Mohave Mountains | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Peak | Crossman Peak, center-south (see text) |
Elevation | 5,103 ft (1,555 m) |
Dimensions | |
Length | 18 mi (29 km) NW-SE |
Width | 6 mi (9.7 km) |
Geography | |
Mohave Mountains in Arizona | |
Country | United States |
State | Arizona |
Regions | Mojave Desert and Sonoran Desert |
County | Mohave |
Communities | Lake Havasu City, Franconia and Lake Havasu Heights |
Range coordinates | 34°35′N 114°14′W / 34.583°N 114.233°W |
Borders on | Colorado River, Lake Havasu, Sacramento Valley, Sacramento Wash, Dutch Flat and Bill Williams Mountains |
The Mohave Mountains are a small 18-mi (29 km) long[1] mountain range of northwest Arizona. The range is a northwest trending range in southwest Mohave County that parallels a southeast-flowing stretch of the Colorado River, the Arizona-California border. The range also forms the southwest border of a flatland region to its east and north, namely, Dutch Flat which lies east, at the south end of Sacramento Valley. Lake Havasu City, AZ on the Colorado, lays opposite the southwest flank of the range, where the London Bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu.
Interstate 40 traverses east from Needles, California adjacent the north of the range through the flatland region, and turns north through the Sacramento Valley to Kingman, Arizona.
The northwest terminus of the range merges into hills and a rocky region on the east shore of the Colorado River called The Needles.[2] The Topock Gorge of the Colorado and The Needles lay at the east border of the Chemehuevi Mountains of California; both the Chemehuevi and Sacramento Mountains force the Colorado River to flow southeasterly.