Collegiate Peaks Wilderness | |
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![]() Collegiate Peaks Wilderness, July 2011 | |
Location | Colorado,United States |
Nearest city | Colorado Springs, CO |
Coordinates | 38°58′10″N106°29′34″W / 38.96944°N 106.49278°W /38.96944; -106.49278[1] |
Area | 167,414 acres (677.50 km2) |
Established | January 1, 1980 |
Governing body | U.S. Forest Service |
TheCollegiate Peaks Wilderness is a 168,000-acre (680 km2) area located in centralColorado betweenLeadville andBuena Vista to the east andAspen to the west andCrested Butte to the southwest. Most of the area is in theSan Isabel andGunnison National Forests, with a smaller area in theWhite River National Forest southeast of Aspen. Most of the area is in northwestChaffee County with smaller portions inGunnison,Pitkin, andLake counties.[2][3][4]
The Collegiate Peaks area includes much of theSawatch Range and has the highest average elevation of any wilderness area in the United States. Five of the area's 14,000-foot (4,300 m) peaks are named for famous universities and colleges, includingMt. Harvard,Mt. Oxford,Mt. Yale,Mt. Princeton andMt. Columbia. These peaks are the source of the name for the wilderness area, which includes them all but Mt. Princeton. Otherfourteeners in the area includeLa Plata Peak,Mount Belford,Huron Peak, andMissouri Mountain. The Collegiate Peaks also includes several notable 13,000-foot (4,000 m) peaks including the Three Apostles, a chain of three mountains about six miles (10 km) south of the ghost town ofWinfield. The middle peak of the Three Apostles is also referred to as Ice Mountain and is generally recognized as one of the most difficult peaks to climb in the Sawatch Range. Notably, the Collegiate Peaks also has two peaks named Grizzly Peak. One is south ofIndependence Pass at 13,988, and the other is north ofTaylor Reservoir on theContinental Divide at 13,281.
The area is an importantwatershed for three rivers on both sides of the Continental Divide: the upperArkansas River, theGunnison River, and theRoaring Fork River. There are numerous alpine creeks in the area's wide valleys and these are all quite marshy. Snow does not usually begin to melt until May or June and it remains year-round in places on some of the high peaks.
Both theContinental Divide Trail and theColorado Trail cross the area. The Continental Divide Trail follows the course of the Continental Divide itself with several side spurs. The Colorado Trail passes through the lower eastern portion of the area and crosses Pine Creek, Frenchman Creek and Three Elk Creek all of which drain into the Arkansas River north of Buena Vista.[5]
In earlier times the area was inhabited by various people. There are groves of old growthPonderosa Pine on the eastern side which bear evidence of stripping by bands of nativeUtes who inhabited the area and used the bark from living trees for clothing and food. The area is also dotted with the evidence of mining operations from the last century. In the Pine Creek valley - one of the central valleys between Mounts Oxford, Belford and Missouri to the north and Mt. Harvard and Columbia to the south, there is evidence of an earlier settlement on both sides of the stream comprising four cabins and a horse corral. South of the town of Winfield are the spare remains of the town of Harrison at the base of Mt. Huron.
The Collegiate Peaks borders several other Colorado wilderness areas including:Buffalo Peaks,Maroon Bells-Snowmass,Hunter-Fryingpan, andMount Massive. It was designated by congress as a wilderness area in 1980 in accordance with the provisions of theWilderness Act of 1964.