Ulysses S Grant Peak | |
Other Name: | U. S. Grant Peak |
Elevation Ft: | 13767 |
Prominence Ft: | 727 |
Isolation Mi: | 1.66 |
Isolation Ref: | [1] |
Parent Peak: | Golden Horn (13,780 ft) |
Etymology: | Ulysses S. Grant |
Location: | San Juan / San Miguel counties Colorado, US |
Range: | Rocky Mountains San Juan Mountains |
Map: | Colorado#USA |
Label Position: | top |
Coordinates: | 37.8244°N -107.8072°W |
Topo: | USGS Ophir |
Rock: | Rhyolite[2] |
Ulysses S Grant Peak is a 13767feet mountain summit located on the shared boundary of San Juan County with San Miguel County, in southwest Colorado, United States.[3] It is situated eight miles west of the community of Silverton, on land managed by San Juan National Forest and Uncompahgre National Forest. Ulysses S Grant Peak is part of the San Juan Mountains which are a subset of the Rocky Mountains, and is west of the Continental Divide. It ranks as the 119th-highest peak in Colorado,[1] and topographic relief is significant as the west aspect rises 2400abbr=offNaNabbr=off in approximately one mile. The mountain's name, which has been officially adopted by the United States Board on Geographic Names, was in use in an 1896 scientific publication by Charles Whitman Cross, and listed by Henry Gannett when he published A Gazetteer of Colorado in 1906.[3] [4] [5]
According to the Köppen climate classification system, Ulysses S Grant Peak is located in an alpine subarctic climate zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and cool to warm summers.[6] Due to its altitude, it receives precipitation all year, as snow in winter, and as thunderstorms in summer, with a dry period in late spring. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains west into tributaries of the San Miguel River, and east to the Animas River via Mineral Creek.