Needle Rock Natural Area

Mountain in United States of America From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Needle Rock Natural Area[1] is located at the western edge of the West Elk Mountains of Colorado. The surrounding terrain is characterized by laccolithic mountains flanked by precipitous cliffs, extensive talus aprons, forested mesas, canyons, and spacious, well-watered intermontane basins.[2] Needle Rock is an intrusive plug of monzonite porphyry[3] cropping out 3.5 miles (5.6 km) east-northeast (bearing 68°) of the Town of Crawford in Delta County, Colorado, United States. With an elevation of 7,797 feet (2,377 m),[4] the towering rock spire stands 800 feet (240 m) tall above the floor of the Smith Fork of the Gunnison River valley. The massive rock feature originated in the Oligocene geological epoch when magma intruded between existing sedimentary rocks[5] as the crown of a buried laccolith[3] or possibly the underlying conduit of a laccolith.[2] Subsequent erosion has exposed the prominent rock formation seen in the natural area today.

Elevation7,797 ft (2,377 m)
Coordinates38°43′28″N 107°33′00″W
LocationDelta County, Colorado, U.S.
Quick facts Highest point, Elevation ...
Needle Rock[1]
Needle Rock in 2016.
Highest point
Elevation7,797 ft (2,377 m)
Coordinates38°43′28″N 107°33′00″W
Geography
Needle Rock is located in Colorado
Needle Rock
Needle Rock
LocationDelta County, Colorado, U.S.
Parent rangeWest Elk Mountains
Topo map(s)USGS 7.5' topographic map
Crawford, Colorado
Geology
Rock agec.a. 28 Ma
Mountain typeIgneous Intrusion
Climbing
Easiest routerock
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The Needle Rock Natural Area is managed by the Bureau of Land Management.[6]

See also

References

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