Winding Stair Mountains
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Winding Stair Mountains | |
|---|---|
| Aiakkowa Shʋnaia (cho) | |
The Byway traverses the Winding Stairs on the Choctaw Reservation, Oklahoma. | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 2,400 ft (730 m) |
| Coordinates | 34°42′31″N 94°40′38″W / 34.70867°N 94.67731°W |
| Geography | |
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| Location | north of Talihina, Choctaw Nation |
| Parent range | Ouachita Mountains |
The Winding Stair Mountains is a mountain ridge located within the state of Oklahoma in Le Flore County, north of Talihina, Choctaw Nation.
The ridge is part of a larger mountain range, the Ouachita Mountains, which is itself a subsection of the U.S. Interior Highlands. Some of the peaks within this ridge have elevations reaching about 2,400 feet (730 m) above sea level. [1]
Tree species native to this area include the following: shortleaf pine, loblolly pine, southern red oak, white oak and flowering dogwood.[1]
History
In prehistoric times (8000 B.C.—1 A.D.), hunter-gatherer tribes roamed the area. By the time the first Europeans visited the region, it had been populated by the Wichita people. When the United States Government expelled the Choctaw people from their previous homeland in the Southeastern States after 1820, the land became part of the Choctaw Nation in Indian Territory. During territorial times the mountains served as the boundary between Sugar Loaf County and Wade County in the Choctaw Nation. The Choctaw government was dissolved in 1906, just before the present state of Oklahoma was formed on November 16, 1907.[1] In 1971, it gained Self-Determination status. Those Choctaw who removed to the Indian Territory in the early 19th century during the Trail of Tears are federally recognized as the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.[2]
