Elk Mountains (Colorado)
The Elk Mountains are a high, rugged mountain range in the Rocky Mountains of west-central Colorado in the United States. The mountains sit on the western side of the Continental Divide, largely in southern Pitkin and northern Gunnison counties, in the area southwest of Aspen, south of the Roaring Fork River valley, and east of the Crystal River. The range sits west of the Sawatch Range and northeast of the West Elk Mountains. Much of the range is located within the White River National Forest and the Gunnison National Forest, as well as the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness and Raggeds Wilderness. The Elk Mountains rise nearly 9,000 ft. above the Roaring Fork Valley to the north.
The highest peaks in the range are its fourteeners, Castle Peak, Maroon Peak, Capitol Peak, Snowmass Mountain, Pyramid Peak, and North Maroon Peak. Maroon Peak and North Maroon Peak are collectively known as the Maroon Bells, a popular destination for recreation alpinism. Mount Sopris sits at the northwest end of the range and dominates the skyline of the lower Roaring Fork Valley and the town of Carbondale, Colorado, serving as an unofficial symbol of the area.
Notable peaks in the range include:
- Cathedral Peak, 13,950 ft, near Pyramid Peak
- Hagerman Peak, 13,841 ft, near Snowmass Mountain
- Snowmass Peak, 13,620 ft, near Hagerman Peak
- Clark Peak, 13,580 ft, near Capitol Peak
- Treasure Mountain, 13,528 ft, southwest of the Maroon Bells
- Mount Owen, 13,058 ft, high point of the Ruby Range
- Mount Sopris, 12,965 ft, north west of Capitol Peak
- Chair Mountain, 12,721 ft, high point of The Raggeds
- Crested Butte, 12,162 ft, home of Crested Butte Mountain Resort
- Whitehouse Mountain, 11,975 ft, northwest of Treasure Mountain