Raton Mesa

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Raton_Mesa an entity of type: Thing

Raton Mesa is the collective name of several mesas on the eastern side of Raton Pass in New Mexico and Colorado. The name Raton Mesa or Mesas has sometimes been applied to all the mesas that extend east for 90 miles (140 km) along the Colorado-New Mexico border from Raton, New Mexico and Trinidad, Colorado to the Oklahoma panhandle. These include Johnson Mesa, Mesa de Maya, and Black Mesa. Raton Mesa is part of the Raton Basin, a coal and natural gas producing region. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Raton Mesa
rdf:langString Raton Mesa (Mesa de Maya)
rdf:langString Raton Mesa
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rdf:langString Las Animas County, Colorado, United States
rdf:langString PSM V74 D032 Fisher peak a spur of the mesa de maya colorado.png
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rdf:langString Raton Mesa is the collective name of several mesas on the eastern side of Raton Pass in New Mexico and Colorado. The name Raton Mesa or Mesas has sometimes been applied to all the mesas that extend east for 90 miles (140 km) along the Colorado-New Mexico border from Raton, New Mexico and Trinidad, Colorado to the Oklahoma panhandle. These include Johnson Mesa, Mesa de Maya, and Black Mesa. The highest point of Raton Mesa, Fishers Peak, is located in Las Animas County, Colorado. The highest part of the mesa (4,183-acre (16.93 km2)) was made a National Natural Landmark in 1967. Raton mesas are volcanic in origin caused by lava flows which solidified into basalt. Over time the softer sedimentary rock surrounding the basalt eroded leaving several distinct large elevated tablelands with precipitous sides. Raton Mesa is part of the Raton Basin, a coal and natural gas producing region.
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