The Alligator (Grand Canyon)

The Alligator (Grand Canyon), is a 5,774-foot (1,760 m)-elevation summit, a large ridgeline butte, connected to, and below Mohave Point (South Rim), approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northwest of Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon. The ridgeline trends north, and the lower elevation cliff, the tail of the alligator, turns northwest. The Alligator landform is about 1.0 mile (1.6 km) from the west-flowing Colorado River, and Granite Gorge. The Alligator lies between the Monument Creek (Grand Canyon) drainage, west, and the Salt Creek (Grand Canyon) drainage, east, both short, south tributaries to the Colorado.

The Alligator
(Grand Canyon)
The Alligator & Mohave Point
(view eastwards)
Highest point
Elevation5,774 ft (1,760 m)[1]
Prominence1,100 ft (340 m)
Parent peakMohave Point (7,974 ft)
Isolation~0.50
Coordinates36°04′47″N 112°10′09″W / 36.0797°N 112.1693°W / 36.0797; -112.1693[2]
Geography
The Alligator is located in Arizona
The Alligator
The Alligator
LocationGrand Canyon
Coconino County, Arizona. U.S.
Parent rangeCoconino Plateau
Colorado Plateau
Topo mapUSGS Grand Canyon
Geology
Age of rockPermian-Pennsylvanian-(prominence) down to Proterozoic
Mountain typesedimentary down to Proterozoic rocks
Type of rockEsplanade Sandstone horizontal platform (unit 4), (complete Supai Group on platform of Redwall Limestone) and Supai Group,
Redwall Limestone,
(Tonto Group-
3-units)
_3-Muav Limestone,
_2-Bright Angel Shale,
_1-Tapeats Sandstone,
Vishnu Basement Rocks

The Alligator is composed of bright red-orange Supai Group (four members), (cliffs, and slopes), upon a red, Redwall Limestone, large cliff. Also being a cliff-former, the curving "tail-of-the-alligator" is a flat-topped platform of the Redwall Limestone.

Geology edit

 
Looking down the upper Esplanade Sandstone, from Mohave Point
 
The Alligator seen from Hopi Point

The Alligator landform is composed of two basic rock units: the prominence-Supai Group (roughly 1,100 ft; 340 m thick), and below, Redwall Limestone (approximately 800 ft; 240 m thick). Because both are cliff-formers (and therefor shelf-formers), the high-point of The Alligator is on the upper platform (shelf) of the Supai Group, the highly resistant Esplanade Sandstone. The curved tail of The Alligator is the bottom platform, sitting on top of the highly resistant Redwall Limestone. As the tail curves, a smaller, secondary cliff-platform (above the Redwall), is composed of Supai unit 2, the also resistant Manakacha Formation. (The Redwall base, also sits on a shorter cliff (and platform), of Tonto Group, no. 3, the Muav Limestone). The rest of the Tonto Group sits on the Granite Gorge at the Colorado River with the walls of Vishnu Basement Rocks.

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