Palo Verde Mountains

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Palo Verde Mountains
Relief map of California.png
Red triangle with thick white border.svg
location of Palo Verde Mountains in California [1]
Highest point
Elevation 285 m (935 ft)
Geography
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
District Imperial County
Range coordinates 33°21′3.113″N114°49′43.865″W / 33.35086472°N 114.82885139°W / 33.35086472; -114.82885139 Coordinates: 33°21′3.113″N114°49′43.865″W / 33.35086472°N 114.82885139°W / 33.35086472; -114.82885139
Topo map USGS  Palo Verde Peak

The Palo Verde Mountains are a mountain range in northeastern Imperial County, California. [1] They are located along the west side of the Colorado River in the Lower Colorado River Valley and Colorado Desert. Palo Verde Peak, which rises to about 1,800 feet in the southern portion, is the highest point in the area. Thumb Peak stands to the north. Clapp Spring, a palm oasis, is located east of Thumb Peak. Clapp Spring is the only permanent water source in the area for wildlife species. [2]

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Milpitas Wash Wilderness is a protected wilderness area to the south of the Palo Verde Mountains and to the west of Cibola National Wildlife Refuge and the Colorado River in Imperial County, California. Established in 2019 by the U.S. Congress, the area is managed by the Bureau of Land Management. Wildlife includes the desert tortoise, mountain lion, long-eared owl, leaf nosed bat, Merriam's and desert kangaroo rat, long-tailed and little pocket mice, Bullock's and hooded orioles, towhees, white-crowned sparrow, Brewer's sparrow, warbler, black-headed grosbeak, diamondback rattlesnake, and the endangered Gila woodpecker. Home to the largest Sonoran desert woodland in North America, trees in Milpitas Wash include mesquite, acacia, palo verde, and ironwood.

References

  1. 1 2 "Palo Verde Mountains". Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey . Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  2. "Wilderness Connect".