Blue Creek Valley

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Blue Creek Valley
Blue Creek Valley is located in Utah
Blue Creek Valley
Blue Creek Valley
Location in Utah
Length18 mi (29 km) N-S
Width8 mi (13 km)
Geography
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
RegionGreat Basin Desert
CountyBox Elder
CommunitiesBlue Creek and Howell
Borders on
Coordinates41°51′44″N 112°27′25″W / 41.86222°N 112.45694°W / 41.86222; -112.45694Coordinates: 41°51′44″N 112°27′25″W / 41.86222°N 112.45694°W / 41.86222; -112.45694
RiverBlue Creek Spring
Lake

Blue Creek Valley is an 18-mile (29 km) long valley located in northeast Box Elder County, Utah. It is endorheic with the Blue Creek Reservoir its lowpoint located south in the valley's center.

The valley is nestled between three mountainous regions. The West Hills and border it east and southeast. The south abuts the north of the Promontory Mountains, and the west is formed by a small north–south range, the

The north of the valley borders the south of Idaho's Pocatello Valley.

Valley description[]

Because Blue Creek Valley is narrow, only 5-8 mi wide, small feeder creeks feed the region from the four cardinal directions. Blue Creek Reservoir is located in the center-south of the valley, with Blue Creek Spring located 2 mi northeast, the main feed to the reservoir.

The outlet of Blue Creek Reservoir trends south past Howell, Utah, into agricultural land. A peak associated with the north of the Promontory Mountains ends the valley's south, at the mountain range foothills. The mountain, Engineer Mountain, 5,400 feet (1,646 m),[1] and parts of the north Promontory Mountains drain north into the south border of Blue Creek Valley; southwest drainage from the mountain region drains southwest into the Bear River Bay section of the northeast Great Salt Lake.

Valley lowpoint[]

The lowest elevation in the valley is south of Blue Creek Reservoir, its outlet, and to the farmland around Howell, Utah. Blue Creek Reservoir is at 4,593 feet (1,400 m).

Blue Creek Valley, north-northeast of the peninsular-Promontory Mountains, only extreme south visible against the hills/mountains
(the ridgeline terminus of the to west, the circular mountain between the two, is Cedar Ridge)
(the brownish hills SE-(at Penrose, Utah), are the )

References[]

  1. ^ Utah, DeLorme Atlas & Gazetteer, p. 10-11.

External links[]


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