Blake, Kevin S.2010-05-272010-05-272010-04-21http://hdl.handle.net/2097/4212The fifty-four Colorado Fourteeners— mountains more than 14,000 feet in elevation—were early symbols of westward expansion, mineral wealth, and wondrous scenery, and they are increasingly popular as environmental icons in place attachment at national, regional, state, and local scales. The symbolism of this contrived yet iconic collection of peaks is examined through the evolution of the Fourteencr concept, the popularity of peakbagging, and the role of the Sawatch Range Fourteeners in creating a larger community identity. Elevation is the gatekeeper into the Fourteener club, in which a distinctive landscape iconography of shape, accessibility, and aesthetics reflects the role of idealized nature and mountains in place identity.Permission to archive granted by Peter Lewis, Permissions Editor, American Geographical Society, May 20, 2010ColoradoCultural geographyLandscapeMountain geographyPlace identityRocky MountainsColorado Fourteeners and the Nature of Place IdentityArticle (publisher version)