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The Crazy Mountains, often called the Crazies, is a mountain range in the Central Montana Alkalic Province in the U.S. state of . They are a part of the northern .


Geography
Spanning a distance of 40 miles (64 km), the Crazy Mountains are located between the Musselshell and Yellowstone rivers. The highest peak is at . Rising over above the to the east, the Crazies dominate their surroundings and are plainly visible just north of Interstate 90.

The Crazy Mountains form an isolated east of the Continental Divide. Other isolated ranges in Montana include the Castle Mountains, Little Belt Mountains, Big Snowy Mountains, Little Snowy Mountains, Bears Paw Mountains, , North and South Moccasin Mountains, Highwood Mountains, Little Rocky Mountains, Sweet Grass Hills, and, in the southeastern corner of the state near Ekalaka, the .


Geology
The Big Timber Stock, a large igneous intrusion, forms the bedrock in the Crazy Mountains. Preliminary geologic map of the Ringling 30' x 60' quadrangle, central Montana, by McDonald, Catherine, Lopez, D.A., Berg, R.B., and Gibson, R. I., Publishing Organization: Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology, Series and Number: Open-File Reports 511. Publication Date: 2005 Map Scale: 1:100,000 The stock is of age, and consists of and with zones of Quartz Monzodiorite, which has been intruded by many dikes and sills.

Geological features of the Crazy Mountains include:


Adjacent counties
  • Meagher County, Montana - north
  • Sweet Grass County, Montana - east
  • Park County, Montana - west, south


Wildlife
Due to the eastern location, these mountains are drier and less densely forested than other mountain ranges in Montana. There are at least 40 alpine lakes in the range, 15 of which are named. The Crazy Mountains sit in both Gallatin National Forest and Lewis and Clark National Forest. The Crazies support a healthy herd of and the occasional elusive .


History
In 1916, the Crazy Mountains were proposed as a location for a national park, yet Congress failed to pass the legislation. National Park Service officials considered the area again in 1935, yet they reported that a national park would not be feasible because "half of the land, every alternate section, is owned by the Northern Pacific Railroad or is in private hands."


Access
The Crazies are almost completely surrounded by private lands making access into the mountains somewhat difficult, especially in the southern section where the highest peaks are located.


Name origin
The name Crazy Mountains is said to be a shortened form of the name "Crazy Woman Mountains" given them in complement to their original name, after a woman who went insane and lived in them after her family was killed in the westward settlement movement.* (This is an apocryphal account likely based more on myth than reality. The name is said to have arisen out of a translation error between early white explorers and the Crow natives who valued the Crazy Mountains as a location for vision quests. They attempted to convey this to the explorers, who, likely confused by the notions of vision quest, came to understand the Crazies as a place where one goes crazy.)
(1986). 9780938314240, Montana Magazine.

The called the mountains Awaxaawippíia, roughly translated as "Ominous Mountains", or even more roughly, "Crazy Mountains". They were famous to the Crow people for having metaphysical powers and being unpredictable—a place used for .


See also
  • List of mountain ranges in Montana


Notes

External links

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