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- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System abstract "The Rocky Mountains begin in northern New Mexico, where the axial crystalline rocks rise to 12,000 ft (3,700 m) between the horizontal structures of the plains on the east and the plateaus on the west. The upturned stratified formations wrap around the mountain flanks of the range, with ridges and valleys formed on their eroded edges and drained southward by the Pecos river to the Rio Grande and the Gulf of Mexico. The mountains rapidly grow wider and higher northward, taking on new complications of structure and including large basins between the axes of uplift. In northern Colorado and Utah, the mountains become a complex of ranges with a breadth of 300 miles (480 km). In Colorado alone, there are 54 summits over 14,000 ft (4,300 m) in altitude, though none rise any higher than Mount Elbert at 14,440 ft (4,400 m). Turning more to the northwest through Wyoming, the ranges decrease in breadth and height. In Montana, their breadth is not more than 150 miles (240 km), and only seven summits exceed 11,000 feet (3350 m) with one reaching 12,834 ft (3,912 m).In general, the peaks in the Rocky Mountains tend to be fairly gentle and rounded relative to those found in other mountain ranges of comparable scale.".
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System thumbnail US_west_coast_physiographic_regions_map.jpg?width=300.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System wikiPageID "186239".
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System wikiPageRevisionID "600453764".
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System hasPhotoCollection Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System subject Category:Geography_of_the_United_States.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System subject Category:Mountain_ranges_of_the_Western_United_States.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System subject Category:Rocky_Mountains.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System comment "The Rocky Mountains begin in northern New Mexico, where the axial crystalline rocks rise to 12,000 ft (3,700 m) between the horizontal structures of the plains on the east and the plateaus on the west. The upturned stratified formations wrap around the mountain flanks of the range, with ridges and valleys formed on their eroded edges and drained southward by the Pecos river to the Rio Grande and the Gulf of Mexico.".
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System label "Geography of the United States Rocky Mountain System".
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System sameAs m.019fzf.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System sameAs Q5535274.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System sameAs Q5535274.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System wasDerivedFrom Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System?oldid=600453764.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System depiction US_west_coast_physiographic_regions_map.jpg.
- Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System isPrimaryTopicOf Geography_of_the_United_States_Rocky_Mountain_System.