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Wheeler Peak (New Mexico)

Wheeler Peak
Wheeler Peak, NM.JPG
Wheeler Peak
Highest point
Elevation 13,161 ft (4,011 m)  NAVD 88
Prominence 3,409 ft (1,039 m) 
Parent peak Vermejo Peak
Listing
Coordinates 36°33′25″N 105°25′01″W / 36.556855136°N 105.416947028°W / 36.556855136; -105.416947028Coordinates: 36°33′25″N 105°25′01″W / 36.556855136°N 105.416947028°W / 36.556855136; -105.416947028
Geography
Wheeler Peak is located in New Mexico
Wheeler Peak
Wheeler Peak
Location Taos County, New Mexico, U.S.
Parent range Taos Mountains
Topo map USGS Wheeler Peak
Climbing
Easiest route Williams Lake

Wheeler Peak is the highest natural point in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It is located northeast of Taos and south of Red River in the northern part of the state, and just 2 miles (3.2 km) southeast of the ski slopes of Taos Ski Valley. It lies in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, the southernmost subrange of the Rocky Mountains. The peak's elevation is 13,161 feet (4,011 m).

Formerly named Taos Peak, after the nearby town of Taos, New Mexico, it was renamed Wheeler Peak in 1950. A plaque at the summit states that the mountain was:

Named in honor of Major George Montague Wheeler (1842–1905) who for ten years led a party of surveyors and naturalists collecting geologic, biologic, planimetric and topographic data in New Mexico and six other southwestern states.

Just north of Wheeler Peak is Mount Walter. At 13,141 feet (4,005 m) it is the second highest named summit in New Mexico, but it is not usually considered an independent peak as it has only about 53 feet (16 m) of topographic prominence. It is sometimes mistaken for Wheeler Peak, since it is along the standard route to Wheeler. Lake Fork Peak at 12,881 feet (3,926 m) lies just across Williams Lake and to the west of Wheeler Mountain.

Taos Ski Valley lies to the northwest of Wheeler Peak, while both the town of Taos and Taos Pueblo are about 15 miles (24 km) to the southwest.

Wheeler Peak is the focus of the 19,661-acre (79.57 km2) Wheeler Peak Wilderness area in the Carson National Forest. Much of the mountain area just south of the peak is on Taos Pueblo land. Some 48,000 acres (190 km2) was returned to the pueblo from the Carson National Forest in 1970 and another 764 acres (3.09 km2) in 1996.


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Wikipedia

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