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Moro Rock

Moro Rock
Moro Rock-View from Potwisha.jpg
View of Moro Rock from Potwisha (near Hospital Rock), Sequoia National Park
Highest point
Elevation 6,725 ft (2,050 m) 
Prominence 245 ft (75 m) 
Coordinates 36°32′39″N 118°45′54″W / 36.54417°N 118.76500°W / 36.54417; -118.76500
Geography
Location Sequoia National Park, Tulare County, California, United States
Parent range Sierra Nevada
Topo map USGS Giant Forest
Geology
Age of rock Cretaceous
Mountain type Granite dome
Climbing
First ascent 1861, by Hale Tharp, John Swanson and George Swanson
Easiest route Hike
Moro Rock Stairway
Moro Rock -steps-9Sept2008.jpg
Built 1931
Architect National Park Service
NRHP Reference # 78000283
Added to NRHP December 29, 1978

Moro Rock is a granite dome rock formation in Sequoia National Park, California, United States. It is located in the center of the park, at the head of Moro Creek, between Giant Forest and Crescent Meadow. A stairway, designed by the National Park Service and built in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps, is cut into and poured onto the rock, so that visitors can hike to the top. The view from the rock encompasses much of the Park, including the Great Western Divide. Use of this trail is discouraged during thunderstorms and when it is snowing.

Vistas of the San Joaquin Valley are often disappointing, due to air pollution.

The road to Moro Rock is closed in winter, so visitors need to hike 2 miles to reach the viewpoint. The road is open in summer so the hike is shortened. The 1996 general plan for the park calls for the road to Moro to be closed, and replaced by a shuttle. As of June 2012, the road is open to general traffic only during weekdays; on weekends, the shuttle is running and the road is closed to general traffic. The west face of Moro Rock offers 1,000 vertical feet of cracks and knobs for rock climbing. However, climbing is prohibited during peregrine falcon nesting season on the South and East faces(up to Full Metal Jacket).

Moro Rock is a dome-shaped granite monolith. Common in the Sierra Nevada, these domes form by exfoliation, the spalling or casting off in scales, plates, or sheets of rock layers on otherwise unjointed granite. Outward expansion of the granite results in exfoliations. Expansion results from load relief; when the overburden that once capped the granite has eroded away, the source of compression is removed and the granite slowly expands. Fractures that form during exfoliation tend to cut corners. This ultimately results in rounded dome-like forms.


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