Lynn Arave stands near where Utah's lowest point likely was in 2006.
Ravell Call explores the wet (west end) of the Beaver Dam wash, in the State of Arizona.
The dirt road in Arizona that leads to the edge of the Beaver Dam Wash.
A closeup of where Utah's lowest point likely is, marked by my GPS.
By Lynn Arave
SAINT GEORGE isn’t the hottest place in Utah, nor is it the lowest elevation place in the Beehive State either.
SAINT GEORGE isn’t the hottest place in Utah, nor is it the lowest elevation place in the Beehive State either.
Having been to Kings
Peak, Utah’s highest point 5 times, I decided in June of 2006 to find and
document the true lowest elevation spot in Utah (also undoubtedly the hottest
spot in the state too.)
Those two superlatives really belong to the Beaver Dam Wash in the extreme
southwest corner of the state, at the Utah-Arizona state line. Welcome to Utah's
basement, in the Beaver Dam Wash, where an environment exists unlike anywhere
else in the Beehive State.
It's the Mojave Desert, where Joshua trees, blackbrush,
creosote, yucca and other southern desert plants rule in an ovenlike
environment this time of year. Kings Peak is Utah's highest elevation at 13,538
feet above sea level, but at Beaver Dam Wash — 288 air miles away — the
elevation dips more than two miles below Kings and is almost 600 feet lower
than the city of St. George, located some 23 miles to the northeast.
The majority of sources out there — Internet and books — have
Utah's lowest elevation all wrong. Utah's lowest point isn't 2,350 feet above
sea level, as is commonly listed by Utah tourist sources.
Nor is it an even 2,000 feet, as some other sources list. Utah's
lowest elevation here is "probably" 2,178 feet above sea level. (In
contrast, St. George has an average elevation of 2,800 feet and Salt Lake
City's Temple Square is 4,327 feet above sea level.) That's according to Mark
Milligan, a geologist with the Utah Geological Survey, who found that
quadrangle maps show the lowest spot is found in an area bounded by 2,160-foot
and 2,180-foot contour lines.
"The border is much closer to the 2,180 contour and thus
agrees with an elevation of 2,178 feet," he wrote in an e-mail to the
Deseret Morning News. He found that even though the USGS Geographic Names
Information also lists Utah's lowest elevation at 2,178 feet, in the same entry
it uses the even 2,000-foot number as the state's least elevation, too.
Milligan believes 2,178 is as close an estimate to the low
elevation as is possible. Since the Beaver Dam Wash is an area prone to
flooding, its elevation can change. "Of course, it is possible erosion may
have recently lowered this portion of the wash,"
Milligan reported in his e-mail. "The precipitation that
caused the 2005 flooding in St. George presumably caused flooding in the Beaver
Dam Wash. "I have not been there recently enough to remember what the
bottom of the wash looks like in that area. So I would not even dare an
educated guess as to whether to expect much erosion there from such
floods." Elaine York, West Desert regional director for the Utah Field
Office of the Nature Conservancy, said the 2005 flooding did damage the Lytle Ranch
facilities in the Beaver Dam Wash, about six miles north. (The ranch is now
owned and operated by Brigham Young University.)
She suspects the lowest
elevation could have dipped slightly from erosion last year. "Beaver Dam
Wash is a Mojave Desert eco-region," she said. It's also an area famous
for bird-watching, and a portion of the Beaver Dam Wash is under study as a
possible wilderness area.
Mark Eubank, KSL's former chief meteorologist, believes Utah's
lowest spot is also usually its hottest most days. "In general, the lower
the elevation, the hotter the temperature," Eubank said. "That is why
Death Valley is the hottest place in North America — elevation near 200 feet
below sea level. "There are no official temperature readings from Beaver
Dam Wash, but I feel certain it averages hotter there than in St. George."
Eubank said Mesquite, Nev., to the southwest of Beaver Dam Wash,
runs 2 to 5 degrees hotter than St. George most days. Chris Gibson,
meteorologist with the Salt Lake Office of the National Weather Service,
agrees. "It probably is the hottest place in Utah," he said. Gibson
said temperatures generally drop 5.5 degrees Celsius for every 1,000 feet of
altitude descended. On a hot, still day, he believes Utah's lowest point would
be a couple of degrees warmer than St. George.
Despite the hot temperatures in the Beaver Dam Wash, it isn't
totally waterless. York said some perennial springs keep year-round water
there, even though at times the water is underground slightly. Utah's lowest
point ranks fourth among the 50 states in height. Only Colorado (3,320 feet),
Wyoming (3,099) and New Mexico (2,840) have higher "low" spot points.
(Montana rates fifth-place with an 1,800-foot low point.) Twenty-one of the
states have sea level as their lowest point. There's also increasing interest
in "bagging" the lowest points in all 50 states and a Web site for
America's Basement,americasroof.com/lowest.shtml, highlights the possibilities.
• During a June 5 and 6 visit to Utah's lowest point, my GPS
initially measured 2,176 in one of the lowest washes, where Utah's lowest point
surely is. A few dozen feet away in another small wash eastward, it measured
2,174 feet and fluctuated, dropping to as low as 2,154. (GPS devices do not
claim absolute accuracy on elevation measured.)
If you still need a more exact idea of where Utah's lowest point
is, it is almost straight north up the Beaver Dam Wash, 15 miles north of
Littlefield, Ariz., which I-15 en route to Mesquite/Las Vegas passes through.
Two Deseret Morning News colleagues and I found the Beaver Dam Wash to be a
much larger region than imagined — with the wash being the lowest point in the
area with a width of up to a half-mile at times. We also found a trek here to
be no walk in the park. Loose sand and gravel, marshes and thick brush make
walking difficult, and the all-terrain vehicle tracks we saw at times may represent
the smartest and easiest way to visit.
Temperatures on an unusually warm June 6 here were likely more
than 100 degrees at 10 a.m. One thermometer measured 112 degrees! Thus, this is
a much more comfortable place to visit in winter, early spring or late fall.
Cattle roam the area, and a fairly new and well-maintained barbed-wire fence
separates Utah from Arizona — even here — meaning Utah's lowest spot is in the
lowest of several dips along the north side of that fence.
• Utah has six corner monuments marking the corners of its
borders. The southwest corner monument is almost due west of Utah's lowest
point — about 2.5 miles away. However, the topography of a steep hillside on
the west slope of the Beaver Dam Wash means making a trip there on the same day
is difficult.
• To visit Utah's lowest point, you will need a truck or
four-wheel drive vehicle, unless you want to walk an extra six miles along dirt
roads in the desert. The road is not suitable for cars because of several dips
that exceed a regular car's clearance. To get there, drive to Littlefield,
Ariz., on I-15 and take Exit 8; go north on the old highway that leads to
Shivwits and back into Utah; go past the Beaver Dam, Ariz., community
(elevation 1,860 feet) and cross the Utah-Arizona stateline.
Then look for a dirt road
that heads left (west), 0.8 mile past the state line. Follow this road
southwest and then straight south for almost five miles into the Beaver Dam
Wash. You will cross two cattle guards and see several "Mormon pioneer
trail" signs posted along the way. Ignore any side roads and always head
due west. Park near some large overhead power lines in a loose gravel area,
near the perennial water of the Beaver Dam Wash. Be sure to carry plenty of
drinking water and do not hike in the afternoon on hot days. Starting elevation
here is about 2,076. Walk northward, carefully picking your route, about two
miles, to a barbed-wire fence you can't miss. Cross the fence and find the
lowest point from there.
(The above ground steam water disappears just before the fence
line.) Retrace your steps to avoid having to bushwack and knowing the power
lines to the south highlight your starting point.
Note that at least one unusually wet year in Southern Utah after
2006, may have already lowered the lowest spot in Utah’s part of the Beaver Dam
wash since this report’s 2006 visit.
Lowest elevation (2,178 feet) from 2006 trip to Beaver Dam Wash becomes official Utah superlative, as seen in a display at the University of Utah's Natural History Museum.
Lynn Arave points to lowest elevation he measured in 2006 in a display at the University of Utah's Natural History Museum.
Lowest elevation (2,178 feet) from 2006 trip to Beaver Dam Wash becomes official Utah superlative, as seen in a display at the University of Utah's Natural History Museum.
Lynn Arave points to lowest elevation he measured in 2006 in a display at the University of Utah's Natural History Museum.
-Lynn Arave, Ravell Call and Ray Boren visited the Beaver Dam
Wash and Utah's lowest point on June 5 and 6, 2006.
-(Originally presented in a Deseret News article on Sept. 3, 2006, by Lynn Arave.)
For those interested in GPS coordinates to get there, I found a geocache online advertizing the lowest place in Utah http://www.geocaching.com/seek/cache_details.aspx?wp=GC1A4G7 I've been wanting to go there for a few months now.
ReplyDeleteAlthough the wash going through can slightly change the location of the lowest place from year to year, it's always at the state line at 37.00 degrees North (in your GPS), and the owner of this geocache says the last time he checked in 2008, it was at the GPS coordinates N 37 00.000 W 113 59.816. He didn't hide the geocache at the exact same spot, however, because he doesn't want it to get washed away, so he hid it nearby!