs Range is north-south trending, linear, narrow (mostly 3 to 4-mi wide),[1] the range is veryslightly "arc-shaped", and curved, to the west.

A small sub-range, Middle Range, lies 6.5-mi southwest, towards the Confusion Range. Southeast lies the extreme north foothills of the House Range. Fish Springs Flat borders the east of the range, and west of the range lies a satellite sub-peak (only other regional peak), The Honeycombs, 5,686 feet (1,733 m).[2]

The highpoint of the range in the center-south is George H. Hansen Peak, 5,686 feet (1,733 m).[3]

Access

The Fish Springs Range and wildlife refuge can be accessed from the west from Trout Creek. From the east, access can be from the Dugway Range region by unimproved roads, and southeast by the same from Delta, and Utah State Route 174, (through the Sevier Desert).

References

  1. Utah, DeLorme Atlas & Gazetteer, p. 30-31.
  2. DeLorme Atlas, p. 30-31.
  3. DeLorme Atlas, p. 30-31.


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