Sawatch Range
The Sawatch Range is a major subrange of the Rocky Mountains situated in central Colorado, United States, extending roughly 80 miles (130 km) in a northwest-southeast direction from near Minturn and Eagle County in the north to Poncha Springs and Saguache County in the south.[1][2] It forms the crest of the Continental Divide in this region and is characterized by rugged, glaciated terrain with broad uplifts and steep eastern escarpments, encompassing an area of approximately 3,734 square miles (9,672 km²).[3][4] The range is renowned as Colorado's highest, hosting 15 peaks exceeding 14,000 feet (4,267 m)—known as fourteeners—including Mount Elbert, the state's tallest summit at 14,440 feet (4,401 m), which is also the second-highest peak in the contiguous United States.[5][6] Geologically, the Sawatch Range originated during the Laramide orogeny around 70–40 million years ago, when tectonic forces uplifted Precambrian metamorphic and igneous rocks, later modified by Oligocene-Miocene volcanism and Pleistocene glaciation that sculpted its U-shaped valleys and cirques.[7][8] The range's western slopes drain into the Colorado River basin, while the eastern flanks feed the Arkansas River, supporting diverse ecosystems from montane forests of aspen, pine, and spruce at lower elevations (8,000–11,000 feet) to alpine tundra above treeline.[9] Notable features include the Mount Massive Wilderness and Holy Cross Wilderness areas, managed by the U.S. Forest Service, together protecting approximately 153,000 acres of pristine habitat for wildlife such as bighorn sheep, elk, and mountain goats.[9][10] Human presence in the Sawatch Range dates to indigenous Ute peoples, who utilized its resources for hunting and seasonal migration before European-American settlement in the mid-19th century, driven by gold and silver mining booms in nearby towns like Leadville and Aspen.[3] Today, the range attracts millions of visitors annually for hiking, skiing, and climbing its accessible yet challenging fourteeners, contributing significantly to Colorado's outdoor recreation economy while facing pressures from climate change, including retreating glaciers and increased wildfire risk.[11][12]Geography
Extent and Boundaries
The Sawatch Range is a prominent sub-range of the southern Rocky Mountains situated in central Colorado. It extends approximately 80 miles (130 km) in a northwest-southeast direction, beginning near the Eagle River close to Minturn in Eagle County and trending southeastward to Poncha Springs in Chaffee County.[13] This orientation positions the range as a key high-elevation feature within the state's interior, influencing regional hydrology and topography. The range's width varies between 10 and 30 miles, with its northern boundary near the upper Eagle River, a tributary of the Colorado River, and the southern extent reaching into the Arkansas River valley. As a segment of the Continental Divide, the Sawatch Range serves as a critical hydrological divide, directing precipitation and meltwater westward into tributaries of the Colorado River basin and eastward into the Arkansas River watershed.[3] To the east, the Sawatch Range borders the Mosquito Range along the upper Arkansas River valley, while the Elk Mountains lie to the southwest and the Gore Range adjoins it to the northwest near the Eagle River. These adjacencies define the range's position within the broader Rocky Mountain system, separating it from neighboring uplifts via river valleys and fault-bounded basins. The Sawatch Range primarily encompasses lands in Chaffee, Pitkin, Lake, Eagle, Gunnison, and Saguache counties, spanning multiple national forest districts and wilderness areas.[14][15]Topography and Hydrology
The Sawatch Range exhibits average elevations between 12,000 and 14,000 feet (3,700 and 4,300 m), characterized by broad, rounded summits and extensive U-shaped valleys sculpted by past glaciation.[16] These landforms result from Pleistocene glacial activity, which carved steep-walled valleys often exceeding 2,000 feet (610 m) in depth, with many heading in prominent cirques.[17] Glacial features such as moraines and hanging valleys are particularly evident in the northern and central sections of the range, where ice flows deposited extensive debris and shaped the rugged terrain spanning approximately 80 miles (130 km) north from Monarch Pass.[18] Major passes traverse the range, facilitating access across its high divide. Independence Pass, at 12,095 feet (3,685 m) along State Highway 82, connects the Roaring Fork Valley to the east with the Arkansas River valley.[19] Cottonwood Pass reaches 12,126 feet (3,701 m) via County Road 306, offering views of the Continental Divide from its summit.[20] Hagerman Pass, accessible primarily by four-wheel drive at 11,925 feet (3,635 m), links the Fryingpan River drainage to the east with historic mining areas near Leadville.[21] Hydrologically, the range's position along the Continental Divide divides its drainages, with eastern slopes feeding the Arkansas River through tributaries such as the Taylor River and East River.[22] Western slopes contribute to the Colorado River system via the Fryingpan River and Roaring Fork River, where snowmelt and glacial meltwater sustain perennial streams across the approximately 3,734 square miles (9,672 km²) of rugged terrain.[23][4] This configuration influences regional water flow, with the eastern Arkansas basin encompassing intermountain valleys flanked by the Sawatch uplift.[18]Geology
Tectonic Formation
The Sawatch Range originated as part of the asymmetric Sawatch anticline during the early stages of the Laramide Orogeny, spanning approximately 75 to 45 million years ago. This mountain-building event, driven by crustal shortening far inland from the plate margin, uplifted the Rocky Mountains through reverse faulting and associated igneous intrusions. In the Sawatch region, initial deformation occurred atop structures like the Elk Range thrust and Castle Creek reverse fault, with faulting active by 72–70 million years ago based on ammonite biostratigraphy in the underlying Mancos Shale. The orogeny involved a ~20-million-year period of contraction from the Late Cretaceous to early Eocene, resulting in the broad uplift of basement-cored ranges like the Sawatch and adjacent Mosquito Range, though synorogenic sediments have been largely eroded away.[24][18] Following Laramide compression, the region transitioned to extensional tectonics in the late Oligocene to Miocene, linked to the development of the Rio Grande Rift from about 28 to 5 million years ago. This rifting phase accommodated crustal extension through normal faulting, notably along the Sawatch Range Fault Zone, which bounds the eastern flank of the range with down-to-the-east displacements up to 3 kilometers. Thermochronologic data from apatite (U-Th)/He and fission-track analyses reveal rapid cooling of rift-flank rocks during this interval, indicating exhumation driven by fault-block rotation and basin formation, such as the accumulation of up to 1,600 meters of Miocene-Pliocene sediments in the adjacent Upper Arkansas Valley. The extension was synchronous across the ~850-kilometer length of the rift, contributing to the range's structural asymmetry inherited from earlier Laramide deformation.[18] The modern topography of the Sawatch Range was profoundly modified by Pleistocene glaciations between 2.6 million and 11,700 years ago, encompassing multiple ice ages that carved U-shaped valleys, cirques, and moraines. During the Last Glacial Maximum around 20–21 thousand years ago, valley glaciers interconnected by upland ice fields advanced across the northern and southern sectors, with reconstructed ice extents covering areas like the Halfmoon Creek drainage at ~44 square kilometers and average thicknesses of 120 meters. Paleoclimate modeling based on equilibrium-line altitudes and steady-state mass balance suggests mean annual temperatures were depressed by ~8.8 ± 0.5 °C relative to present conditions, assuming stable precipitation; modest variations in snowfall (±10 cm water equivalent) adjust this depression by only ±0.2 °C. Deglaciation was rapid, with retreat rates of ~1 meter per year in some valleys following the LGM.[25][18] Within the broader geology of central Colorado, the Sawatch Range represents a faulted anticlinal structure arched during Laramide uplift, spanning ~100 miles north-south and ~40 miles wide, with subsequent erosion removing much of the overlying Paleozoic and Mesozoic sedimentary cover to expose Precambrian basement rocks—primarily granites, gneisses, and schists—in its core. This exposure is evident along the range's high summits, such as Mount Elbert, and contrasts with less-eroded adjacent basins, highlighting the range's role in the north-south trending Laramide uplifts that define the Southern Rocky Mountains. Ongoing post-rift adjustment has maintained elevated topography, though specific recent uplift rates remain constrained by limited direct measurements.[26][18]Stratigraphy and Rock Types
The Sawatch Range is underlain by Precambrian basement rocks of Paleoproterozoic age, approximately 1.8 to 1.7 billion years old, which form the structural core of the range and consist predominantly of granites, gneisses, schists, and quartzites.[27] These metamorphic and igneous rocks, including biotite gneiss, hornblende gneiss, and muscovite schist, underwent multiple episodes of deformation and intrusion during the Proterozoic era.[18] Later Tertiary volcanics, dating to the Oligocene (around 34 to 24 million years ago), intrude this basement, featuring andesite flows, rhyolite dikes, tuffs, and granodiorite plutons such as those in the Mount Princeton batholith.[18] Paleozoic sedimentary rocks overlay the Precambrian basement but have been largely eroded from the crest of the range, with remnants preserved primarily in fault-bounded blocks along the flanks.[18] The Cambrian Sawatch Quartzite represents the basal Paleozoic unit, comprising thick beds of white quartz arenite and quartz-rich sandstone that reach thicknesses of 4 to 54 meters and form resistant cliffs.[28] The Ordovician Manitou Formation, about 65 meters thick, consists of fossiliferous dolomite and limestone, while the Mississippian Leadville Limestone, 50 to 78 meters thick, is a dolomitized micritic carbonate sequence often exhibiting karst features; both units are variably silicified and mined historically for industrial uses.[18][29] Mesozoic rocks are sparsely preserved in the lower elevations of the range due to extensive erosion, appearing mainly as Cretaceous shale and sandstone units such as the Mancos Shale (up to 1,600 meters thick) and the Dakota Sandstone (67 to 73 meters thick).[29] Notable mineral resources within these rock types include gemstones like aquamarine occurring in Oligocene leucogranite pegmatites on Mount Antero, molybdenum in porphyry deposits at the Climax Mine, and fluorite in epithermal veins associated with calc-silicate gneiss in the Browns Canyon district.[18] The range's stratigraphy is segmented by northwest-trending normal faults of the Sawatch Range Fault Zone, which exhibit active brecciation in the northern section, with at least six seismic events recorded since approximately 100,000 to 150,000 years ago.[18]Climate and Ecology
Climate Patterns
The Sawatch Range exhibits an alpine subarctic climate, classified under the Köppen system as Dfc, characterized by cold, snowy winters and short, cool summers with significant annual precipitation primarily in the form of snow at higher elevations. Average January lows reach approximately -10°F (-23°C) at elevations above 10,000 feet (3,000 m), while July highs typically range from 60–70°F (16–21°C), reflecting the influence of elevation and latitude in moderating temperatures. Annual precipitation varies from 20–40 inches (500–1,000 mm), with much of it falling as snow above 10,000 feet (3,000 m), supporting the range's role as a key water source for downstream regions.[30][31][32] Elevation-driven microclimates create distinct variations across the range, with the treeline generally occurring between 11,000–12,000 feet (3,400–3,700 m), above which conditions become increasingly harsh and treeless. Ridges and exposed summits experience frequent high winds, with gusts reaching up to 100 mph (160 km/h), exacerbating the cooling effect and contributing to erosion patterns. During the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) approximately 20–21 ka, the region faced a temperature depression of 8–12°C compared to modern values, with extensive valley glaciers in higher elevations, as inferred from equilibrium-line altitudes and degree-day modeling of paleoglaciers.[33][34][25][35] Modern warming trends indicate a 1–2°C rise since 1900, consistent with broader Rocky Mountain patterns driven by anthropogenic greenhouse gases.[35] Seasonal patterns feature dry winters influenced by persistent Pacific high-pressure systems, which block moist air masses and limit snowfall to sporadic events, contrasted by summer monsoon influences from late July through August that deliver frequent thunderstorms and convective precipitation. These dynamics result in snowpack accumulation of 200–300 inches (5–8 m) annually at higher elevations, which serves as a critical reservoir feeding major rivers like the Arkansas and Colorado through spring melt. Due to ongoing climate change, snowmelt timing has shifted earlier by 2–3 weeks on average, altering hydrologic regimes and increasing risks of summer droughts downstream.[36][37][38][39]Flora and Fauna
The Sawatch Range encompasses distinct life zones shaped by elevation gradients, transitioning from montane forests below approximately 9,000 feet (2,700 meters) featuring aspen stands and ponderosa pine woodlands, to subalpine spruce-fir forests between 9,000 and 11,000 feet (2,700–3,400 meters), and alpine tundra above 11,500 feet (3,500 meters) dominated by low-growing cushion plants.[40][41][42] These zones support a progression of vegetation adapted to decreasing temperatures and increasing exposure, with the montane areas providing transitional habitats influenced by adjacent climate patterns.[40] Key flora in the Sawatch Range includes Engelmann spruce and subalpine fir in the dense subalpine forests, alongside bristlecone pines on exposed lower subalpine slopes, some individuals exceeding 2,000 years in age.[43] In summer, alpine tundra blooms with wildflowers such as Rocky Mountain columbine and scarlet paintbrush, while cushion plants like moss campion form protective mats against harsh winds and short growing seasons.[44][45] Fauna in the range features large mammals including elk and mule deer that utilize subalpine and montane habitats for foraging, bighorn sheep and introduced mountain goats navigating rocky alpine slopes, and black bears roaming forested areas.[46][47][48] Birds such as the white-tailed ptarmigan blend into alpine tundra for camouflage, while Clark's nutcracker caches subalpine seeds, aiding forest regeneration; mountain lions prey on ungulates but no large predators like gray wolves are currently present, though they historically occupied the area before extirpation in the mid-20th century.[49][50] Rare alpine species, including the Uncompahgre fritillary butterfly in southern portions and endemics like Sawatch knotweed, face vulnerability from climate change, which is projected to shrink alpine habitats and fragment tundra ecosystems.[51][52] Invasive species such as cheatgrass encroach on lower montane and valley edges, altering native plant communities and increasing fire risk.[53] The Sawatch Range serves as a biodiversity hotspot within national forests like Pike-San Isabel and White River, fostering migration corridors for ungulates such as elk and deer between seasonal ranges.[48][54] These habitats support interconnected ecosystems that enhance regional wildlife resilience despite ongoing environmental pressures.[55]Human History
Indigenous Peoples and Naming
The Sawatch Range formed part of the traditional territory of the Ute people, known to themselves as the Nuche, who have inhabited the region for millennia as the oldest continuous residents of what is now Colorado.[56] The Ute utilized the range's diverse landscapes for hunting game such as deer, elk, and bighorn sheep, gathering wild plants like berries and roots, and conducting seasonal migrations between lower valleys in winter and higher elevations in summer to follow resources and avoid harsh weather.[57][58] Sacred sites within the range included natural hot springs, such as those at Mount Princeton, valued for their healing properties in traditional medicine and spiritual practices, as well as mountain passes like Monarch Pass, where the Ute constructed stone walls and pits for communal hunting rituals.[59][60][61][62] Archaeological evidence reveals human presence in central Colorado dating back to the Paleo-Indian period, with sites in the region including lithic scatters and tools in areas like Chaffee County near the Sawatch Range foothills, indicating mobile lifeways adapted to high-altitude big-game hunting.[63][64][65] These early inhabitants likely used the area for short-term camps, as the high-altitude terrain and severe climate precluded permanent settlements. The name "Sawatch" derives from the Ute term saguguachipa, meaning "blue earth," referring to the verdant mid-elevation slopes and mineral-rich soils between the range's canyons and peaks; this etymology reflects the Ute worldview, where colors like blue and green blend to describe life-sustaining landscapes.[66] An alternate spelling, "Saguache," emerged from Spanish transliterations during 18th-century expeditions through the region, when explorers like those under the Viceroyalty of New Spain documented Ute place names while traversing southern Colorado.[57][67] In Ute oral histories, the Sawatch Range holds cultural significance as a spiritual barrier, embodying the divide between earthly and sacred realms, with peaks and passes serving as portals in creation stories and ceremonies that emphasize harmony with the land.[68] This reverence persisted until the late 19th century, when Ute displacement accelerated through U.S. treaties, including the 1868 Brunot Treaty (also known as the Ute Treaty of 1868), which initially reserved much of western Colorado for the Nuche but ultimately confined them to smaller areas east and west of the range; by 1880, following conflicts like the Meeker Incident of 1879, most Ute bands were removed from their ancestral Sawatch homelands and relocated to reservations in southwestern Colorado and Utah, where the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute tribes maintain cultural ties to the region.[69][56] Early European-American interactions with the Ute in the Sawatch region are documented in 19th-century fur trappers' journals, such as those of Osborne Russell and Warren Ferris, who noted frequent encounters with Nuche bands during expeditions in the 1830s and 1840s, describing their horsemanship, trade in furs and horses, and control over key passes along the Continental Divide.[70] These accounts highlight the Ute's dominant presence in the range before intensified settler encroachment.European Exploration and Mining
The first documented European contact with the Sawatch Range occurred during Spanish expeditions in the mid-18th century, with Juan de Rivera's 1765 journey from Santa Fe marking early incursions into northern New Mexico and southern Colorado territories, though direct sightings of the range remain unconfirmed in surviving records.[71] More explicit mapping came during the American era with Zebulon Pike's 1806-1807 expedition, where he observed prominent peaks in the region from the San Luis Valley while exploring the headwaters of the Arkansas River.[72] By the 1820s, American fur trappers had penetrated the area as part of the broader Rocky Mountain fur trade, establishing temporary camps and trade routes along streams draining the range's eastern slopes to harvest beaver pelts.[73] The 1859 Colorado Gold Rush ignited widespread placer mining along the Arkansas River at the range's eastern base, drawing thousands of prospectors and spurring the rapid growth of boomtowns like Leadville, which exploded to a peak population of around 40,000 by 1880 amid the subsequent silver boom.[74] This era transformed the region into a mining epicenter, with operations targeting gold, silver, and lead deposits; for instance, California Gulch near Leadville yielded millions in gold within the first year, fueling settlement and infrastructure development.[75] Major mining sites in the Sawatch Range included the Mount Antero area, which gained renown for gem extraction, with aquamarine crystals first discovered there in 1880, alongside topaz and other minerals in pegmatite veins that attracted specialized prospectors.[76] These activities left a legacy of ghost towns, such as St. Elmo, which thrived on silver and gold until its abandonment around 1926 following the closure of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad line; Winfield, a 1880s silver mining hub that declined after the 1893 economic crash; and Vicksburg, established during the 1880s Clear Creek gold rush and largely deserted by the early 20th century.[77][78] Railroads like the Denver & Rio Grande, completed through the Royal Gorge to Salida and Leadville by 1880, were essential for transporting ore and supplies, connecting remote sites to broader markets.[79] Similarly, early highways and wagon roads, constructed primarily for mining access in the late 19th century, opened the range's rugged terrain and persist as foundational routes today.[80]Recreation and Conservation
Outdoor Activities
The Sawatch Range offers extensive opportunities for hiking and climbing, with numerous trails traversing its rugged terrain within the San Isabel and White River National Forests. The area features over 390 miles of trails in Chaffee County alone, including segments of the Colorado Trail that wind through the eastern slopes and provide access to lower summits.[81] Popular routes include the standard ascent of Mount Elbert via the North Mount Elbert Trail, a Class 1 hike covering approximately 9.8 miles round trip with 4,458 feet of elevation gain.[82] Beyond hiking, the range supports a variety of other outdoor pursuits suited to its diverse landscape. Backcountry skiing is common on the range's gentler slopes, such as those in Horn Fork Basin, where descents can exceed 4,000 feet of vertical.[83] Mountain biking thrives on historic passes like Hagerman Pass, an 11.7-mile point-to-point route popular for its challenging gravel and off-road sections.[84] Fishing draws anglers to nearby rivers, including the Taylor River, a gold medal fishery below Taylor Park Reservoir known for wild brown trout populations up to 5,000 per mile in its pocket waters.[85] Off-roading is accessible via routes like Hagerman Pass Road 105, which crosses the Continental Divide at 11,925 feet and connects Leadville to Basalt.[86] Access to these activities peaks in summer from June through September, when snow has melted on most 14er routes, allowing thousands of climbers to attempt summits like Mount Elbert annually; nearly all ascents occur during this period to avoid winter hazards.[87] High passes, such as Independence Pass on Highway 82 and Cottonwood Pass, typically close from late October or November through May due to snow accumulation, limiting vehicle access and emphasizing the need for snowshoe or ski approaches in winter.[88][89] Participants must heed safety considerations inherent to the high-altitude environment. Altitude sickness poses risks above 10,000 feet, with symptoms like shortness of breath and dizziness affecting those ascending rapidly; acclimatization and hydration are essential preventive measures.[90] Avalanche hazards persist on steeper slopes during winter and early spring, as evidenced by early-season slides in the range due to wind-loaded snow.[91] Thunderstorm exposure is a summer concern, particularly above treeline after noon, requiring early starts to mitigate lightning strikes.[92] These activities contribute significantly to Colorado's outdoor recreation economy, valued at $17.2 billion in 2023, with the Sawatch Range drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors yearly to gateway communities like Buena Vista for hiking, rafting, and other pursuits.[93][81]Protected Areas and Management
The Sawatch Range is predominantly protected within the San Isabel National Forest on its eastern slopes and the White River National Forest on its western slopes, encompassing large portions of the range under federal management.[94][95] These national forests together cover millions of acres across Colorado's central Rockies, with the Leadville Ranger District of the Pike-San Isabel National Forests alone managing 286,000 acres.[96] A key designation is the Holy Cross Wilderness, established in 1980 under the Colorado Wilderness Act, spanning 122,918 acres across the two forests and preserving high-elevation alpine terrain, including the iconic Mount of the Holy Cross.[10] Management of these protected areas falls primarily to the USDA Forest Service, which oversees trail maintenance, recreation permitting, and wildfire prevention through ranger districts like Leadville and Eagle-Holy Cross.[3][95] Complementing this, the Colorado Parks and Wildlife agency monitors and manages wildlife populations, conducting annual helicopter surveys of bighorn sheep and mountain goats in the Sawatch to assess herd health and habitat use.[97] Conservation efforts address several ongoing challenges, including water rights disputes stemming from historical mining activities that have altered stream flows and groundwater quality in the range.[98] Climate change exacerbates these issues by driving species shifts, such as the expansion of introduced mountain goats into bighorn sheep habitats, leading to competition and disease transmission risks.[47] Recreational overuse from high visitor volumes contributes to trail erosion and vegetation damage in popular areas. Restoration initiatives include the reclamation of the Climax Mine site, which was closed from 1995 to 2012 and underwent extensive environmental restoration starting in the late 1990s, converting former tailings areas into wetlands and reservoirs while earning multiple state awards for hardrock reclamation; the mine reopened in 2012 and remains operational as of 2025 with ongoing reclamation efforts.[99][100] Invasive species control efforts target non-native mountain goats and pests like bark beetles, with monitoring and removal programs integrated into Forest Service and state wildlife management to protect native ecosystems.[97][101] Cultural preservation in the range highlights the Mount of the Holy Cross, whose cross-shaped snowfield—long revered as a religious symbol—is safeguarded within the 1980 wilderness designation, succeeding an earlier short-lived national monument status from 1929 to 1950 that aimed to protect the feature but was abolished due to access and maintenance difficulties.[102][10]Peaks
Fourteeners
The Sawatch Range is home to 15 fourteeners, more than any other range in Colorado.[103] These peaks are defined as summits exceeding 14,000 feet (4,267 m) in elevation with at least 300 feet (91 m) of topographic prominence.[104] The range's fourteeners are characterized by broad, rounded profiles shaped by glacial erosion, offering accessible routes for hikers and climbers. Recent measurements by the National Geodetic Survey (as of 2024) have refined elevations using LiDAR data.[105] Among the highest are Mount Elbert at 14,438 feet (4,401 m) with 9,078 feet (2,767 m) of prominence, Colorado's state high point; Mount Massive at 14,427 feet (4,396 m) with 1,981 feet (604 m) of prominence, noted for its extensive summit ridge spanning several miles and featuring five distinct points above 14,000 feet; Mount Harvard at 14,424 feet (4,395 m) with 2,351 feet (716 m) of prominence; La Plata Peak at 14,343 feet (4,371 m) with 1,844 feet (562 m) of prominence; and Mount Antero at 14,271 feet (4,349 m) with 2,497 feet (761 m) of prominence.[104][106][107] The complete list of Sawatch Range fourteeners, ordered by elevation, is as follows (elevations and prominences from Peakbagger.com, based on modern topographic data):| Peak Name | Elevation (ft / m) | Prominence (ft / m) |
|---|---|---|
| Mount Elbert | 14,438 / 4,401 | 9,078 / 2,767 |
| Mount Massive | 14,427 / 4,396 | 1,981 / 604 |
| Mount Harvard | 14,424 / 4,395 | 2,351 / 716 |
| La Plata Peak | 14,343 / 4,371 | 1,844 / 562 |
| Mount Antero | 14,271 / 4,349 | 2,497 / 761 |
| Mount Shavano | 14,226 / 4,336 | 1,610 / 491 |
| Mount Belford | 14,202 / 4,329 | 1,329 / 405 |
| Mount Princeton | 14,200 / 4,328 | 2,212 / 674 |
| Mount Yale | 14,200 / 4,328 | 1,879 / 573 |
| Mount Oxford | 14,157 / 4,315 | 648 / 198 |
| Tabeguache Peak | 14,157 / 4,315 | 440 / 134 |
| Mount Columbia | 14,074 / 4,290 | 912 / 278 |
| Missouri Mountain | 14,071 / 4,289 | 855 / 261 |
| Huron Peak | 14,006 / 4,269 | 1,425 / 434 |
| Mount of the Holy Cross | 14,007 / 4,269 | 2,113 / 644 |