The 'Rocky Mountains', often called the 'Rockies', are a broad
mountain range in western
North America. The Rocky Mountains stretch more than 4,800
kilometers (3,000
miles) from northernmost
British Columbia, in
Canada, to
New Mexico, in the
United States. The range's highest peak is
Colorado's
Mount Elbert at 14,440 feet (4,401
meters) above
sea level. Though part of North America's
Pacific Cordillera, the Rockies are not to be confused with the
Pacific Coast Ranges which are located immediately adjacent to the
Pacific coast.
The Eastern edge of the rockies rises impressively above the
Interior Plains of central North America, including the
Front Range which runs from northern
New Mexico to northern
Colorado, the
Wind River Range and
Big Horn Mountains of
Wyoming, the
Crazy Mountains and the
Rocky Mountain Front of
Montana, and the
Clark Range of
Alberta, along with a series of ranges in Canada called the
Continental Ranges.
Mount Robson in
British Columbia, at 3,954 meters (12,972 feet) is the highest peak in the
Canadian Rockies.
The western edge of the Rockies, such as the
Wasatch Range near
Salt Lake City, Utah divides the
Great Basin from other mountains further to the west. The Rockies do not extend into the
Yukon or
Alaska, or into central British Columbia. The
'Rocky Mountain System' within the United States is a
United States physiographic region.
Geography and geology
The Rocky Mountains are commonly defined to stretch from the
Liard River in British Columbia south to the
Rio Grande in New Mexico. Other mountain ranges continue beyond those two rivers, including the
Selwyn Range in
Yukon, the
Brooks Range in
Alaska, and the
Sierra Madre in
Mexico, but those are not part of the Rockies, though they are part of the
American cordillera. The United States definition of the Rockies, however, includes the
Cabinet and
Salish Mountains of Idaho and Montana, whereas their counterparts north of the
Kootenai River, the
Columbia Mountains, are considered a separate system in Canada, lying to the west of the huge
Rocky Mountain Trench, which runs the length of British Columbia from its beginnings in the middle Flathead River valley in western Montana.

Mount Timpanogos, in the Wasatch Range, near
Provo, Utah.
The younger ranges of the Rocky Mountains uplifted during the late
Cretaceous period (100 million-65 million years ago), although some portions of the southern mountains date from uplifts during the
Precambrian (3,980 million-600 million years ago). The mountains' geology is a complex of
igneous and
metamorphic rock; younger
sedimentary rock occurs along the margins of the southern Rocky Mountains, and volcanic rock from the
Tertiary (65 million-1.8 million years ago) occurs in the
San Juan Mountains and in other areas. Millennia of severe erosion in the
Wyoming Basin transformed intermountain basins into a relatively flat terrain. The
Tetons and other north-central ranges contain folded and faulted rocks of
Paleozoic and
Mesozoic age draped above cores of
Proterozoic and
Archean igneous and metamorphic rocks ranging in age from 1.2 billion (e.g., Tetons) to more than 3.3 billion years (
Beartooth Mountains).
[1][2][3]
Periods of glaciation occurred from the
Pleistocene Epoch (1.8 million-70,000 years ago) to the
Holocene Epoch (fewer than 11,000 years ago). Recent episodes included the
Bull Lake Glaciation that began about 150,000 years ago and the
Pinedale Glaciation that probably remained at full glaciation until 15,000-20,000 years ago.
1[4] Ninety percent of Yellowstone National Park was covered by ice during the Pinedale Glaciation.
13The
little ice age was a period of glacial advance that lasted a few centuries from about 1550 to 1860. For example, the Agassiz and Jackson glaciers in
Glacier National Park reached their most forward positions about 1860 during the little ice age.
1[5]
Water in its many forms sculpted the present Rocky Mountain landscape.
1[6] Runoff and snowmelt from the peaks feed Rocky Mountain rivers and lakes with the water supply for one-quarter of the United States. The rivers that flow from the Rocky Mountains eventually drain into three of the world's
Oceans: the
Atlantic Ocean, the
Pacific Ocean, and the
Arctic Ocean.
1 These rivers include:
★
Arkansas River
★
Athabasca River
★
Clark Fork River
★
Clearwater River
★
Colorado River
★
Columbia River
★
Coeur d'Alene River
★
Elk River
★
Fraser River
★
Green River
★
Kootenay River
★
Lochsa River
★
Missouri River
★
North Saskatchewan River
★
Peace River
★
Payette River
★
Platte River
★
Rio Grande
★
Salmon River
★
Selway River
★
South Saskatchewan River
★
Snake River
★
Wind River
★
Yellowstone River
The
Continental Divide is located in the Rocky Mountains and designates the line at which waters flow either to the
Atlantic or
Pacific Oceans.
Triple Divide Peak (8,020 feet / 2,444 m) in
Glacier National Park (U.S.) is so named due to the fact that water which falls on the mountain reaches not only the Atlantic and Pacific, but the
Arctic Ocean as well.
Human history
Since the last great Ice Age, the Rocky Mountains were home first to
Paleo-Indians and then to the
Native American tribes of the
Apache,
Arapaho,
Bannock,
Blackfoot,
Cheyenne,
Crow,
Flathead,
Shoshoni,
Sioux,
Ute,
Kutenai (Ktunaxa in Canada),
Sekani,
Dunne-za and others.
1[7] Paleo-Indians hunted the now-extinct
mammoth and
ancient bison (an animal 20% larger than modern bison) in the foothills and valleys of the mountains. Like the modern tribes that followed them, Paleo-Indians probably migrated to the plains in fall and winter for bison and to the mountains in spring and summer for
fish,
deer,
elk,
roots, and
berries. In Colorado, along the crest of the Continental Divide, rock walls that Native Americans built for driving game date back 5,400-5,800 years.
1[8] A growing body of scientific evidence indicates that Native Americans had significant effects on mammal populations by hunting and on vegetation patterns through deliberate burning.
1[9]
Recent human history of the Rocky Mountains is one of more rapid change.
1[10]3The Spanish explorer
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado — with a group of soldiers, missionaries, and African slaves — marched into the Rocky Mountain region from the south in 1540. The introduction of the horse, metal tools, rifles, new diseases, and different cultures profoundly changed the Native American cultures. Native American populations were extirpated from most of their historical ranges by disease, warfare, habitat loss (eradication of the bison), and continued assaults on their culture.
1

Colorado Rockies
In 1739,
French fur traders Pierre and Paul Mallet, while journeying through the
Great Plains, discovered a range of mountains at the headwaters of the
Platte River, which local
American Indian tribes called the "Rockies", becoming the first Europeans to report on this uncharted mountain range
[11].
Sir Alexander MacKenzie (1764 -
March 11,
1820) became the first European to cross the Rocky Mountains in 1793. He found the upper reaches of the Fraser River and reached what is now the Pacific coast of Canada on
July 20 of that year, completing the first recorded transcontinental crossing of North America north of Mexico. He arrived at Bella Coola, British Columbia, where he first reached saltwater at South Bentinck Arm, an inlet of the Pacific Ocean.
The
Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-1806) was the first scientific reconnaissance of the Rocky Mountains. Specimens were collected for contemporary botanists, zoologists, and geologists.
1[12] The expedition was said to have paved the way to (and through) the Rocky Mountains for European-Americans from the East, although Lewis and Clark met at least 11 European-American mountain men during their travels.
1
Mountain men, primarily French, Spanish, and British roamed the Rocky Mountains from 1720 to 1800 seeking mineral deposits and furs. The fur-trading
Northwest Company established
Rocky Mountain House as a trading post in what is now the Rocky Mountain foothills of Alberta in 1799, and their business rivals the
Hudson's Bay Company established Acton House nearby. These posts served as bases for most European activity in the Canadian Rockies in the early 1800s, most notably the expeditions of
David Thompson (explorer), the first European to follow the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean. After 1802, American
fur traders and explorers ushered in the first widespread
white presence in the Rockies south of the 49th parallel. The more famous of these include Americans included
William Henry Ashley,
Jim Bridger,
Kit Carson,
John Colter,
Thomas Fitzpatrick,
Andrew Henry, and
Jedediah Smith. On
July 24,
1832,
Benjamin Bonneville led the first
wagon train across the Rocky Mountains by using
Wyoming's South Pass.
1
Thousands passed through the Rocky Mountains on the
Oregon Trail beginning in 1842. The
Mormons began to settle near the
Great Salt Lake in 1847. From 1859 to 1864,
Gold was discovered in
Colorado,
Idaho,
Montana, and
British Columbia sparking several
gold rushes bringing thousands of prospectors and minors to explore every mountain and canyon and to create the Rocky Mountain's first major industry. The Idaho gold rush alone produced more gold than the California and Alaska gold rushes combined and was important in the financing of the
Union Army during the
American Civil War. The
transcontinental railroad was completed in 1869, and
Yellowstone National Park was established as the world's first national park in 1872. While settlers filled the valleys and mining towns, conservation and preservation ethics began to take hold.
President Harrison established several forest reserves in the Rocky Mountains in 1891-1892. In 1905,
President Theodore Roosevelt extended the
Medicine Bow Forest Reserve to include the area now managed as
Rocky Mountain National Park.
1.
8 Economic development began to center on
mining,
forestry,
agriculture, and
recreation, as well as on the service industries that support them.
1.
10 Tents and camps became ranches and farms, forts and train stations became towns, and some towns became cities.
1
Industry and development
Economic resources of the Rocky Mountains are varied and abundant.
Minerals found in the Rocky Mountains include significant deposits of
copper,
gold,
lead,
molybdenum,
silver,
tungsten, and
zinc. The Wyoming Basin and several smaller areas contain significant reserves of
coal,
natural gas,
oil shale, and
petroleum. For example, the
Climax mine, located near
Leadville, Colorado, was the largest producer of
Molybdenum in the world. Molybdenum is used in heat-resistant steel in such things as cars and planes. The Climax mine employed over 3,000 workers. The
Coeur d’Alene mine of northern Idaho produces silver, lead, and zinc. Canada's largest
coal mines are near
Fernie, British Columbia and
Sparwood, British Columbia; additional coal mines exist near
Hinton, Alberta1 and in the
Northern Rockies surrounding
Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia.
Abandoned mines with their wakes of mine tailings and toxic wastes dot the Rocky Mountain landscape. In one major example, eighty years of zinc mining profoundly polluted the river and bank near
Eagle River in north-central Colorado. High concentrations of the metal carried by spring runoff harmed
algae,
moss, and
trout populations. An economic analysis of mining effects at this site revealed declining property values, degraded water quality, and the loss of recreational opportunities. The analysis also revealed that cleanup of the river could yield $2.3 million in additional revenue from recreation. In 1983, the former owner of the zinc mine was sued by the Colorado Attorney General for the $4.8 million cleanup costs; 5 years later, ecological recovery was considerable.
1[13]
Agriculture and forestry are major industries. Agriculture includes dryland and irrigated farming and
livestock grazing. Livestock are frequently moved between high-elevation summer
pastures and low-elevation winter pastures,
1 a practice known as
transhumance.
Human population is not very dense in the Rocky Mountains, with an average of four people per square kilometer (10 per square mile) and few cities with over 50,000 people. However, the human population grew rapidly in the Rocky Mountain states between 1950 and 1990. The 40-year statewide increases in population range from 35% in Montana to about 150% in Utah and Colorado. The populations of several mountain towns and communities have doubled in the last 40 years.
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, increased 260%, from 1,244 to 4,472 residents, in 40 years.
1
Tourism
''See also:''
List of U.S. Rocky Mountain ski resorts,
List of Alberta ski resorts,
List of B.C. ski resorts

Snowpack accumulation at 14,255 ft. on Longs Peak in Rocky Mountain National Park (photo courtesy of USDA).
Every year the scenic areas and recreational opportunities of the Rocky Mountains draw millions of tourists.
1 The main language of the Rocky Mountains is
English. But there are also linguistic pockets of
Spanish and
Native American languages.
People from all over the world visit the sites to hike, camp, or engage in mountain sports.
1 In the summer, main tourist attractions are:
In the United States:
★
Pikes Peak
★
Royal Gorge
★
Rocky Mountain National Park
★
Yellowstone National Park
★
Grand Teton National Park
★
Glacier National Park (U.S.)
★
Sawtooth National Recreation Area
In Canada, the mountain range contains these
national parks:
★
Banff National Park
★
Jasper National Park
★
Kootenay National Park
★
Waterton Lakes National Park
★
Yoho National Park
Glacier National Park in Montana and Waterton Lakes National Park in Alberta border each other and collectively are known as
Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park. (See also
International Peace Park.)
In the winter,
skiing is the main attraction. The major ski resorts are:
★
Colorado:
★
★
Aspen
★
★
Vail
★
★
Keystone
★
★
Breckenridge
★
★
Steamboat
★
★
Winter Park
★
★
Copper Mountain
★
★
Eldora
★
Utah:
★
★
Alta
★
★
Snowbird
★
★
Park City
★
★
Brighton
★
★
Sundance Ski Resort
★
★
Solitude Ski Area
★
★
Dear Valley Ski Resort
★
★
Brian Head Ski Resort
★
★
The Canyons Ski Resort
★
★
Wolf Mountain Ski Resort
★
★
Powder Mountain Ski Resort
★
★
Beaver Mountain Ski Area
★
Idaho:
★
★
Bogus Basin
★
★
Brundage Mountain
★
★
Schweitzer Mountain
★
★
Silver Mountain
★
★
Sun Valley
★
★
Tamarack
★
Montana:
★
★
Big Mountain
★
★
Big Sky
★
Alberta:
★
★
Lake Louise
★
★
Sunshine Village
★
★
Nakiska
★
★
Norquay
★
★
Marmot Basin
★
★
Fortress Mountain
★
★
Canmore Nordic Centre
★
British Columbia:
★
★
Fernie
★
Wyoming:
★
★
Jackson Hole Ski Resort
★
★
Grand Targhee
★
★ Hogadon
The adjacent
Columbia Mountains in British Columbia contain major resorts such,
Fernie,
Panorama and
Kicking Horse, as well as
Mount Revelstoke National Park.
Climate

Aerial view of the Colorado Rocky Mountains in summer

Aerial view of the Colorado Rocky Mountains in winter
The Rocky Mountains have a highland climate. The average annual temperature in the valley bottoms of the Colorado Rockies near the latitude of Boulder is 43 °F (6 °C). July is the hottest month there with an average temperature of 82 °F (28 °C). In January, the average monthly temperature is 7 °F (−14 °C), making it the region's coldest month. The average precipitation per year there is approximately 14 inches (360 mm).
The summers in this area of the Rockies are warm and dry, because the western fronts impede the advancing of water-carrying storm systems. The average temperature in summer is 59 °F (15 °C) and the average precipitation is 5.9 inches (150 mm). Winter is usually wet and very cold, with an average temperature of 28 °F (−2 °C) and average snowfall of 11.4 inches (29.0 cm). In spring, the average temperature is 40 °F (4 °C) and the average precipitation is 4.2 inches (107 mm). And in the fall, the average precipitation is 2.6 inches (66 mm) and the average temperature is 44 °F (7 °C).
References
1. Status and Trends of the Nation's Biological Resources, Stohlgren, T.J., , , U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1998,
2. Paleotectonics and sedimentation in the Rocky Mountain Region, United States, , , , American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 1986, Memoir 41
3. Mountains and plains: the ecology of Wyoming landscapes, , D. H., Knight, Yale University Press, 1994,
4. History and dynamics of glaciation in the northern Yellowstone National Park area, , K. L., Pierce, U.S. Geological Survey, 1979, Professional Paper 729-F
5. The little ice age, , J. M, Grove, Rutledge Press, 1990,
6. High country empire: the High Plains and Rocky Mountains, , R. G., Athearn, McGraw-Hill, 1960,
7. The native tribes of North America: a concise encyclopedia, , M. G., Johnson, Macmillian Publishing, 1994,
8. Rocky Mountain National Park: a history, , C. W., Buchholtz, Colorado Associated University Press, 1983,
9. Aboriginal overkill, , C. E., Kay, Human Nature, 1994
10. The Rockies, , D., Lavender, Harper and Row, 1975,
11. http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/events/1650_1800.htm
12. Letters of the Lewis and Clark expedition with related documents, , D., Jackson, University of Illinois Press, 1962, 17831854
13. How much is a gray wolf worth?, , E., Brandt, National Wildlife, 1993
See also
★
Canadian Rockies
★
Colorado mountain peaks
★
Colorado mountain ranges
★
Geography of North America
★
Geology of North America
★
Lists of mountains
★
Mountain peaks of the Rocky Mountains
External links
★
U.S. Geological Survey website on the Rocky Mountains
★
Headwaters News - Headwaters News - Reporting on the Rockies
★
Colorado Rockies Forests ecoregion images at bioimages.vanderbilt.edu (
slow modem version)
★
North Central Rockies Forests ecoregion images at bioimages.vanderbilt.edu (
slow modem version)
★
South Central Rockies Forests ecoregion images at bioimages.vanderbilt.edu (
slow modem version)