Merrimac Butte[2] is a 5,627-foot (1,715-metre) sandstone summit located in Grand County, Utah, United States, about 12 miles northwest of the town of Moab. Merrimac Butte is a thin, 200–600-foot-wide and 1,600-foot-long east-to-west butte with 200-foot-tall vertical Entrada Sandstone walls overlaying a Carmel Formation base.

Merrimac Butte
Merrimac Butte (left) seen with Monitor Butte (right)
Highest point
Elevation5,627 ft (1,715 m)[1]
Prominence637 ft (194 m)[1]
Coordinates38°39′48″N 109°44′34″W / 38.6632°N 109.7429°W / 38.6632; -109.7429[1]
Geography
Merrimac Butte is located in Utah
Merrimac Butte
Merrimac Butte
Location of Merrimac Butte in Utah
Merrimac Butte is located in the United States
Merrimac Butte
Merrimac Butte
Merrimac Butte (the United States)
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
CountyGrand
Parent rangeColorado Plateau
Topo mapUSGS Merrimac Butte
Geology
Rock typeEntrada Sandstone
Climbing
Easiest routeClimbing class 5.8[1]

Monitor Butte is situated immediately east of Merrimac Butte. The two buttes were named after the Monitor and Merrimack, two ironclad steamships known for clashing during the American Civil War. They can be seen from Highway 313 after it climbs out of Sevenmile Canyon en route to the Island in the Sky section of Canyonlands National Park or Dead Horse Point State Park.

Climbing Routes

edit

Climbing Routes on Merrimac Butte[3]

The first ascent was made September 22, 1985, by Jimmy Dunn, John Bouchard, Eric Bjornstad, and Lin Ottinger via "Hypercrack on the Anchor Chain."[4][5]

"Without a Net" is the least difficult climb on Merrimac Butte and the first ascent of this route was made in April 1991 by Charlie Fowler and Sue Wint.[6]

Climate

edit

Spring and fall are the most favorable seasons to see Merrimac and Monitor Buttes, when highs average 60 to 80 °F and lows average 30 to 50 °F. Summer temperatures often exceed 100 °F. Winters are cold, with highs averaging 30 to 50 °F, and lows averaging 0 to 20 °F. As part of a high desert region, it can experience wide daily temperature fluctuations. The area receives an average of less than 10 inches (25 cm) of rain annually.

See also

edit

References

edit
 
Merrimac and Monitor buttes
  1. ^ a b c d "Merrimac Butte" Lists of John
  2. ^ "Merrimac Butte". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  3. ^ Monitor and Merrimac Buttes Rock Climbing Mountain Project
  4. ^ First Ascent Timeline, deserttowersbook.com
  5. ^ North America, United States, Utah, Merrimac Butte, The Hyper Crack on the Anchor Chain, American Alpine Journal, 1986
  6. ^ Selected Climbs in the Desert Southwest: Colorado and Utah, author: Cameron Burns, publisher: The Mountaineers, First Edition 1999, page 125.
edit