Harcuvar Mountains

Harcuvar Mountains
Harcuvar Mountains is located in Arizona
Harcuvar Mountains
Harcuvar Mountains
Harcuvar Mountains, (La Paz & southwest Yavapai Counties), in Arizona
Highest point
PeakSmith Peak (Arizona)
Elevation5,242 ft (1,598 m)
Coordinates33°56′30″N 113°35′03″W / 33.9416943°N 113.5840954°W / 33.9416943; -113.5840954
Dimensions
Length25 mi (40 km) SW-NE
Width5 mi (8.0 km)
Geography
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
RegionsMaria fold and thrust belt and Sonoran Desert
DistrictsLa Paz County, AZ and Yavapai County, AZ
SettlementWenden, ArizonaSalome, Arizona-(SW)
Vicksburg, Harcuvar &
Aguila, AZ-(SW & SE)
Borders onBuckskin Mtns, Butler Valley, McMullen Valley, Harquahala Mtns and Bill Williams River

The Harcuvar Mountains (Yavapai: Ahakuwa) are a narrow mountain range in western-central Arizona, United States. The range lies just east of the north–south Colorado River, and south of the east–west, west-flowing Bill Williams River, from Alamo Lake.

The range is part of a three-range sequence of mildly arc-shaped ranges, and two intermountain range valleys in the Maria fold and thrust belt, a region in western-central Arizona and southeast Southern California, with the Colorado River flowing south through the western part of the belt. The fold-and-thrust-belt region contains numerous plains, valleys, and mountain ranges, about 30 landforms in all.

The range is a narrow range about 25 mi long, and 5 mi wide, and trends southwest to northeast. The McMullen Valley is the southeast border of the range, and is traversed by U.S. Route 60.

Four peaks are found in the range; the highest peak is Smith Peak (Arizona), 5,242 feet (1,598 m) in the northeast, but not easily accessible by road. In the southwest, is Harcuvar Peak, at 4,618 feet (1,408 m),[1] accessible by unimproved road, via Cottonwood Pass. Two other peaks lie in the center of the range; one lies adjacent and north of Cunningham Pass, called ECC Peak, at 3,000 feet (914 m), and further northeast, ECP Peak, at 4,593 feet (1,400 m).

In 1990, the Harcuvar Mountains Wilderness became part of the now over 109 million acre National Wilderness Preservation System established by the Wilderness Act of 1964. The Harcuvar Mountains Wilderness is in northeast La Paz County 82 miles northwest of Phoenix, Arizona.