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Monitor Range

Coordinates: 38°48′51″N 116°33′42″W / 38.81417°N 116.56167°W / 38.81417; -116.56167
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Famartin (talk | contribs) at 11:56, 21 October 2014 (removed info on max elevation. some sources at least list table mountain at 10,888 as the range high point). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

38°48′51″N 116°33′42″W / 38.81417°N 116.56167°W / 38.81417; -116.56167

Location of the Monitor Range within Nevada

The Monitor Range is located in south-central Nevada in the United States. The range lies west and northwest of the Hot Creek Range and north of U.S. Route 6 in Nye County. It extends into the southwest corner of Eureka County at its northern end ending just south of U.S. Route 50. Tonopah is about 15 miles west of the south end of the range and Eureka lies about 20 miles east of the north end of the range.[1]

The Table Mountain Wilderness Area lies in the central part of the Monitor Range. The mountains cover an area of 3,046 km², and lies between the Antelope Valley and the Monitor Valley at the northern end. At the southern end, the mountains lie between the Toquima Range and Stone Cabin Valley.

Range-valley example, south Nevada, showing flatland transition to California border. (Monitor Range in east, and extending north out of view.)

As the map/graphic shows, its extreme linearity is because the range is an extensive linear horst between graben (down-dropped) valleys to the east and west. The range lies amongst a series of range-valley-ranges, in south-central Nevada (mostly south of the Humboldt River). The pattern is the result of crustal extension as part of the basin and range topography of western North America.

The Forest Service is in charge of 83.6% of the mountains and the Bureau of Land Management manages 16% of the range. Pinon-juniper makes up 39.3% of the area, with Sagebrush scrub making up 24.8% of the mountains. Montane shrub accounts for 19.9%.

References

  1. ^ Nevada Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme, Eighth ed., 2012, pp. 46 and 54 ISBN 978-089933-334-2