Mount Tenabo


Mount Tenabo is the principal peak in the Cortez Mountains. The mountain is of cultural and religious significance to the Western Shoshone people.

Etymology

There are various theories as to the name's etymology. The mountain may have been named by New Mexicans after an ancient pueblo, or Tenabo may be a Paiute word, meaning of "dark colored water".

Geography

The summit elevation of Mount Tenabo is, which is above the surrounding valleys. Its base is covered with scrub pine. The summit and below is overgrown with grass and shrubs. Approximately to the north is the Humboldt River and its valley. Eastward, there are hills and valleys. To the west is the Smoky Valley, Mount Hope, Bunker Hill, and other peaks of the Toiyabe Range. Mount Tenabo, east of and near the north end of the Toiyabe Range, is about south of Beowawe.
At an area approximately above the mountain's base, a vein of silver-bearing quartz cuts through obliquely, penetrating into the valley after for. Its width is. This vein contains ore beds, and is encased in crystalline limestone.

History

Silver ore was discovered at Mount Tenabo in 1862 by a group of New Mexicans. By the later half of the 1860s, there were at least 20 working mills. In 2008, the Te-Moak tribe, the Timbisha tribe and others sought an emergency injunction that would have halted further development of Barrick Gold's Cortez Hills mining operation which includes facilities on the slopes of Mount Tenabo. As of July 2016, mining continues while the BLM prepares a court-ordered supplemental environmental impact statement.