Mount Magazine

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Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox mountain

Mount Magazine, officially named Magazine Mountain, is the highest point of the U.S. Interior Highlands and the U.S. state of Arkansas, and is the site of Mount Magazine State Park.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is a flat-topped mountain or mesa capped by hard rock and rimmed by precipitous cliffs. There are two summits atop the mountain: Signal Hill, which reaches Template:Convert and Mossback Ridge, which reaches Template:Cvt.

Mount Magazine is often called "the highest point between the Alleghenies and the Rockies" (there are mountains located in the Trans-Pecos region of far-west Texas which exceed Mount Magazine in elevation and prominence, although the Trans-Pecos region lies so far south of the Rockies, that region arguably lies not "between" the Allegheny Mountains and the Rocky Mountains).

Etymology

According to English botanist Thomas Nuttall, writing in 1819, French hunters named the mountain "Magazine" or "Barn" (French Template:Lang) because of its "peculiar form".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> However, today some scholars believe Nuttall may have been writing about nearby Mount Nebo, and what is today called Mount Magazine was labeled "Castete Mt" on Nuttall's maps.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Location

The U.S. Geological Survey elevation marker atop Mount Magazine.

Mount Magazine is located due north of Blue Mountain Lake in Logan County, Arkansas, approximately Template:Convert east of the Arkansas-Oklahoma border. The most scenic route to the top is a Template:Convert drive along Highway 309 (also known as the Mount Magazine Scenic Byway) from Havana.

Physiographically, Mount Magazine is part of the Frontal Ouachita Mountains, and is part of the Arkansas River Valley ecoregion.<ref name="Geologic Map of Arkansas">Template:Cite web</ref> It lies within a southern extension of the Ozark National Forest close to the Ouachita National Forest.

Climate

The climate is very different from the typical climate of Arkansas state as temperatures remain 10 degrees cooler than normal temperatures in the valleys. The annual average temperature is 56 °F. The park gets 54 inches of rainfall every year, and due to the low clouds, there is fog and limited visibility all year for eight days each month.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref>

Summer

The summer temperature very rarely reaches 100 degrees Fahrenheit on the mountaintop and the hottest average temperature during the summer in the park is 90 degrees Fahrenheit.<ref name=":0" />

Winter

The mountain has limited forest due to the harsh weather during the wintertime. Normal conditions like frost, sleet, hail, snow, and freezing rain can cause the limbs of trees to snap. Higher up on the mountain, frost flowers, ice crystals, hoarfrost, rime ice, and freezing fog can occur. Template:Weather box

Geology

Looking north from Mount Magazine's Cameron Bluff, October 2013

As the South American plate collided with the North American plate during the late Paleozoic, a major foreland basin, the Arkoma Basin, developed north of the Ouachita Mountains.<ref name="History of the Ouachita Mountains">Template:Cite journal</ref> Small grains of sediment that had filled the Arkoma Basin were compacted and cemented into sedimentary rock.<ref name="History of the Ouachita Mountains"/> As the land rose above sea level, small streams developed that eventually merged into the Arkansas River.<ref name="The Geologic History of Mount Magazine">Template:Cite web</ref> After millions of years of erosion, synclines like Mount Magazine have become the most positive topographic features; this phenomenon is the result of the rapid weathering of shales once sandstones were breached on the flanks of surrounding anticlines.<ref name="Stratigraphic Summary of the Arkansas River Valley and Ouachita Mountains">Template:Cite web</ref>

Mount Magazine is a broad mesa composed of Pennsylvanian sedimentary rocks deposited in various shallow-water environments.<ref name="Geologic Map of Mount Magazine">Template:Cite web</ref> Like many mountains in the western Arkansas River Valley, Mount Magazine is capped by the Savanna Formation, a sequence of shale, siltstone, and sandstone; the upper portion of this sequence is missing throughout most of Arkansas.<ref name="Geologic Map of Mount Magazine" /> The Savanna Formation is conformable with the underlying McAlester Formation, a sequence of shale, siltstone, sandstone, and several coal beds.<ref name="Geologic Map of Mount Magazine" /> The McAlester Formation is conformable with the underlying Hartshorne Sandstone, a prominent ledge-former under favorable structural conditions.<ref name="Geologic Map of Mount Magazine" /> The Hartshorne Sandstone is unconformable with the underlying Atoka Formation. This unit has the largest areal extent of any of the Paleozoic formations in Arkansas, extending as far north as the Boston Mountains, and is divided into upper, middle, and lower members.<ref name="Geologic Map of Mount Magazine" /><ref name="Geologic Map of Arkansas" />

Nature & Attractions

Mount Magazine promotes environmental conservation through an Eco-friendly nature attraction that allows visitors to explore nature.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref> It also consists of 18 campsites for nature-lovers.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite web</ref> An annual butterfly festival is hosted each June in the Paris town square.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Animals

The park is home to many species including the shagreen snail, black bear, white-tailed deer, rufous-crowned sparrows (rare), and 94 of the 134 butterfly species of Arkansas. The rarest butterfly species is the Diana Fritillary.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref>

Activities

Activities include the following: hiking, biking, bird watching, horseback riding, hang gliding, rappelling, rock climbing, sightseeing, and photography.<ref name=":1" /> ATV riding is also allowed as there is a guide to the activity.<ref name=":2" />

See also

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References

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