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Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States

Explore sacred mountain sacred sites in United States, with related traditions, pilgrimage context, and mapped places.

Atlas summary

Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States overview

Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States help visitors move beyond broad directories into a more precise set of sacred places with shared geography, tradition, or site type.

Use this page for search-friendly discovery, map comparison, and faster paths into individual site pages with context, coordinates, and nearby places.

Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States overview
Coverage9 sacred sites match this focused browse path.
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Showing 13 of 9 matching sites

Mauna Kea, Hawaii

Mauna Kea, Hawaii

Hilo, Hawaii, United States

Mauna Kea rises nearly 14,000 feet above Hawaii Island, a dormant volcano that Native Hawaiians call Mauna a Wakea, the first-born mountain child of Sky Father and Earth...

Lassen Peak, California

Lassen Peak, California

Mineral, California, United States

Lassen Peak stands as the southernmost active volcano in the Cascade Range and ancestral homeland of the Atsugewi, Yana, Yahi, and Mountain Maidu peoples....

Blanca Peak, Colorado
Navajo

Blanca Peak, Colorado

Fort Garland, Colorado, United States

Blanca Peak rises in Colorado's Sangre de Cristo Range as one of the four most sacred mountains in Navajo religion....

Black Elk Peak, South Dakota
Sioux Native American

Black Elk Peak, South Dakota

Custer, South Dakota, United States

Rising as the highest point in the Black Hills, Black Elk Peak stands at the center of the world in Lakota cosmology....

Inyan Kara Mountain, Wyoming
Cheyenne and Sioux Lakota

Inyan Kara Mountain, Wyoming

Sundance, Wyoming, United States

Rising from the Wyoming plains at the western edge of the Black Hills, Inyan Kara Mountain holds profound significance for the Lakota people as part of an interconnected...

Bear Butte, South Dakota

Bear Butte, South Dakota

Sturgis, South Dakota, United States

Rising alone from the South Dakota plains, Bear Butte has drawn seekers for ten thousand years. For the Lakota, it is their most sacred altar....

Guadalupe Peak, Texas
Mescalero Apache

Guadalupe Peak, Texas

Salt Flat, Texas, United States

Rising 8,751 feet above the Chihuahuan Desert, Guadalupe Peak stands as one of the four sacred mountains of the Mescalero Apache, where creation narratives place their...

Chief Mountain (Ninaistakis), Glacier County, Montana
Nitsitapii

Chief Mountain (Ninaistakis), Glacier County, Montana

Babb, Montana, United States

Chief Mountain rises alone at the edge of the Rocky Mountains, a solitary peak standing sentinel where the plains meet the sky....

Huerfano Mountain, New Mexico
Navaho

Huerfano Mountain, New Mexico

San Juan County, New Mexico, United States

Huerfano Mountain, New Mexico is a sacred mountain of sacred significance.

Gobernador knob, New Mexico
Navajo

Gobernador knob, New Mexico

Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, United States

Gobernador knob, New Mexico is a sacred mountain of sacred significance.

Capitan Mountains, New Mexico
Mescalero Apache

Capitan Mountains, New Mexico

Lincoln County, New Mexico, United States

The Capitan Mountains rise from the desert of south-central New Mexico in an unusual east-west ridge, climbing from Chihuahuan sagebrush to spruce-fir forest across 4,500...

Chicoma Mountain, New Mexico
Pueblo Indians

Chicoma Mountain, New Mexico

Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, United States

Chicoma Mountain, New Mexico is a mountain of sacred significance.

Hosta Butte, New Mexico

Hosta Butte, New Mexico

Eastern Navajo Agency, New Mexico, United States

Hosta Butte, New Mexico is a sacred mountain of sacred significance.

Key questions

Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States questions

What Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States are included?
This guide includes 9 Sacred Mountain sacred sites in United States, filtered from the Pilgrim Map atlas for stronger browsing and planning context.
Can I view these sacred sites on a map?
Yes. Use the map view to compare geographic clusters, then open individual site pages for coordinates, nearby places, and practical visiting context.
How should I use this browse page?
Start with the list view for scannable cards, switch to map view for geographic comparison, and open site pages for deeper background.