Sulphur Springs Valley

Sulphur Springs Valley
Sulphur Springs Valley and the Chiricahua Mountains.
Sulphur Springs Valley is located in Arizona
Sulphur Springs Valley
Sulphur Springs Valley
Location in Arizona
Length65 mi (105 km)
Width25 mi (40 km)
Geography
LocationCochise County, Arizona, United States
Population centersWillcox, AZ-N
Douglas, AZAgua Prieta-S
Borders onDos Cabezas Mountains-NE
Chiricahua Mountains-E
Dragoon Mountains-W
Little Dragoon Mountains-NW
Mule Mountains-SW
Coordinates32°29′55″N 110°01′51″W / 32.4986824°N 110.0309102°W / 32.4986824; -110.0309102
RiversWillcox Playa

The Sulphur Springs Valley is a valley in the eastern half of Cochise County, Arizona. The valley covers an approximated vertical rectangle west of the Chiricahua MountainsDos Cabezas Mountains complex. The Sulphur Springs Valley is the large flatland to the west.

Geography

The valley gets its name from two sulfur springs located there.

Mule deer in the Sulphur Springs Valley.

Drainage is from north to south, with a moderately sized endorheic basin, named the Willcox Playa, occupying the northern area. The southern portion of the valley drains into Mexico through Douglas, Arizona through Agua Prieta, Sonora, and into the Yaqui River.

During plentiful rain the mountain foothills contain plentiful grasslands. The region is otherwise an arid part of the northeastern Sonoran Desert, influenced by the Chihuahuan Desert just southeast in New Mexico and northwest Chihuahua.

The highest mountain areas of this southeast Arizona section contains Madrean Sky Islands of mountain sky islands. Sulphur Springs Valley is one of the largest and driest subsections in this otherwise mountainous region. From north to south at the west of the valley are the Little Dragoon Mountains, the Dragoons, and the Mule Mountains. The south end of Sulphur Springs Valley also has three small ranges associated with the southern Chiricahua Mountains, the Swisshelm, Pedregosa, and Perella Mountains.

Transportation

The valley is traversed north-south by U.S. Route 191 connecting Douglas, AZ north to Willcox on Interstate 10, at the Willcox Playa. Arizona 181 in the east accesses the west and northwest Chiricahua's, including Chiricahua National Monument. It is connected to Arizona 186 which traverses the southwestern foothills of the Dos Cabezas range.

Conservation

The Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory is active in Cochise County and all of southeast Arizona, especially in the Willcox Playa, where thousands of sandhill cranes roost.[1] The Sky Island Alliance also has conservancy programs associated with the sky island mountains and their fauna and flora.

See also

References

  1. ^ National Geographic Magazine. (Sandhill Cranes)

External links

  • Article (with map of Chiricahua's and the valley); Map: (west of Chiricahua Mountains)
  • National Geographic: Masters of Migration (Sandhill Cranes in the Sulphur Springs Valley)
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