Mount Taylor (New Mexico)

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Mount Taylor

Elevation 11,301 ft (3,445 m)
Location New Mexico, United States
Range San Mateo Mountains
Prominence 4,094 ft (1,248 m)
Coordinates 35°14′19″N, 107°36′30″W
Topo map USGS Mount Taylor (NM)
Type Stratovolcano
Easiest route hike

Mount Taylor (Diné: Tsoodził) is a stratovolcano in northwest New Mexico, northeast of the town of Grants. It is the high point of the San Mateo Mountains[1] and the highest point in the Cibola National Forest. It was named in 1849 for then president Zachary Taylor. Prior to that, it was called Cebolleta (tender onion) by the Spanish; the name persists as one name for the northern portion of the San Mateo Mountains, a large mesa. Mount Taylor is largely forested, rising like a blue cone above the desert below. Its slopes were an important source of lumber for neighboring pueblos.

To the Navajo people, Mount Taylor is Tsoodził, the turquoise mountain, one of the four sacred mountains marking the cardinal directions and the boundaries of the Dinetah, the traditional Navajo homeland. Mount Taylor marks the southern boundary, and is associated with the direction south and the color blue; it is gendered female. In Navajo mythology, First Man created the sacred mountains from soil from the Fourth World, together with sacred matter, as replicas of mountains from that world. He fastened Mount Taylor to the earth with a stone knife. The supernatural beings Black God, Turquoise Boy, and Turquoise Girl are said to reside on the mountain.[2] Also, both the Laguna and the Acoma peoples consider it to be sacred.

Mount Taylor was active from 3.3 to 1.5 million years ago[3] during the Pliocene, and is surrounded by a field of smaller inactive volcanoes. Repeated eruptions built lava domes and produced lava flows, ash plumes, and mudflows. The mountain is surrounded by a great volume of volcanic debris, suggesting multiple major eruptions, possibly similar to that of Mount Saint Helens.[4] Estimates vary about how high the mountain was at its highest.

Mount Taylor is very rich in a uranium-vanadium bearing mineral, and was mined extensively for it from 1979 to 1990. The Mount Taylor and the hundreds of other uranium mines on Pueblo lands have provided over thirteen million tons of uranium ore to the United States since 1945.

Location of Mount Taylor within New Mexico

  1. ^ There are two small ranges in New Mexico called the San Mateo Mountains; this is the northern one. The other range is near the Plains of San Agustin.
  2. ^ Robert S. McPherson, Sacred Land, Sacred View: Navajo perceptions of the Four Corners Region, Brigham Young University, ISBN 1-56085-008-6.
  3. ^ Volcano World: Mount Taylor, New Mexico
  4. ^ Halka Chronic, Roadside Geology of New Mexico, Mountain Press, Missoula, 1987, ISBN 0-87842-209-9, p. 50.


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