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Poachie Range

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Landform in La Paz, Mohave, and Yavapai Counties, Arizona
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Poachie Range
Alamo Lake
Highest point
PeakArrastra Mountain
Elevation4,807 ft (1,465 m)
Coordinates34°25′16″N 113°22′56″W / 34.4211304°N 113.3821463°W / 34.4211304; -113.3821463
Dimensions
Length28 mi (45 km) (E-W)
Width8 mi (13 km)
Geography
Poachie Range is located in ArizonaPoachie RangePoachie RangePoachie Range in Arizona
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
RegionsMojave Desert and Sonoran Desert
CountiesMohave and Yavapai
SettlementsWikieup and Nothing
Range coordinates34°28′09″N 113°29′11″W / 34.4691844°N 113.4863171°W / 34.4691844; -113.4863171
Borders onRawhide Mountains, Dutch Flat, Hualapai Mountains, Black Mountains, Alamo Lake State Park, Buckskin Mtns, Butler Valley and U.S. Route 93

The Poachie Range is a moderate length mountain range and massif in southeast Mohave County, Arizona, and the extreme southwest corner of Yavapai County; the range also abuts the northeast corner of La Paz County. The Poachie Range massif is bordered by the south-flowing Big Sandy River on its west, and the west-flowing Santa Maria River on its south; both rivers converge at the Poachie Range's southwest at Alamo Lake in Alamo Lake State Park.

From Alamo Lake, the (short) Bill Williams River flows due west for 35 mi to meet the Colorado River. The Bill Williams River is the de facto border between the Mojave Desert north and northwest; the Sonoran Desert is south and southeast. Across the south-flowing Colorado River to the west, is the massif of the Whipple Mountains at the northeast of the Sonoran Desert subsection named the Colorado Desert of southern California and bordered by the Colorado River.

The entire region south of the Poachie Range, and its two mountain ranges bordered westwards, the Rawhide and Bill Williams Mountain, and bordered on the Bill Williams River northern bank — is the Maria fold and thrust belt. The thrust belt is a geographic and geologic region at the convergence of these neighboring mountain ranges, rivers, the Alamo Lake, as well as other plains and valleys.

Range description

The Poachie Range is approximately 30 mi long slightly trending northwest by southeast, with no central ridgeline. Instead the range is made up of a central canyon draining southwest. The west-northwest contains a small canyon, and various peaks, three peaks west of the south-flowing Big Sandy River. Signal, Arizona with only unimproved road access is at the northwest foothills, about 10 mi from U.S. Route 93.

The east and southeast of the range contains People's Canyon, about 5 mi long, and the west-flowing Santa Maria River; to the southeast the river borders the northwest of the smaller range, the Black Mountains.

The highpoint of the range is Arrastra Mountain, 4,807 feet (1,465 m), located at 34°18′45″N 113°18′48″W / 34.31252°N 113.31325°W / 34.31252; -113.31325 (Arrastra Mountain). Arrastra Mountain is at the range center, 3 mi northeast of the 'range ridgeline' and 4 mi southwest of U.S. Route 93 in Arizona (the Joshua Tree Highway).

Arrastra Mountain Wilderness

The Arrastra Mountain Wilderness comprises almost 100% of the Poachie Range. Both the Big Sandy and Santa Maria Rivers are mostly contained in the wilderness, as well as People's Canyon in the east.

Access

The entire northeast of the range is accessed from U.S. Route 93, from Wikieup, Arizona and Nothing, Arizona.

See also

References

  1. Arizona Road & Recreation Atlas, Benchmark Maps, c 1998.
  2. Arrastra Mountain, topozone

External links

Arrastra Mountain


Poachie Range

Mountains of Arizona
Black Hills
(Yavapai County)
Black Mountains
Bradshaw Mountains
Castle Dome Mountains
Cerbat Mountains
Chiricahua Mountains
Chuska Mountains
Dragoon Mountains
Hieroglyphic Mountains
Huachuca Mountains
Hualapai Mountains
Little Ajo Mountains
Little Dragoon Mountains
Mazatzal Mountains
McDowell Mountains
Mule Mountains
Phoenix Mountains
Pinal Mountains
Pinaleño Mountains
Plomosa Mountains
Quinlan Mountains
Rincon Mountains
San Francisco Peaks
San Francisco Volcanic Field
Santa Catalina Mountains
Santa Rita Mountains
Santa Teresa Mountains
Sierra Ancha
Sierra Prieta
Superstition Mountains
Tank Mountains
Tucson Mountains
Whetstone Mountains
White Mountains
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