Talk:Kaweah Peaks Ridge

Latest comment: 10 days ago by 2600:6C50:4E7F:67C2:3947:F9B6:B878:6FD9 in topic Geologic concern

Photo

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I am afraid that the picture does not depict the Kaweah Peaks Ridge, for the most part anyways. I am very certain about that. It is a view of a section of the Great Western Divide as seen from the High Sierra Trail about 1 mile east of the Mehrten Creek crossing. From this place, the Kaweah Peaks Ridge is located behind the Great Western Divide. Only on the far left the Black Kaweah (13765') is visible and just to the right, barely visible, is the Red Kaweah with its two peaks. The remaining peaks belong to the Great Western Divide. From the left: Eagle Scout Peak (12040') appearing just a tiny bit higher than the Black Kaweah. The next three peaks are unnamed. In the center of the picture is Lippincott Mountain (12265') and the prominent peak on the right side is Mt. Eisen (12160'). Theschenks 10:18, 12 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Can anyone confirm if the current photo is of the peaks named in its caption, or does the note above still apply? --Justin (talk) 01:22, 28 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
I believe Theschenks is correct. These do not represent the Kaweah Peaks. This photo looks more like the southern most Great Western Divide.Naturespace (talk) 21:15, 9 April 2008 (UTC)Reply
Definitely not the Kaweahs. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.219.152.177 (talk) 20:43, 25 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Good question

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Good question, as the Kaweah Ridge runs rough northwest -- southeast. I checked the map of Sequoia I picked up back when I lived there. Been a few, but where's the "orange lump" (copyrighted image here) of Mount Kaweah?

One copyrighted image lives here, another good one here, with the "broken up" Red Kaweah quite prominent.

dino (talk) 03:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

The photo in the article is in fact of the Kaweah Ridge. It is taken from the NE from the entrance to the basin. The peaks from L to R are Second Kaweah, Bilko Pinnacle, Squaretop, Michael's Pinnacle, and Red Kaweah. The photo from Summit Post you linked to is taken from the SW, on the opposite side of the ridge. 2600:6C50:4E7F:67C2:3947:F9B6:B878:6FD9 (talk) 15:28, 6 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

Geologic concern

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This article states that the Kaweahs are primarily metamorphic when in fact they consist of early Cretaceous granite with abundant pyrite, which when it breaks down gives a reddish color that causes many to (I presume) misconstrue it as being metamorphic. Black Kaweah is the only metamorphic peak in the ridge (which is actually only a western spur of the ridge) consisting of meta dacite with meta-quartz plagioclase crystal-lithic tuffs. This can be confirmed by consulting the USGS geologic quad for Triple Divide Peak. 2600:6C50:4E7F:67C2:3947:F9B6:B878:6FD9 (talk) 15:39, 6 September 2024 (UTC)Reply