Raton Mesa (formerly known as Raton Mountain) is the name of the mesa that overlooks the town of Trinidad and is located in Las Animas County, Colorado. The highest point of Raton Mesa is Fishers Peak. In 1967, the Department of the Interior designated it as a National Natural Landmark.[1][2]
Raton Mesa | |
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Location | Las Animas County, Colorado, United States |
Designated | 1967 |
Raton Mesa is the namesake for Raton Pass and also lends its name to the cluster of mesas that separate northeastern New Mexico from southeastern Colorado, collectively recognized as the Raton Mesas (formerly known as the Raton Mountains).
Raton Mesas are volcanic in origin caused by lava flows which solidified into basalt. Over time the softer sedimentary rock surrounding the basalt eroded leaving several distinct large, elevated tablelands with precipitous sides.[1]
The Raton Mesas begin at the Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the west and extend eastward for 90 miles (140 km) along the Colorado-New Mexico border to the Oklahoma panhandle. In addition to Raton Mesa proper, the major mesas within this cluster include Bartlett Mesa, Horseshoe Mesa, and Johnson Mesa. East of the major mesas, between Branson, Colorado, and the Black Mesa of Oklahoma, lies a scattering of minor mesas known as "Mesa de Maya."[2]
Much like how "New York" refers to both a city and a state, "Raton" is used to refer to both a specific mesa and the larger collection of mesas.
Description
editInterstate Highway 25 through Raton Pass, 7,834 feet (2,388 m) in elevation, separates the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the west from the mesa country on the east. For this article, Raton Mesa is defined as the area east of Interstate 25 between Trinidad, Colorado and Raton, New Mexico, approximately 19 miles (31 km) south to north, and extending eastwards about 13 miles (21 km). Within this area are three distinct mesas separated by deep canyons: Fishers Peak Mesa in Colorado, with a maximum elevation of 9,633 feet (2,936 m), Bartlett Mesa, mostly in New Mexico, with a maximum elevation of 8,900 feet (2,700 m), and Barela/Horseshoe/Horse Mesa, straddling the Colorado/New Mexico state line, with a maximum elevation of 8,757 feet (2,669 m). The elevations at the foot of the mesas are 6,000 feet (1,800 m) or higher.[3]
The flat-topped mesas are mostly grassland, but their steep slopes are wooded with ponderosa pine the dominant species, joined by quaking aspen, Douglas fir, and white fir at higher elevations and pinyon, juniper, and Gambel oak at lower elevations. Mammal species include American black bear, cougar, mule deer, beaver, and especially elk which are seen in herds of more than 100 individuals.[4] Hunting, especially for elk, is popular in season on both public and private lands.[5]
No public roads reach the top of the mesas. The only public road which penetrates the area is through Sugarite Canyon State Park in New Mexico. It terminates shortly after crossing the border into Colorado at an altitude of 7,560 feet (2,300 m). This road provides access to the three publicly owned areas of Raton Mesa: Surgarite Canyon State Park 3,600 acres (15 km2) in New Mexico and Lake Dorothey State Wildlife Area 5,152 acres (20.85 km2) and James M. John State Wildlife Area 8,339 acres (33.75 km2) in Colorado.[6] From the parking area at Lake Dorothey, the summit of Fisher's Peak is a straight-line distance of about eight miles by an unmarked trail.[7]
Much of the Colorado portion of the Raton Mesa, including Fisher's Peak, was owned by the Crazy French Ranch until 2019 when the 19,200 acres (7,800 ha) ranch was purchased to become a Colorado state park. Funds to purchase the ranch came jointly from Great Outdoors Colorado, the funding arm of the Colorado Lottery, The Nature Conservancy, and the Trust for Public Land.[8]
References
edit- ^ Lee, Willis T. "The Raton Mesas of New Mexico and Colorado" Geographic Review, Vol 11, No 3 (July 1921), pp. 384-397
- ^ Keyes, Charles R. (1919), The Hanging Gardens of the Mesa de Maya, The Geographic Review, Vol. 8, No. 3, pp. 145-152. Downloaded from JSTOR.
- ^ Google Earth
- ^ Jones, Cheri A. (2002) "Mammals of the James M. John and Lake Dorothey State Wildlife Areas, Las Animas County, Colorado", Proceedings of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Series 4, No. 3, pp. 1-14
- ^ Hunting in Las Animas County, Colorado. Sangres.com. http://www.sangres.com/stateco/lasanimas.htm#.VOtPPPldW3k, accessed 23 Feb2015
- ^ "Colorado Parks and Wildlife", http://www.cpw.state.co.us/swa/Lake%20Dorothey%20SWA, accessed 23 Feb 2015
- ^ Google Earth
- ^ "Agreement Reached on Fisher's Peak / Crazy French Ranch". Great Outdoors Colorado. 2019-01-04. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
Further reading
edit- Willis Thomas Lee; Frank Hall Knowlton (1917). Geology and Paleontology of the Raton Mesa and Other Regions in Colorado and New Mexico (PDF). Washington: GPO.
- United States. National Park Service (1965). Raton Mesa National Monument: A Proposal. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service.
- McKenna, Thomas 'Shoes' (2023)True Southern Colorado; Gateway to the American Southwest, ISBN 13 979836438 10572023, Chapter 4: Raton Mesa, Folsom Man, and the Beginning of Civilization on the Arkansas River Basin