Medicine Bow Peak

Medicine Bow Peak (12,018 ft (3,663 m)) is the highest peak in the Snowy Range, a part of the Medicine Bow Mountains, about 35 miles (56 km) west of Laramie, Wyoming. It lies within Medicine Bow National Forest and is the highest point in southern Wyoming. The summit lies in extreme western Albany County, but the mountain's lower reaches stretch westward into eastern Carbon County. The summit is 12,018 feet (3,663 m) high and is visible from Snowy Range Pass, elevation 10,847 ft (3,300 m), on Wyoming Highway 130, a Wyoming Scenic Byway. The most commonly used trail to the peak is a four-mile hike featuring switch-backs and a great deal of loose rock. The trails to the peak are usually open from early June to mid October.

Medicine Bow Peak
Southern extent of Medicine Bow Peak rising above Lake Marie.
Highest point
Elevation12,018 ft (3,663 m)[1]
Prominence3233[1]
Coordinates41°21′35.99″N 106°19′11.99″W
Geography
LocationAlbany and Carbon counties, Wyoming, U.S.
Parent rangeMedicine Bow Mountains
Topo mapUSGS Medicine Bow Peak (WY)
Geology
Mountain typequartzite
Climbing
Easiest routeHike
Summit of Medicine Bow Peak

The mountain is usually covered with snow from October to late June. During winter the peak can be reached by snowshoe or by skiing. Summer conditions can be extreme, with frequent thunderstorms and hail during the afternoons.

Geology

The peak is part of a proterozoic quartzite ridge that juts above the Snowy Range. It was glaciated until quite recently, and year-round snowfields are still present on its flanks. Periglacial polygons, also known as "stone nets", are located above the timberline. Several glacial lakes are located at the base of the peak.

Geologic publications have suggested that the Snowy Pass Supergroup at the peak is significantly older than, and unrelated to, the orogeny of the surrounding Medicine Bow mountains.[2] These publications often refer to the mountain as "Medicine Peak", and its rock as "Precambrian Medicine Peak Quartzite". The quartzite, which lies unconformably on gneissic basement rock, has been analyzed for traces of Precambrian life.[3] The findings may be pseudofossils.[3]

History

Little is known of the mountain's history before the John C. Frémont expeditions of 1833 - 1834. Native American tribes such as the Northern Arapahoe, Northern Cheyenne, Lakota, Ute, and Eastern Shoshone were known to have either inhabited the surrounding lowlands or used nearby canyons and mountain passes as travel routes.[4]

In 1955, United Airlines Flight 409 crashed into the side of the mountain; there were no survivors. Engines and other fragments of the plane are still present at the base of the cliff. During the recovery process, several additional access routes were established, which are still in use today.

A memorial stone and plaque were placed near the crash site, known as "Disaster Wall", in August 2001.

View from the summit of Medicine Bow Peak

Ecology

Biomes on the trails leading to the peak include alpine meadows, sub-alpine meadows, and taiga. Stunted and twisted Krummholtz trees, many of which are Engelmann spruce, are common at or just above the tree line. The wildflowers along its access trails include Indian Paintbrush, blue columbine, gentian, and harebell. The peak is located in a Special Botanical Area.[5]

Mammals inhabiting the peak and its immediate surroundings include bighorn sheep, marmots, pikas, pine martens, mule deer, and dwarf shrew.

Maps

References

  1. "Medicine Bow Peak, Wyoming". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  2. http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2001RM/finalprogram/abstract_6228.htm Geology of the Snowy Range
  3. Kauffman, Erle G.; Steidtmann, James R. (19 April 1981). "Are These the Oldest Metazoan Trace Fossils?". Journal of Paleontology. 55 (5): 923–947. JSTOR 1304516.
  4. "History and geology of the Medicine Bows" (PDF). fs.fed.us. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  5. "-State Species Abstract--Wyoming Natural Diversity Database" (PDF). University of Wyoming. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2009-12-02.
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