<Li> San Bernardino National Forest, in San Bernardino County, California </Li> <Ul> <Li> Abajo Mountains, also called the Blue Mountains, is a small mountain range west of Monticello, Utah (below) </Li> <Li> Blanca Peak, a mountain in Colorado (White Peak) </Li> <Li> Brazos Mountains, a range in far northern Rio Arriba County, New Mexico (arms) </Li> <Li> Caballo Mountains, New Mexico (Horse Mountains) </Li> <Li> Caja del Rio, a dissected plateau, of volcanic origin, which covers approximately 84,000 acres of land in northern Santa Fe County, New Mexico (box of the river) </Li> <Li> Canelo Hills, a range of low mountains or hills in eastern Santa Cruz County, Arizona (Brown Hills) </Li> <Li> Capitan Mountains, a mountain range in Lincoln County, New Mexico (captain) </Li> <Li> Ciervo Hills, low mountain range in west Fresno County, California (Deer Hills) </Li> <Li> Dos Cabezas Mountains, in southeasternmost Arizona (Two heads) </Li> <Li> El Capitan, California, a rock formation (the Captain) </Li> <Li> El Capitan (Texas), a peak in Culberson County, Texas </Li> <Li> Grand Mesa, a large mesa in western Colorado </Li> <Li> Guadalupe Mountains, a mountain range located in West Texas and southeastern New Mexico (named after Guadalupe, Cáceres, Spain) </Li> <Li> Huerfano Butte, an isolated volcanic neck in Huerfano County, Colorado (named "Huerfano" by early Spanish explorers of southern Colorado . Of Spanish Orphan). </Li> <Li> Jemez Mountains, a volcanic group of mountains in New Mexico </Li> <Li> La Panza Range, a mountain range in the Central Coast of California </Li> <Li> La Plata Mountains, small subrange of the San Juan Mountains in the southwestern part of Colorado (silver) </Li> <Li> La Sal Mountains, in Grand and San Juan County counties, Utah along the Utah / Colorado border (The Salt Mountains) </Li> <Li> Little Rincon Mountains, small range of mountains, lying to the east of the Rincon Mountains, at Tucson, Arizona ("Corner") </Li> <Li> Little San Bernardino Mountains, in California </Li> <Li> Luna Peak (Washington), a mountain in the US (moon) </Li> <Li> Manzano Mountains, a small mountain range in the central part of New Mexico (apple tree) </Li> <Li> Manzano Peak, the highest peak in the Manzano Mountains </Li> <Li> Mesa de Maya, volcanic tableland in Colorado </Li> <Li> Mogollon Mountains, of the San Francisco River in Grant and Catron counties of southwestern New Mexico . These Mountains were named for the governor of Spanish New Mexico Juan Ignacio Flores Mogollon . </Li> <Li> Mosquito Range, Rocky Mountains range in central Colorado </Li> <Li> Mosquito Pass, a high mountain pass in the Mosquito Range </Li> <Li> Mount Vaca, located in northern California (was named so for Juan Manuel Cabeza Vaca (1782 - 1856), who with Juan Felipe Pena received in 1843 the Rancho Los Putos Mexican land grant, which included the peak that now bears Vaca's name) </Li> <Li> Nacimiento Mountains, New Mexico, also called San Pedro Mountains (Birth Mountains or Saint Peter Mountains) </Li> <Li> Negro Mountain, Pennsylvania and Maryland, United States (Black Mountain) </Li> <Li> Palos Verdes Hills, California (Green Stick) </Li> <Li> Patagonia Mountains, a 15 mile long mountain range south of the Santa Rita Mountains, Arizona . </Li> <Li> Puente Hills, a chain of hills, one of the lower Transverse Ranges, in an unincorporated area in eastern Los Angeles County, California </Li> <Li> Raton Pass - mountain pass on the Santa Fe Trail along the Colorado - New Mexico border in the United States (Mouse Pass) </Li> <Li> Redonda Mesa, a tall mesa located in the Southern Santa Ana Mountains near the Pacific Ocean (round table) </Li> <Li> Rincon Mountains, mountain range east of Tucson, Arizona ("Corner", "Nook") </Li> <Li> Robledo Mountains, a mountain range in Doña Ana County, New Mexico just northwest of Las Cruces </Li> <Li> Sacramento Mountains (California) (are also named for the Sacramento Wash and Sacramento Valley (Arizona)) </Li> <Li> Sacramento Mountains (New Mexico), a mountain range in the south - central part of New Mexico </Li> <Li> San Bernardino Mountains, high mountain range in Southern California </Li> <Li> San Emigdio Mountains, part of the Transverse Ranges in Southern California </Li> <Li> San Gabriel Mountains, mountain range located in northern Los Angeles County and western San Bernardino County, California </Li> <Li> San Gorgonio Pass, a gap on the rim of the Great Basin between the San Bernardino Mountains to the north and the San Jacinto Mountains to the south </Li> <Li> San Gorgonio Mountain, also known locally as Mount San Gorgonio, or Old Greyback, is the highest peak in Southern California and the Transverse Ranges (Spanish missionaries in the area during the early 17th century named the peak after Saint Gorgonius) </Li> <Li> San Jacinto Mountains, a mountain range east of Los Angeles in southern California </Li> <Li> San Joaquin Hills, in Orange County, California </Li> <Li> San Jose Hills, a part of the Transverse Ranges located in Eastern Los Angeles County, California, marking the border between the San Gabriel Valley and the Pomona Valley in the Inland Empire </Li> <Li> San Juan Mountains, in southwestern Colorado </Li> <Li> San Luis Mountains, in Pima County, Arizona </Li> <Li> San Mateo Peak, at the western end of the ridge running west then northwest from Elsinore Peak to Morrell Canyon, California </Li> <Li> San Pedro Arroyo Formation, a geologic formation in New Mexico (creek) </Li> <Li> San Rafael Hills, mountain range in Los Angeles County, California </Li> <Li> Sandia Mountains, a mountain range located in Bernalillo and Sandoval counties, New Mexico (watermelon) </Li> <Li> Sangre de Cristo Mountains, the southernmost subrange of the Rocky Mountains . They are located in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico in the United States (Blood of Christ). </Li> <Li> Sangre de Cristo Range, called also the East Range, is located in the San Luis Valley, is mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in southern Colorado . </Li> <Li> Santa Ana Mountains, a short mountain range near Santa Ana, California (saint) </Li> <Li> Santa Catalina Mountains, north, and northeast of Tucson, Arizona </Li> <Li> Santa Clara Volcano, a volcanic field and lava flow in southwest Utah . </Li> <Li> Santa Cruz Mountains, California </Li> <Li> Santa Lucia Mountains, a mountain range in coastal central California </Li> <Li> Santa Margarita Mountains, California </Li> <Li> Santa Rosa Range, in northern Nevada </Li> <Li> Santa Rita Mountains, southeast of Tucson, Arizona </Li> <Li> Santa Rosa Mountains (California) </Li> <Li> Santa Susana Mountains, a transverse range of mountains in Southern California, north of the city of Los Angeles </Li> <Li> Santa Ynez Mountains, west coast of North America </Li> <Li> Santos Trail System, a network of mountain bike trails outside of Ocala, Florida (saints) </Li> <Li> Sierra Blanca (Colorado), a mountain range </Li> <Li> Sierra Blanca (New Mexico), a mountain range (White Mountain saw) </Li> <Li> Sierra Madre Mountains (California), a mountain range in northern Santa Barbara County, California </Li> <Li> Sierra Madre Range (Wyoming), a mountain range in the south central portion of the state </Li> <Li> Sierra Nevada, between the Central Valley of California and the Basin and Range Province </Li> <Li> Sierra Valley, in Plumas and Sierra counties, California </Li> <Li> Tejon Pass, a mountain pass, between the southwest end of the Tehachapi Mountains and northeastern San Emigdio Mountains (badger) </Li> <Li> Temblor Range, a mountain range within the California Coast Ranges, at the southwestern extremity of the San Joaquin Valley in California (tremor) </Li> <Li> Vaca Mountains, a mountain range in Napa County, California (was named so for the Vaca family, who, along with their partners the Pena family, were among the earliest white settlers in the area) </Li> <Li> Vaqueros sandstone, a sedimentary rock formation in the western United States </Li> <Li> Valles Caldera National Preserve (part), volcanic caldera in the Jemez Mountains of northern New Mexico (Boiler Valley) </Li> <Li> Ventana Cave, a National Historic Landmark in Arizona, U.S. </Li> <Li> Ventana Double Cone, a twin mountaintop in the Ventana Wilderness (window . Early explorers gave the Ventana Double Cone its name because near its summit is a ledge that forms a small slot, or window) </Li> <Li> Verdugo Mountains, a small, rugged mountain range of the Transverse Ranges system, located just south of the western San Gabriel Mountains in Los Angeles County, Southern California (executioner) </Li> <Li> Yegua Formation, a geologic formation in Texas (mare or female horse) </Li> </Ul> <Li> Abajo Mountains, also called the Blue Mountains, is a small mountain range west of Monticello, Utah (below) </Li> <Li> Blanca Peak, a mountain in Colorado (White Peak) </Li>

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