PhotosLocation


Pusch_Ridge_Wilderness_Area Latitude and Longitude:

32°22′0″N 110°49′0″W / 32.36667°N 110.81667°W / 32.36667; -110.81667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pusch Ridge Wilderness
Pusch Ridge from the western summit of Prominent Point
Map showing the location of Pusch Ridge Wilderness
Map showing the location of Pusch Ridge Wilderness
Location Pima County, Arizona, USA
Nearest city Catalina Foothills, Arizona
Coordinates 32°22′0″N 110°49′0″W / 32.36667°N 110.81667°W / 32.36667; -110.81667
Area56,430 acres (228.4 km2)
Established1978
Governing body U.S. Forest Service

Pusch Ridge Wilderness Area is a 56,430 acre (228.36 km2) wilderness area. It is located within the Coronado National Forest in the Santa Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, Arizona, United States. Established in 1978, the area varies greatly in elevation and biodiversity, rising from 2,800 feet to over 9,100 feet in elevation.

The area was originally created in an ill-fated effort to preserve and protect the sensitive Desert Bighorn Sheep population on Pusch Ridge, one of the last remaining populations in Arizona. Due in part to increased residential and commercial development around the Santa Catalina Mountains in Oro Valley and the Catalina Foothills, however, the Desert Bighorn Sheep population in the wilderness area has dwindled dramatically, and sightings have nearly ceased in recent years. In November 2013, 31 adult bighorn sheep were reintroduced to the area. In early February 2014, 2 lambs were spotted by an Arizona Game and Fish Department official. These two are the first Catalina-born desert bighorn sheep in nearly 25 years. [1]

Plant life at lower elevations includes saguaro cactus and other desert plants. Trees found at mid-level elevations include mountain mahogany, juniper and pinyon pine. Forests of fir and aspen grow above 8,000 feet. [2]

In the middle of the Santa Catalina mountains there is a dome-shaped core of Catalina granite, formed in the Triassic period. The south face of the mountains is formed by Catalina gneiss with bands of white quartzite, this face is the form of a steep anticline and it is separated from the rest of the mountains by a series of valleys. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Greenberg, Max (February 18, 2014). "Milestone: baby bighorn sheep born in Arizona Wilderness". The Wilderness Society. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  2. ^ a b Warren, Scott S. (2002). Exploring Arizona's Wild Areas. pp. 184–185. ISBN  978-0898867749.

External links