Javascript required
Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

What's the Highest Mountain in Colorado

Pikes Peak

mountain, Colorado, United States


Pikes Peak, peak in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains in El Paso county, Colorado, U.S., 10 miles (16 km) west of Colorado Springs. It ranks 32nd in elevation (14,115 feet [4,302 metres]) among Colorado peaks and is widely known because of its commanding location and easy accessibility.

Pikes Peak

Pikes Peak

Pikes Peak, Rocky Mountains, Colorado.

Brian

Located on the western edge of the Great Plains, it is in the southeastern corner of Pike National Forest; to the southwest is the famous Cripple Creek gold-mining district. Ascent to the summit (a fairly level area of about 60 acres [24 hectares]) may be easily accomplished by trail, cog railway (8.75 miles [14 km]), or automobile toll road (18 miles [29 km]). An average snowfall of about 9.5 feet (3 metres) on the northern slope and 14 feet (over 4 metres) on the southern assures good skiing conditions. Colorado Springs draws its main water supply from Pikes Peak Watershed. The timberline is between 11,400 and 12,000 feet (3,475 and 3,660 metres); above it rise nearly 2,500 feet (760 metres) of bare granite. The view from the summit is said to have inspired Katharine Lee Bates to write "America the Beautiful" in 1893.

Blue Ridge Mountains. Blue Ridge Parkway. Autumn in the Appalachian Mountains in North Carolina, United States. Appalachian Highlands, Ridge and Valley, The Appalachian Mountain system

Britannica Quiz

All About Mountains Quiz

What is the highest mountain range in South America? In which country are the Southern Alps located? Lace your climbing boots tight, because this quiz will test whether you can conquer the highest peaks of knowledge.

The peak was encountered in November 1806 by Lieutenant Zebulon Pike, who abandoned his attempt to climb it because of snow and a lack of warm clothing. It was climbed by Edwin James, J. Verplank, and Z. Wilson of Major Stephen Harriman Long's expedition on July 14–15, 1820; this was the first recorded ascent of a 14,000-foot (4,300-metre) peak in any area of what became the United States. Long named the mountain for James, but common usage had bestowed Pike's name upon it by 1859, when it became the focal point of a gold rush with the slogan "Pikes Peak or bust." Bicycling and running contests are frequently staged on the mountain, as is the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, an automobile race held each summer (typically, late June).

Pikes Peak

Pikes Peak

Pikes Peak, Pike National Forest, central Colorado, U.S.

Hogs555

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.

Learn More in these related Britannica articles:

  • Pikes Peak

    Front Range

    …km) west-southwest of Denver, and Pikes Peak (14,115 feet [4,302 metres]), just west of Colorado Springs; each has a paved road to its summit. Notable passes through the range include Berthoud (11,307 feet [3,446 metres]), near Winter Park; Loveland (11,990 feet [3,655 metres]), just northwest of Grays Peak; and Iceberg…

  • amazonstone

    amazonstone

    The Pikes Peak district of Colorado, U.S., became the most important source of amazonstone after 1876; when samples were unveiled at the Centennial Exhibition, their impressive purity and size eventually forced competing Russian mineral dealers out of business.…

  • Colorado

    Colorado

    Colorado

    , constituent state of the United States of America. It is classified as one of the Mountain states, although only about half of its area lies in the Rocky Mountains. It borders Wyoming and Nebraska to the north, Nebraska and Kansas to the east, Oklahoma and New Mexico to the…

What's the Highest Mountain in Colorado

Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/Pikes-Peak