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Bishop Peak (California)

Bishop Peak
Bishop Peak from Cerro San Luis.JPG
Bishop Peak from Cerro San Luis
Highest point
Elevation 1,549 ft (472 m)  NAVD 88
Prominence 1,086 ft (331 m) 
Listing Sierra Club Lower Peaks Committee
Coordinates 35°18′09″N 120°41′51″W / 35.3024744°N 120.6973949°W / 35.3024744; -120.6973949Coordinates: 35°18′09″N 120°41′51″W / 35.3024744°N 120.6973949°W / 35.3024744; -120.6973949
Geography
Location San Luis Obispo County, California, U.S.
Parent range Santa Lucia Range
Topo map San Luis Obispo
Geology
Age of rock 20 million years
Mountain type Volcanic plug

Bishop Peak is a 1,546-foot (471 m) volcanic plug in San Luis Obispo, California. It is the tallest of the Morros or "Nine Sisters", a chain of similar peaks stretching to Morro Bay. Often said to take its name from its resemblance to a bishop's miter, it is named in homage to the town's name (San Luis Obispo). "Obispo" is the Spanish word for Bishop.

Like the other Morros, Bishop Peak is primarily composed of dacite. About 20 to 25 million years ago, magma welled up underneath a layer of softer rock and solidified. The softer overlying rock has since eroded away, leaving a distinct rugged shape.

Bishop Peak's thin, rocky soil supports many plants that are not common in the surrounding area. Vegetation includes an Oak woodland, sage scrub and chaparral.

Woodland areas are composed of species like coast live oak and California bay trees, as well as poison oak and California blackberry. Scrub areas support many aromatic varieties of sagebrush, coyote bush, and monkeyflower.

Bird life includes large numbers of jays and other passerine birds, as well as birds of prey including golden eagles, bald eagles, owls and vultures. Animals include deer, raccoons and opossums as well as predators like foxes, coyotes, bobcats and mountain lion.


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