The Glass Mountains are not actually mountains, but a series of mesas and buttes that are part of the Blaine Escarpment that extends from the Permianred beds of northwestern Oklahoma in Major County. The Glass Mountains rise to above the surface of the plains, and the highest elevation in the formation is about above sea level. The Glass Mountains stretch west along U.S. Route 412 from Orienta south of the Cimarron River. The name comes from the sparkling selenite crystals on the slopes and tops of the mesas.
Geology
During the Quaternary Period, the most recent one million years, Pleistocene terraces were laid down along the major rivers in this area of the United States, with Holocene alluvium that are at least thick and contain sand, gravel, silt, clay and volcanic ash. The next layer was formed during the Permian Period, which occurred 230 to 270 million years ago. This consists of red sandstone and shale which is to thick, with gypsum on the outcroppings. The Permian "redbeds" are subdivided into the Cimarronian Series at the base, overlain by the Custerian Series. Deposits of Flowerpot shale that consists mainly of red-brown illitic-chloritic shale, are found at this area.
History
The first American explorers referred to this feature as the "Shining Mountains," when they saw the formation in 1821. The name Glass Mountains has been attributed to an explorer named Thomas James. James visited this area during 1821, while on a trading expedition along the Cimarron River. In 1875, a transcription error by a mapmaker resulted in the name Gloss Mountains which is still a somewhat common name for the mountains. The region became part of the Cherokee Outlet during the 19th Century. In 1891, botanist George Walter Stevens, started collecting specimens in the Glass Mountains domain for his dissertation. The University of Oklahoma Bebb Herbarium holds 4,500 samples that Stevens collected statewide. Two cacti he may have collected in the Glass Mountains area are Echinocereus caespitosus and Opuntia phaecantha.
State park
The state of Oklahoma operates the Glass MountainState Park, west of Orienta on a mesa along Highway 412. The park allows climbers to hike to the top of the mesa via a path and stairs. Picnic tables and an informational kiosk have been installed, and a pond known as Rattlesnake Lake is nearby.