Guadalupe Mountains love

Guadalupe Mountains

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • A mountain range of southern New Mexico and western Texas rising to Guadalupe Peak, 2,667 m (8,749 ft) high, in Texas.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun a mountain range in southern New Mexico and western Texas; the southern extension of the Sacramento Mountains

Etymologies

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Examples

  • The east and west faces of the Guadalupe Mountains are cut by a series of canyons.

    Ecoregions of Texas (EPA) 2009

  • The Chihuahuan Desert Slopes of the Guadalupe Mountains in Texas form the leading edge of a giant uplifted Permian reef created from the accumulated remains of algae, sponges, and marine bivalves.

    Ecoregions of Texas (EPA) 2009

  • The 2000 foot high, white cliff face of the southern Guadalupe Mountains dominates the landscape of the northern Trans-Pecos of Texas.

    Ecoregions of Texas (EPA) 2009

  • The Montane Woodlands ecoregion covers the higher slopes of the Guadalupe Mountains above 5500 feet with densities of juniper, pinyon pine, and oak varying according to aspect.

    Ecoregions of Texas (EPA) 2009

  • Located in the foothills of the Guadalupe Mountains near the New Mexican border with Texas, 200 km east-northeast of El Paso, centred on 32°10'N by 104°23'W.

    Carlsbad Caverns National Park, United States 2009

  • There is some evidence that the lower Guadalupe Mountains were once grasslands overgrazed in the late 19th century and subsequently invaded by desert shrubs.

    Ecoregions of Texas (EPA) 2009

  • History of the sulfuric acid theory of speleogenesis in the Guadalupe Mountains, New Mexico.

    Carlsbad Caverns National Park, United States 2009

  • A fabulously decorated system of underground chambers, Carlsbad Caverns lie beneath the arid Guadalupe Mountains of New Mexico.

    Travel Guide: the Incredible Natural Landscapes in the U.S.A. (Part 1) 2008

  • But they had traveled only about ten miles when they saw a band of Comanches swarming down from the Guadalupe Mountains.

    THE AMERICAN WEST DEE BROWN 2007

  • There'd been a tent in Texas, where she'd worked backcountry in the Guadalupe Mountains, filled with diamondbacks.

    Firestorm Barr, Nevada 1996

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