I love mountains. I plan to hike "my" mountain next year. Actually, I planned to hike it this year, but then I went to Oregon instead.
"My" mountain is Mount Timpanogos. This is my view from the front yard:
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Mount Timpanogos |
East view of Mount Timpanogos from Alpine Loop |
Prominence 5,269 ft
2nd Tallest peak in the Wasatch range after King's Peak, but the most popular one to climb.
Right in my back yard (yup, pretty much literally)
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Timp's highest point Big Baldy is the hill in the foreground left- looks so big because it's much closer. Big baldy is 8,756 ft |

The mountains are made of sedimentary rock mostly, including a great deal of limestone, which was formed when Utah was mostly a shallow inland sea. Limestone is mostly calcium carbonate which is the substance in shells and other parts of sea organisms.
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Take a look at those layers! This was a rainy day and I've never seen the layers on Timp look so prominent |
Continued dropping of the valley floor with the regular Wasatch Fault created this mountain range from the lithified marine deposits.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_the_Rocky_Mountains
http://www.onlineutah.com/utahcountymountains.shtml
Cascades
The cascades are incredible mountains that are really volcanoes. There are a number of awesome peaks in this range that extends from northern California into Canada, but here are some of those I saw in Oregon.
Mount Washington is a deeply eroded shield volcano, the main peak is a volcanic plug. Elevation 7,794 ft, prominence 2,554 ft.
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Mount Washington - elevation 7,794 ft |
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Belknap Crater (6,877 ft) on left, Mount Washington on right |
Three Sisters
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Three Sisters (l to r) - Charity, Hope, Faith |
North Sister "Faith" - elevation 10,085 ft, prominence 2,725 ft
- Oldest and most eroded of the 3
- Shield volcano
- Last erupted over 100,000 years ago
- Considered extinct
Middle Sister "Hope" - elevation 10,047 ft, prominence 1,127 ft
- Stratovolcano
- Last erupted 50,000 years ago
- Considered extinct
South Sister "Charity" - elevation 10,358 ft, prominence 5,598 ft
- Youngest and tallest of the 3
- Stratovolcano atop a shield volcano
- Last erupted 2,000 years ago
- Has a summit crater holding a small lake called Teardrop Pool - highest lake in Oregon
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3 Sisters with Broken Top to the left |
The beautiful Crater Lake National Park
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Crater Lake National Park |
Lake depth is 1,148 ft - deepest lake in the US
Wizard Island is a cinder cone at elevation 6,932 ft
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Wizard Island cinder cone in Crater Lake |
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Mount Scott, highest peak around Crater Lake |
Geology of the Cascade Mountains
This awesome mountain range is formed by plate tectonics! As the Juan de Fuca plate dives under the North American plate, that crust is destroyed by the heat of the inner layers of the earth. That molten rock (magma), comes up to the surface creating a line of volcanoes parallel to the coast.
The melting on the right where it rises to the surface is how the Cascades ^^ were formed |
Plate tectonics of the cascades |