San Gorgonio Mountain

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San Gorgonio Mountain
File:San Gorgonio, snowcapped, clouds.jpg
Highest point
Elevation Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). NAVD 88[1]
Prominence Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[1]
Parent peak Olancha Peak[1]
Listing Ultra
Three Saints
Hundred Peaks Section[2]
California County High Points[1]
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[1]
Naming
Translation Saint Gorgonius (Spanish)
Geography
San Gorgonio Mountain is located in California
San Gorgonio Mountain
San Gorgonio Mountain
California
Location San Bernardino County, California, U.S.
Parent range San Bernardino Mountains
Topo map USGS San Gorgonio Mountain
Climbing
First ascent 1872 by W. A. Goodyear and Mark Thomas
Easiest route Strenuous Hike

San Gorgonio Mountain, also known locally as Mount San Gorgonio, or Old Greyback, is the highest peak in Southern California and the Transverse Ranges at 11,503 feet (3,506 m). It is in the San Bernardino Mountains, 27 miles (43 km) east of the city of San Bernardino and 12 miles (19 km) north-northeast of San Gorgonio Pass. It lies within the San Gorgonio Wilderness, part of the San Bernardino National Forest. Spanish missionaries in the area during the early 17th century named the peak after Saint Gorgonius.

Since it is the highest point in a region which is separated from higher peaks (e.g. in the Sierra Nevada) by relatively low terrain, San Gorgonio Mountain is one of the most topographically prominent peaks in the United States. It is ranked 7th among peaks in the 48 contiguous states[3] and 18th among overall.[4]

Like other high peaks in the Transverse Ranges, the mountain has a pyramid shape, with a steep north face and a slightly shallower south face. The mountain is large and broad; the summit plateau itself is one square-mile in area (2 km2).

In contrast to its spectacular but lower neighbor, San Jacinto Peak, San Gorgonio is not particularly craggy, and from a distance, it only appears to be an extremely high hill, earning it the name of greyback. Despite not being particularly striking in appearance during the summer, it is the only mountain in Southern California with a summit a significant distance above the tree line. As such its bright white winter snow cap, unobstructed by vegetation, makes the mountain noticeable from many miles away. The mountain hosts the longest recorded line of sight in the contiguous United States; it is plainly visible from the summit of Mount Whitney, 190 miles away.[5]

Geography

The shallow slopes of San Gorgonio Mountain earn it the name of Old Greyback

San Gorgonio Mountain lies at the easternmost extremity of the Transverse Ranges. The mountain is a heavily eroded, partially dissected plateau.[6]

Big Bear Lake, California is the largest city near San Gorgonio, and hosts two major ski resorts, as well as a popular summer get away for many southern Californians that utilize the lake for boating swimming, and fishing.

Geology

The shape of the mountain is influenced by a series of steeply dipping thrust faults on the north face of the mountain. The south side of the mountain contains river canyons typical of a dissected plateau.[6]

The mountain is a massive block of quartz monzonite, which sits on an ancient platform of Precambrian gneissic rocks. Glacial and fluvial deposits dominate the surface of the lowest part of the mountain.[7]

Hydrology

Three major Southern California rivers have their source on San Gorgonio Mountain: the Santa Ana River, the Whitewater River, and the San Gorgonio River.

Jenks Lake, on the north slope of the mountain, is one of the few perennial lakes in Southern California.

San Gorgonio Mountain sits on the Great Basin Divide, which separates steams that flow into the basins of the Basin and Range Province from rivers that flow into the Pacific Ocean.

Climate

The climate on most of the mountain is Csb (Warm-summer Mediterranean) under the Köppen climate classification. The summit of San Gorgonio has an Alpine climate (ET), as no month in that area has an average temperature greater than 10 °C (50 °F).

Hiking

Like most other peaks in the Transverse Ranges, the summit is a technically easy class 1 hike. Several trails lead to the broad summit of San Gorgonio Mountain, which rises a few hundred feet (100 m) above the tree line. Most routes are very strenuous and require well over Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). of elevation gain.

The trail leading from the Fish Creek Trailhead to San Gorgonio Mountain has about Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). of gain, less than the routes from the South Fork and Vivian Creek trailheads. Hikers should always take caution because some junctions on this trail are not well marked.

Aircraft wreckage

On December 1, 1952, a Douglas C-47 Dakota, serial number 45-1124, crashed at the Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). level on the eastern face of the mountain. The C-47 was en route from Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska to March Air Force Base near Riverside, California when it struck the mountain at night in the middle of a storm. "The aircraft was last heard from at 9:51 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, Monday." Thirteen people died.[8][9]

Nearly one month after the C-47 accident a Marine Corps HRS-2 helicopter, bureau number 129037, crashed on the mountain in coordination of the efforts of recovering the victims.[10] The three crewmen of the helicopter survived the impact.[11] Most of the wreckage of the two aircraft remain on the mountain and are accessible via the Fish Creek Trailhead or the South Fork Trailhead.

In more recent years, the mountain claimed the lives of Frank Sinatra's mother[12] (January 16, 1977) and Dean Paul Martin (March 21, 1987), son of Dean Martin, in unrelated plane crashes. Martin was an Air National Guard pilot and the McDonnell Douglas F-4C he was flying disappeared in a snowstorm and the wreckage was found on the mountain several days later.[13]

Pan looking west and southwest from Mt San Gorgonio.

See also

References

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  5. Longest lines of sight
  6. 6.0 6.1 J.C. Matti and D.M. Morton, U.S. Geological Survey, Geologic setting, San Bernardino National Forest
  7. Dibblee, T.W., 1964, Geologic map of the San Gorgonio Mountain quadrangle, San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, California: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations, Map I-431, scale 1:62,500.
  8. "Transport Plane Wreckage Hunted", Playground Daily News, Fort Walton, Florida, 4 December 1952, Volume 7, Number 44, page 2.
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External links

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