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Geography of Colorado

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A scenic view of a pine forest in Rocky Mountain National Park, showing tall trees and open wilderness.

The geography of the U.S. State of Colorado is very different in many places. It has tall mountains, wide plains, deserts, deep valleys called canyons, and flat areas named mesas. Colorado is a landlocked state, meaning it does not reach the ocean. In 1861, the United States Congress decided the edges of the new Territory of Colorado using lines of latitude and longitude. These lines go from 37°N to 41°N latitude, and from 102°02'48"W to 109°02'48"W longitude. The borders are marked by 697 boundary markers joined by straight boundary lines, giving Colorado its special shape.

The tallest point in Colorado is the top of Mount Elbert in Lake County. It stands at 14,440 feet and is the highest point in the Rocky Mountains of North America. Colorado has about 550 mountain peaks that are higher than 10,000 feet. The lowest spot in the state is where the Arikaree River leaves Yuma County and goes into the state of Kansas, at 3,317 feet above sea level. This is the highest low point of any state. Colorado and Wyoming are the only two states where all land is above 3,000 feet.

Because of the mountains, Colorado has small areas with different weather, called microclimates. The weather in the state changes because of the shape of the land, known as orography. One special weather pattern is the Denver Convergence Vorticity Zone (DCVZ). It changes the weather on the High Plains near Denver. The Rocky Mountains also affect weather far away, creating something called the Colorado low.

Regions

To the east of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado are the Colorado Eastern Plains/High Plains, part of the Great Plains. These plains sit between 3,500 to 7,000 feet above sea level. The Midwest states of Kansas and Nebraska are next to Colorado on the east and northeast.

Rocky Mountain National Park

Not many people live on the plains, except near the South Platte and Arkansas rivers. Rain is scarce, with about 15 inches falling each year. Some farms use irrigation, while others grow crops without it or raise animals. Winter wheat is a common crop, and small towns often have both a water tower and a grain elevator.

Most of Colorado’s people live along the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains in the Front Range Urban Corridor. These mountains protect this area from many storms.

Snowpack accumulation at 14,255 ft (4,345 m) on Longs Peak in Rocky Mountain National Park

West of the plains is the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. Famous peaks here include Longs Peak, Mount Blue Sky, Pikes Peak, and the Spanish Peaks near Walsenburg. This area has forests and some towns. However, dry conditions and forests sometimes lead to big forest fires.

The Continental Divide runs along the top of the Rocky Mountains. West of this divide is the Western Slope. Water here flows west into the Pacific Ocean through the Colorado River. Western Colorado has more mountains, flat-topped hills called mesas, deep valleys called canyons, and dry lands called deserts.

Inside the Rocky Mountains are big open areas called parks or basins. In the north is North Park, drained by the North Platte River, which flows into Wyoming. South of that, on the other side of the divide, is Middle Park, drained by the Colorado River. Further south is South Park, where the South Platte River begins. Even farther south is the San Luis Valley, where the Rio Grande River starts and flows into New Mexico. Nearby is the Wet Mountain Valley. These areas are part of a big crack in the Earth’s surface called the Rio Grande Rift.

Sagebrush Shrubland is typical of Northwestern Colorado. This ecosystem dominates here in Wolf Creek Wildlife Management Area, near Massadona, CO.

The Rocky Mountains in Colorado have 54 peaks that rise above 14,000 feet, called fourteeners. Trees like evergreens and aspen grow below about 12,000 feet in the south and 10,500 feet in the north. Above that, only small plants grow. Snow covers the mountains in winter but usually melts by August, except for a few tiny glaciers. Many old gold and silver mines are found in the Colorado Mineral Belt, which stretches from the San Juan Mountains in the southwest to Boulder and Central City near the front range.

The Western Slope is mostly drained by the Colorado River and its smaller rivers. To the south are the San Juan Mountains, a very rough range, and beyond them lies the Colorado Plateau, a high desert that reaches into other states. Grand Junction is the biggest city here and can be reached by Interstate Highway 70. Near Grand Junction is Grand Mesa, a large flat-topped desert mountain. Further east are popular ski resort towns like Aspen, Vail, Crested Butte, and Steamboat Springs. The northwest corner of Colorado, next to Utah and Wyoming, has mostly open land used for raising animals.

From west to east, Colorado changes from dry basins and canyons to plateaus, then tall mountains, and finally the grassy plains. Mount Elbert is the highest peak in the Rocky Mountains in all of North America. The well-known Pikes Peak stands just west of Colorado Springs. On clear days, its peak can even be seen from close to the border with Kansas.

Climate statistics for selected cities

Here are some climate facts for cities in Colorado. These numbers show how warm or cold, wet or dry, different places in Colorado usually get.

Images

A detailed topographic map of the state of Colorado, showing its mountains, valleys, and geographical features.
A stunning view of planet Earth from space.
A beautiful view of the Matterhorn mountain as seen from the town of Zermatt.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Geography of Colorado, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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