Product Code Database
Example Keywords: jeans -music $44
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Mount Tamalpais
Tag Wiki 'Mount Tamalpais'.
Tag

Mount Tamalpais (; ; : Támal Pájiṣ), known locally as Mount Tam, is a in Marin County, , United States, often considered symbolic of Marin County. Much of Mount Tamalpais is protected within public lands such as Mount Tamalpais State Park, the Marin Municipal Water District , and National Park Service land, such as .


Toponym
The name Tamalpais was first recorded in 1845. It comes from the Coast Miwok name for this mountain, , meaning "west hill".Callaghan, Catherine. (1970). Bodega Miwok Dictionary. University of California Publications in Linguistics 60.

Various different also exist, but they are unsubstantiated. One holds that it comes from the Spanish Tamal país, meaning "Tamal country," Tamal being the name that the Spanish missionaries gave to the people. Another holds that the name is the Coast Miwok word for "sleeping maiden" and is taken from the "Legend of the Sleeping Maiden". "Mt. Tamalpais" by Kathleen Goodwin, Point Reyes Visions. Supposedly, the legend is that the mountain's contour reflects the reclining profile of a young Miwok girl who was saved from a rival tribe by the shuddering of the mountain. However, this legend actually has no basis in Coast Miwok myth and is instead a piece of Victorian-era .Robertson, David. (1991). Mt. Tamalpais: The Legendary Birth of a Holy Mountain. California History 70(2):146–161.Skolnick, Sharon. (1989). Dreams of Tamalpais. San Francisco: Last Gasp. The "Sleeping Lady" story was the creation of playwright Dan Totheroh, who wrote the first play performed at Mt. Tamalpais' Mountain Theater about Tamelpa, the Mountain Queen. Another suggests a tie to the Eurasian origins of the Miwoks, where "pais" means place and "tamal" is a tribe in Siberia.


Geography
Mount Tamalpais is the highest peak in the , which are part of the Northern California Coast Ranges. The elevation at the West Peak, where a radar dome currently stands, is between and . It stood over before the summit was flattened for the radar dome construction. The East Peak is at . The mountain is clearly visible from parts of and the East Bay.

The majority of the mountain is contained in protected public lands, including Mount Tamalpais State Park, Muir Woods National Monument, and the Mount Tamalpais Watershed. It adjoins the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (which in turn adjoins Point Reyes National Seashore) as well as several Marin County Open Space Preserves. This provides nearly of continuous publicly accessible open space. Some of the lower slopes of Mount Tamalpais fall within several cities and unincorporated communities of Marin County, including Mill Valley, Tamalpais-Homestead Valley, Stinson Beach, and Kentfield. These areas are generally developed, consisting of mostly low-density single-family homes.


Natural history

Geology and soils
Like the rest of the California Coast Ranges, Mount Tamalpais is the result of uplift, buckling, and folding of the North American Plate as it slides along the near the San Andreas Fault zone.

In 2004, a team of Penn State geoscientists suggested that a blind thrust fault, like the one that caused the Northridge earthquake, lies beneath Mount Tamalpais. This idea was partly based on the steepness of Mount Tamalpais and of nearby , such steepness on the visible surface often being the result of blind thrust faults. Another reason for the suggestion was that the San Andreas Fault creeps more slowly south of Mount Tamalpais than it does in its sections north of Mount Tamalpais and in the , and that the existence of a blind thrust fault may explain the different creeping velocities. If a blind thrust fault does exist under Mount Tamalpais, and if it ruptures, it could be potentially devastating to the North Bay, San Francisco, and any other nearby locale resting on unstable earth and loose fill.

Major Mount Tamalpais rockforms include , particularly evident in outcroppings near the summit and on the north side. A number of serpentine endemic plants grow in the in this part of the mountain.


Hydrology
Since the steep slopes of Mount Tamalpais force out moisture from passing storms and/or fog, the mountain supports several year-round streams like Redwood Creek on the southern face of the mountain down into Muir Woods. The steep southeastern slopes of Mount Tamalpais drain to Arroyo Corte Madera del Presidio, which in turn discharges to .


Climate
With its height, various faces, and proximity to the ocean and bay, the mountain contains many , ranging from cool and foggy in lower ocean-facing valleys with their redwood forests, to hot and dry on the slopes, cool and breezy at the summit, and shady on the heavily -forested north slopes near Alpine Lake.

Annual precipitation San Francisco State University SFSU Bay Area Rainfall Map around Mount Tamalpais varies greatly from around 27.5–31.5 inches (700–800 mm) in the drier, eastern foothills to about 59 inches (1,500 mm) near the , close to the . Both Mount Tamalpais and the Bolinas Ridge force moisture out of the air efficiently, since the air is cooled rapidly as it ascends the steep mountain faces and thus Mount Tamalpais's western part is heavily forested with tall redwoods and Douglas firs. The same fact holds for the steep, south-facing bowl canyon that Muir Woods is located in, with precipitation in Redwood Canyon at around 39.4–47.2 inches (1,000–1,200 mm). Worldclimate.com Rainfall station at about 950 feet (290 m) elevation.

in , most of the annual precipitation falls during the winter months. During cold, wet winter storms, the mountain also regularly gets some snowfall, sometimes as much as overnight, as observed in February 2001, March 2006, February 2011, February 2019, and February 2023. Davidsanger.com Photograph of snow on Mount Tamalpais. The region sometimes gets hit with strong Pacific storms that may topple trees, and bring hurricane-force winds to exposed, barren areas like the Bolinas Ridge and the summit of Mount Tamalpais. In summer, the area gets almost no precipitation, except for Sightseeingworld.com Climate description of the local area. that occurs in Muir Woods, the Bolinas Ridge and the western end of Mount Tamalpais, where summer fog and oceanic breezes are more prevalent. In contrast, the eastern foothills, sheltered from the oceanic breezes and fog, are drier, since the foothills force little moisture out of the air. This leads to the fact that the eastern slopes contain only oak, pine, shrub, coastal sage scrub, grassland and sparse Douglas-fir forest. Coastal sage scrub also occurs on some of the exposed coastal slopes.

Temperatures on top of Mount Tamalpais are generally somewhat cooler than places next to the San Francisco Bay or the ocean due to elevation. In summer, however, the top of Mount Tamalpais may actually be warmer than the middle, foggy elevations due to a thermal inversion. The summer fog and breezes make locations on Mount Tamalpais, closer to the ocean, cooler than the blazing hot interior valleys.


Plant communities
Hardwood woodland types are generally subtypes of California oak woodland, including oak-bay-madrone forest, oak woodland, and . Oak-bay-madrone forests are found in areas with moderate moisture and particularly favor north-facing slopes. They are dominated by one or more of three hardwood tree species – Coast Live Oak, , and madrone. Coast live oak tends to be dominant in somewhat drier areas, while bay is more dominant in shadier, moister areas; madrone is abundant in certain soil types in both moist and dry spots. Oak woodlands are a more open-canopy forest dominated by coast live oak, while oak has a completely open canopy and represents a mixture of coast live oak woodland and grassland.Shufford WD, Timossi IC. (1989). Plant Communities of Marin County. Sacramento, CA: California Native Plant Society.

The great diversity of microclimates on Mount Tamalpais ensures a wide variety of as well. Plant communities on the mountain include various types of hardwood and coniferous forests, coastal scrub, , , and vegetation. Wholly or partially coniferous forest types are found in the moistest areas of Mount Tamalpais. Coast redwood forests are restricted to areas where the particular ecological needs of redwood are met: areas characterized by high overall moisture, low elevations below the fog line, and deep soils. Muir Woods is the most extensive and best-known redwood forest of the Mount Tamalpais area. Mixed evergreen forests of various combinations of , madrone, coast and canyon live oak, and are found in moist areas on middle to high elevations on the mountain. Very moist areas of mixed evergreen forest may also include bay, redwood, and California torreya. Areas in which mixed evergreen forests are predominant include areas of Fairfax-Bolinas Road and and around Alpine Lake.

Various kinds of communities are also widespread. Low-elevation areas below the fog line with relatively low overall rainfall or thin soils are often the site of a northern coastal scrub community characterized by - association, with lesser amounts of poison-oak, bush monkeyflower, California , western , and various species of and . is predominant in areas characterized by thin, rocky soils and little moisture. Two main types of chaparral are found the mountain chamise chaparral and chaparral. Chamise is dominant in the hottest, most xeric areas of the mountain, particularly on south- and west-facing slopes, while manzanita is dominant in other xeric areas, particularly on east-facing slopes and forest borders. Areas of mixed chamise-manzanita chaparral occur in relatively more areas; and dwarfed interior live oak may also predominate on such sites. Areas in which various kinds of chaparral communities are dominant include areas along Old Railroad Grade.

Grassland areas are also common on Mount Tamalpais. Native perennial bunchgrass species were originally dominant, but most of these grasslands are now dominated by annual grasses of European origin. Native grasslands, still found in a few isolated areas, are of two types. Northern coastal prairie is found below the fog line and is characterized by a - association, while valley grassland, found in drier areas, is dominated by , with and Leymus triticoides also being common.

Wetland vegetation types found on Mount Tamalpais include coastal riparian forests, , and some marsh areas. Coastal riparian forest is predominant along the valley streams of Mount Tamalpais. Red and white ( and Alnus rhombifolia) and arroyo and yellow ( and ) are dominant in these types of woodland, with bigleaf maple ( Acer macrophyllum), box-elder ( ssp. californicum), and California bay also being common. Wet are present in several high-elevation spots on the mountain,Howell JT. (1970). Marin Flora (2nd ed). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. while High Marsh represents a rare example of a community on the mountain.

have a high rate of and are the site of several unique subtypes of the above plant communities. Serpentine grasslands are some of the few grasslands in which native perennial grasses are still relatively dominant. Serpentine chaparral forms a unique plant community, dominated by dwarfed leather oak ( ), Jepson ceanothus ( Ceanothus jepsonii), Tamalpais manzanita ( Arctostaphylos montana), and Sargent cypress ( Cupressus sargentii). On the upper slopes of the mountain, small groves of Sargent cypress trees up to 50 feet (15 m) tall can be found in serpentine areas.

Several species of endemic plants are found only on serpentine soils; these species may be widespread, but only occur on serpentine soils, or the may be more restricted, only growing in a few other places besides Mount Tamalpais, or may even be restricted just to Mount Tamalpais. The Mount Tamalpais thistle ( Cirsium hydrophilum var. vaseyi), for example, is a rare variety of thistle known only from the serpentine seeps of the mountain. The Mount Tamalpais jewelflower ( Streptanthus batrachopus) is also limited to the area.


Wildlife
Mount Tamalpais provides one of the last remaining refuges in the Bay Area. has invaded wildlife habitat, forcing many in southern Marin County to retreat up onto Mount Tamalpais, Muir Woods, and the . of , , and are found on Mount Tamalpais, including a number of and endangered species. Mt. Tamalpais and the neighboring Golden Gate Recreation Area together encompass over 115 square miles (298 square kilometers) of land, forming one of the largest preserved parklands located near a U.S. urban center.


History
The are said to have believed that an evil witch dwelled at the top of Mount Tamalpais and therefore never set foot on the peak.

Tamalpais was home to the Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods Railway, also known as "The Crookedest Railroad in the World," a railroad which wound its way from downtown Mill Valley up to the mountain's East Peak, starting in 1896. An auto road was constructed to the peak as automobiles gained popularity in the 1920s. The 8-mile railroad used conventional rails but required mountain-climbing geared steam locomotives and operated from 1896 to 1930. The Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods Railway (website) by Don Hargraves.Wurm, Ted and Graves, Al. (1983). The Crookedest Railroad in the World.

Early wireless towers were constructed on the mountain in the early 20th century, only to be destroyed by one of the periodic hurricane-force windstorms.

In late November 1944, a US Navy plane crashed into the mountain after developing engine trouble shortly after takeoff from Alameda Naval Air Station. All eight aviators on board were killed.

The U.S. Weather Bureau operated a weather station at the site of the now defunct Mill Valley Air Force Station for many years.

The peak and its surrounding areas are the birthplace of in the 1970s, where early mountain bikers such as , Charlie Kelly, and were active.

British philosopher owned a cabin on Mount Tamalpais later in his life where he ultimately died in his sleep of heart failure on November 16, 1973.Brown, Patricia Leigh, "Oasis for Resisting Status Symbols Just Might Get One", New York Times, January 25, 2012. Date in 1973 and cause of death not specified in this source. Retrieved 2016-09-14.

On top of the East Peak is a station, staffed during the summer months by volunteers with the Marin County Fire Department.


Recreation
Mount Tamalpais is a hiking, picnicking, mountain and road cycling, horseback riding, and hang-gliding destination for residents of the San Francisco Bay Area, with over of trails and fire roads. With numerous trailheads, a well-networked trail and road system, and hikes of greatly varying length and difficulty, the mountain offers a compelling range of attractions. Marin Municipal Water District maintains several reservoirs on the north slopes of Mount Tamalpais, including Alpine Lake, , Bon Tempe Lake, Phoenix Lake, and .

The western slopes of the mountain descend to the Pacific Ocean at Stinson Beach. The annual traverses the mountain from to Stinson Beach. Though backpack camping isn't allowed, walk-in camping exists at the Pantoll and Bootjack campgrounds. The historic Bootjack Campground was established in the early 1920s by the Tamalpais Conservation Corps, and the Civilian Conservation Corps further refined the campground facilities in the 1930s. Showing substantial signs of overuse, the campground was closed by State Parks in 1969. The Bootjack Campground and Trail were reopened on Thursday, June 5, 2014. Bootjack Campground and Trail reopening parks.ca.gov

parking within Mt. Tamalpais State Park is available generally with a self-service fee ($8). The scenic Ridgecrest Blvd. running along the ridgeline between the Rock Spring trailhead and Fairfax-Bolinas Road, with panoramic views of the summit, Pacific, , , and , is featured in many automobile and other advertisements, as well as being the local hang-gliding launch point. Mount Tam is also home to the Edgewood Botanic Garden and to the where Broadway musical productions are performed every year by the Mountain Play Association. Monthly astronomy viewings and lectures are held at Rock Spring and Mountain Theater April through October by Mt Tam Astronomy.


Hiking and mountain biking
Since the Mount Tamalpais area contains large expanses of undeveloped, natural land, there are many trails and trailheads that criss-cross the area. Many of these trails are used by hikers and bikers seeking refuge from the urban landscape of the San Francisco Bay Area. Some of these trails, including the mountaintop or ridgetop trails, have views of the San Francisco Bay and Pacific Ocean. Other trails, usually lower elevation valley trails, lead into natural, dense groves of mature and redwood trees, clear, open grassland, and shrublands. All roads leading to the many trailheads around Mount Tamalpais are usually open, but during fire season some of these roads may be closed due to high fire risk.

The many roads, paved and unpaved, that cross the Mount Tamalpais region are used by , especially on weekends. Mount Tamalpais played an instrumental role in the birth of mountain biking many years ago, with pioneer frame builders such as , , and setting up shops in nearby towns. There has been considerable controversy over trail access for mountain bikes, both in terms of environmental impact and the safety of other trail users. As a result, bicycles have been banned from the majority of narrow, single-track trails, though bicycles are still allowed on fire roads. The fire roads on Mt. Tam are mixed-use and they are commonly used as running, hiking, biking and horseback riding routes. "Single-Track Trail Mix" by Gordy Slack, California Wild 53:2, Spring 2000.

The , the oldest cross-country race in the U.S., is held in the area and part of the trail traverses the mountain from Mill Valley to Stinson Beach.


Theater
Broadway musicals are performed outdoors, several times each summer, in the stone open air Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre on the southern side of Mt. Tam. Mountainplay.org: The Mountain Play .


See also
  • List of highest points in California by county
  • List of summits of the San Francisco Bay Area
  • Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods Railway
  • Mount Tamalpais State Park


Further reading
  • Fairley, Lincoln. (1987). Mount Tamalpais: A History. San Francisco: Scottwall Associates. (hardbound), (paperback)
  • Spitz, Barry. (1998). Tamalpais Trails. San Anselmo, CA: Potrero Meadow Publishing Co.
  • Skolnick, Sharon. (1989) Dreams of Tamalpais. San Francisco, CA: Last Gasp of San Francisco.


External links


Video and photographs


Hiking and cycling

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
7s Time