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Little Belt Mountains

Little Belt Mountains
Little Belt Mountains2.PNG
Highest point
Peak Big Baldy Mountain
Elevation 9,175 ft (2,797 m)
Geography
Country United States
State/Province Montana
Range coordinates 46°45′N 110°24′W / 46.750°N 110.400°W / 46.750; -110.400Coordinates: 46°45′N 110°24′W / 46.750°N 110.400°W / 46.750; -110.400
Parent range Rocky Mountains

The Little Belt Mountains are a section of the Rocky Mountains in the U.S. state of Montana. Situated mainly in the Lewis and Clark National Forest, the mountains are used for logging and recreation for the residents of Great Falls, Montana. Showdown is a ski area located within the mountains located off US Highway 89 which splits the mountains in half connecting White Sulphur Springs and Belt, MT. The highest point in the Little Belt Range is Big Baldy Mountain at 9,175 feet (2,797 m).

The Little Belts have been mined for silver since the 1880s, and for sapphire since 1896. The sapphires, called Yogo sapphires as they are mined near Yogo Creek, occur in a formation three miles long and eight feet across.

The Showdown Ski Area holds the state's record for snowfall, 33 feet of snow in one winter.

Although an undramatic mountain range of gently rolling peaks and expansive conifer forests, the Little Belts contain two large roadless areas. The smaller area, about 92,000 acres in size, is protected as the Middle Fork-Judith Wilderness Study Area. This area includes the Middle and Lost Forks of the Judith River, which cut deep canyons through multicolored limestone cliffs. The Middle Fork-Judith WSA contains over 29 miles of streams containing Yellowstone cutthroat and rainbow trout. Higher elevations are covered in lodgepole pine and whitebark pine, while lower elevations contain ponderosa pine and douglas fir intermixed with grassy parks and meadows. The larger area, encompassing the Tenderfoot Creek drainage, in the western portion of the range, is unprotected and about 108,000 acres in size; it includes some private lands as well as about 98,000 acres of roadless Lewis and Clark National Forest lands. The Smith River Canyon, a popular float trip, is along the western edge of this area.


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