The Verdugo Mountains, also known as the Verdugo Hills or simply The Verdugos, are a small, rugged
mountain range of the
Transverse Ranges system in
Los Angeles County, California
Los Angeles County, officially the County of Los Angeles, and sometimes abbreviated as L.A. County, is the List of the most populous counties in the United States, most populous county in the United States and in the U.S. state of California, ...
. Located just south of the western
San Gabriel Mountains
The San Gabriel Mountains ( es, Sierra de San Gabriel) are a mountain range located in northern Los Angeles County, California, Los Angeles County and western San Bernardino County, California, United States. The mountain range is part of the Tr ...
, the Verdugo Mountains region incorporates the cities of
Glendale,
Pasadena, and
La Cañada Flintridge; the unincorporated communities of
Altadena and
La Crescenta-Montrose
La Crescenta-Montrose () is an unincorporated area in Los Angeles County, California, United States. The community is bordered by Glendale to the south and west, La Cañada Flintridge to the east, and Angeles National Forest to the north. A ...
; as well as the
City of Los Angeles neighborhood of
Sunland-Tujunga
Sunland-Tujunga is a Los Angeles city neighborhood within the Crescenta Valley and Verdugo Mountains. Sunland and Tujunga began as separate settlements and today are linked through a single police station, branch library, neighborhood council ...
.
Surrounded entirely by urban development, the Verdugo Mountains represent an isolated wildlife island and are in large part under public ownership in the form of undeveloped parkland. The mountains are used primarily for recreation in the form of hiking and mountain biking, and as the site of communications installations on the highest peaks.
The mountains arise directly from the eastern floor of the
San Fernando Valley
The San Fernando Valley, known locally as the Valley, is an urbanized valley in Los Angeles County, California. Located to the north of the Los Angeles Basin, it contains a large portion of the City of Los Angeles, as well as unincorporated ar ...
, exaggerating their height from some vantages. Beginning with foothills, they rapidly rise to rugged sections, with the highest peaks topping 3,000', nearly as high as the nearby
Santa Susana Mountains.
Geography
The northwest-trending range is approximately long by wide, and roughly parallels the southern front of the
San Gabriel Mountains
The San Gabriel Mountains ( es, Sierra de San Gabriel) are a mountain range located in northern Los Angeles County, California, Los Angeles County and western San Bernardino County, California, United States. The mountain range is part of the Tr ...
at a distance of to , with the
Crescenta Valley lying between the two. The southern front of the range forms part of the northeastern boundary of the
San Fernando Valley
The San Fernando Valley, known locally as the Valley, is an urbanized valley in Los Angeles County, California. Located to the north of the Los Angeles Basin, it contains a large portion of the City of Los Angeles, as well as unincorporated ar ...
; at their southeastern end the Verdugo Mountains are separated from the
San Rafael Hills by the
Verdugo Wash.
The highest summit is the informally named Verdugo Peak (), located near the center of the range and rising to approximately above its southern base. Other peaks include Tongva Peak (2,656
feet), recently named in honor of the
Tongva (Gabrielino) people, the original inhabitants of much of the
Los Angeles Basin,
Santa Monica Mountains, and
San Gabriel Valley
The San Gabriel Valley ( es, Valle de San Gabriel) is one of the principal valleys of Southern California, lying immediately to the east of the eastern city limits of the city of Los Angeles, and occupying the vast majority of the eastern part ...
areas. Other informally named peaks are Mount La Tuna on the north end and Mount Thom on the south end of the range. With the exception of Mount La Tuna, all these summits, as well as several others, are occupied by communications towers.
The Verdugo Mountains lie within the corporate boundaries of the cities of
Glendale,
Burbank
Burbank may refer to:
Places Australia
* Burbank, Queensland, a suburb in Brisbane
United States
* Burbank, California, a city in Los Angeles County
* Burbank, Santa Clara County, California, a census-designated place
* Burbank, Illinois, ...
, and
Los Angeles. The neighborhood of
La Crescenta, most of which lies within Glendale, is adjacent to the range's northern end, as are the Los Angeles neighborhoods of
Tujunga, Sunland,
Shadow Hills
Shadow Hills (originally Hansen Heights) is a neighborhood in the Verdugo Mountains and northeastern San Fernando Valley, within the city of Los Angeles, California.
Geography
Shadow Hills is in the northwestern Verdugo Mountains, near the western ...
, and
Sun Valley Sun Valley may refer to:
Places Australia
* Sun Valley, New South Wales
* Sun Valley, Queensland, a suburb of Gladstone
United States
* Valley of the Sun, a region that covers the Phoenix metropolitan area
*Sun Valley, Arizona
* Sun Valley, Los A ...
(the last of which includes La Tuna Canyon).
Geology
The Verdugo Mountains consist of an east-west-trending antiformal
fault block
Fault blocks are very large blocks of rock, sometimes hundreds of kilometres in extent, created by tectonic and localized stresses in Earth's crust. Large areas of bedrock are broken up into blocks by faults. Blocks are characterized by rela ...
, bounded on the south by the Verdugo Fault, a north-dipping
reverse fault, and on the north by the Sierra Madre
thrust fault near the front of the San Gabriel Mountains,
[Arkle, Jeanette, C, and Armstrong, Phillip A. (2007). "Quaternary exhumation of the Verdugo Mountains, Los Angeles Basin, constrained by low-temperature thermochronometry." Geological Society of America ''Abstracts with Programs,'' vol. 39, no. 6, p. 83.] thus including the sediment-covered Crescenta Valley within the Verdugo Mountains Block. The Verdugo Fault lies slightly south of the topographic range front and is completely covered by sediments.
The rocks within the Verdugo Mountains block are almost entirely igneous and metamorphic similar to the crystalline basement rocks exposed to the north in that portion of the San Gabriel Mountains south of the San Gabriel Fault. These consist of
gneiss, and gneissic
diorite and
quartz diorite, intruded by irregular bodies of equigranular granitic rocks, predominantly quartz diorite and
granodiorite, with accompanying
pegmatite
A pegmatite is an igneous rock showing a very coarse texture, with large interlocking crystals usually greater in size than and sometimes greater than . Most pegmatites are composed of quartz, feldspar, and mica, having a similar silicic com ...
and
aplite. Exposed rocks in the
Shadow Hills
Shadow Hills (originally Hansen Heights) is a neighborhood in the Verdugo Mountains and northeastern San Fernando Valley, within the city of Los Angeles, California.
Geography
Shadow Hills is in the northwestern Verdugo Mountains, near the western ...
neighborhood at the extreme northwestern end of the Verdugos are typically marine
sedimentary rocks of
Miocene age, predominantly
sandstone and
shale
Shale is a fine-grained, clastic sedimentary rock formed from mud that is a mix of flakes of clay minerals (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolin, Al2 Si2 O5( OH)4) and tiny fragments (silt-sized particles) of other minerals, especial ...
.
The Verdugo Mountains are part of the western
Transverse Ranges, which have risen in the last 7 million years as the result of contractional deformation resulting from transpressional motion and rotation of crustal blocks in the "Big Bend" region of the
San Andreas Fault. The amount of crustal shortening since the beginning of the
Pliocene has been estimated to be on the order of . The Verdugo fault and Sierra Madre thrust are part of a complex system of faults that accommodate some of this shortening and generally become younger to the south, with the Verdugo Fault possibly being the youngest member of this system and forming the current boundary between this portion of the western Transverse Ranges and the Los Angeles basin.
[Arkle, Jeanette C.; and Armstrong, Phillip A. (2009). "Exhumation of the Verdugo Mountains, Southern California; constraints from low-temperature thermochronology and geomorphic analysis." Geological Society of America ''Abstracts with Programs,'' vol. 41, no. 67 p. 300.] Uplift along the Verdugo fault may total approximately , at a minimum rate of per million years since 2.3 million years ago,
[Meigs, Andrew; Yule, Doug; Blythe, Ann; and Burbank, Doug (2003). "Implications of disturbed crustal deformation for exhumation in a portion of a transpressional plate boundary, Western Transverse Ranges, Southern California." ''Quaternary International,'' vol. 101–102, pp. 169–177.] moving the crystalline rocks of the Verdugo Mountains up and over younger
Tertiary and
Quaternary
The Quaternary ( ) is the current and most recent of the three periods of the Cenozoic Era in the geologic time scale of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS). It follows the Neogene Period and spans from 2.58 million years ...
sediments to the south. The Verdugo Mountains are, therefore, young and rapidly rising, reflected in their steep topography and rapid rates of erosion.
Municipalities and neighborhoods
Incorporated cities (independent)
*
Glendale
*
Pasadena
*
La Cañada Flintridge
Unincorporated communities
*
Altadena
*
La Crescenta-Montrose
La Crescenta-Montrose () is an unincorporated area in Los Angeles County, California, United States. The community is bordered by Glendale to the south and west, La Cañada Flintridge to the east, and Angeles National Forest to the north. A ...
City of Los Angeles neighborhoods of The Verdugos
*
Sunland-Tujunga
Sunland-Tujunga is a Los Angeles city neighborhood within the Crescenta Valley and Verdugo Mountains. Sunland and Tujunga began as separate settlements and today are linked through a single police station, branch library, neighborhood council ...
Flora, fauna and climate
The Verdugo Mountains lie almost entirely within the
chaparral
Chaparral ( ) is a shrubland plant community and geographical feature found primarily in the U.S. state of California, in southern Oregon, and in the northern portion of the Baja California Peninsula in Mexico. It is shaped by a Mediterranean c ...
plant community, as defined by Munz and later authors, including Sawyer ''et al.'' This dense, shrub-dominated community of the
California chaparral and woodlands
The California chaparral and woodlands is a terrestrial ecoregion of southwestern Oregon, northern, central, and southern California (United States) and northwestern Baja California (Mexico), located on the west coast of North America. It is a ...
is more highly developed on the north-facing slopes than on the drier, hotter south-facing slopes. Among the shrub species that characterize this community, prominent in the Verdugos are laurel sumac (''
Malosma laurina''), toyon (''
Heteromeles arbutifolia''), poison oak (''
Toxicodendron diversilobum''), chamise (''
Adenostoma fasciculatum'') and two species of California-lilac (''
Ceanothus crassifolius'' and ''
Ceanothus oliganthus
''Ceanothus oliganthus'' is a species of shrub in the family Rhamnaceae known by the common name hairy ceanothus or hairy-leaf ceanothus.Flowering Plants of the Santa Monica Mountains, Nancy Dale, 2nd Ed., 2000, p. 167
The variety of this specie ...
''). Native trees are restricted to protected canyons, especially on the shadier north slope of the range, where soil moisture levels are higher. Coast live oak (''
Quercus agrifolia''), California bay laurel (''Umbellularia californica''), California sycamore (''
Platanus racemosa''), California walnut (''
Juglans californica''), and several species of willow (''
Salix'' spp.) are the most common native trees. Non-native trees, particularly pines (''
Pinus'' spp.), cypress (''
Cupressus
''Cupressus'' is one of several genera of evergreen conifers within the family Cupressaceae that have the common name cypress; for the others, see cypress. It is considered a polyphyletic group. Based on genetic and morphological analysis, the ge ...
'' spp.), locust (''
Robinia pseudoacacia''), and Australian eucalyptus (''
Eucalyptus'' spp.) have been planted locally along the fire roads and, most notably, in the Fire Warden's Grove, established in the wake of a
wildfire in 1927.
Except for a tenuous link to the large wild area in the
San Gabriel Mountains
The San Gabriel Mountains ( es, Sierra de San Gabriel) are a mountain range located in northern Los Angeles County, California, Los Angeles County and western San Bernardino County, California, United States. The mountain range is part of the Tr ...
through
Big Tujunga Wash
Big or BIG may refer to:
* Big, of great size or degree
Film and television
* ''Big'' (film), a 1988 fantasy-comedy film starring Tom Hanks
* '' Big!'', a Discovery Channel television show
* ''Richard Hammond's Big'', a television show present ...
at their northwestern end, the Verdugo Mountains are an urban wildlife island completely surrounded by development. Among the large mammals, coyote (''
Canis latrans'') and mule deer (''
Odocoileus hemionus'') are the most common; mountain lions (''
Puma concolor'') and black bears (''
Ursus americanus'') have occasionally been reported. The many rodent species support a population of western rattlesnakes (''
Crotalus viridis''). Of the numerous bird species present, the most characteristic of the chaparral here, and throughout California, is the small, seldom seen but often heard wrentit (''
Chamaea fasciata''). With its call of three or four chirps followed by an accelerating trill, often likened to the sound of a dropped ping-pong ball, the wrentit provides the most characteristic sound of the chaparral.
The Verdugo Mountains have warm, dry summers and cool wet winters. Snow infrequently falls along the crest during the coldest winter storms, but melts rapidly. Annual average precipitation increases with elevation (due to the
orographic lift effect), from 17-21 inches at the base to about 24–28 inches at the crest. Annual rainfall totals are highly variable from year to year, with the higher totals usually in
El Nino years. Most of the rain falls between November and March during periodic frontal passages.
History
The mountains were part of the indigenous
Tongva people's homelands for over 7,000 years, with villages at some
springs in the canyons.
[Gumprecht, Blake. The Los Angeles River: Its Life, Death, and Possible Rebirth, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999, , page 31]
The Verdugo Mountains were named for
Jose Maria Verdugo, holder of the
Rancho San Rafael land grant, which covered the mountains during California's
Spanish and Mexican periods. On October 20, 1784
Pedro Fages
Pedro Fages (1734–1794) was a Spanish soldier, explorer, first Lieutenant Governor of the Californias under Gaspar de Portolá. Fages claimed the governorship after Portolá's death, acting as governor in opposition to the official governor ...
, the military governor of
Alta California
Alta California ('Upper California'), also known as ('New California') among other names, was a province of New Spain, formally established in 1804. Along with the Baja California peninsula, it had previously comprised the province of , but ...
, granted Jose Maria Verdugo permission to use the rancho, known officially by the name San Rafael but informally called "La Zanja" by Verdugo.
[.] The rancho's boundaries were primarily defined by the Verdugo Mountains, the
Arroyo Seco and the
Los Angeles River, with the boundary following north along the east bank of the river and wrapping westerly around
Griffith Park to a point near the
Travel Town Museum in the park.
Glendale & Mount Verdugo Railway
One of the earliest attempts to access and develop the interior of the Verdugo Mountains was the 1912 proposal by Colonel Lewis Ginger to build a cable incline railroad to the summit of Mount Verdugo, now known as Mount Thom. The proposed Glendale & Verdugo Mountain Railway was to run in a straight line from the
Pacific Electric's Casa Verdugo station at the top of Brand Boulevard to the summit of Mount Verdugo, employing cars with stepped seating similar to those of
Angels Flight on
Bunker Hill in Los Angeles. Initially, Colonel Ginger had proposed that his cable railway would lift a Pacific Electric car directly to the summit, but
Henry E. Huntington
Henry Edwards Huntington (February 27, 1850 – May 23, 1927) was an American railroad magnate and collector of art and rare books. Huntington settled in Los Angeles, where he owned the Pacific Electric Railway as well as substantial real estate ...
did not approve of this scheme. The railway was to have four or five stations along the incline and a large visitor's center at the summit. Several months after the initial proposal, the route was altered to run up the west side of Verdugo Canyon from a hoped-for extension of the Pacific Electric up Verdugo Canyon to Montrose. Interest in the cable railway continued for about a year, but the project was abandoned before a company could be formed, largely as the result of the Pacific Electric's decision not to build the Montrose extension.
Wildfire
Fire is a natural component of the chaparral ecosystem, and the plants that comprise it are largely adapted to survive fire or to reproduce after it.
[ Barbour, Michael, Keeler-Wolf, Todd, and Schoenherr, Allan A. (2007). '']Terrestrial Vegetation of California
Allan A. Schoenherr (February 6, 1937 – May 31, 2021) was a Californian author, ecologist, and naturalist. He is the author of the widely used reference book, ''A Natural History of California''.
He received his PhD in zoology at Arizona State ...
,'' 3rd ed. Berkeley: University of California Press. More specifically, the members of this plant community are adapted to a particular
fire regime, which is characterized by intensity and seasonality, but most importantly, by the frequency of fires.
[Quinn, Ronald D., and Keeley, Sterling G. (2006). ''Introduction to California Chaparral.'' Berkeley: University of California Press.] In the southern California chaparral, natural frequencies of 30 to 40 years are typical, with some areas going as long as 100 years without fires and others burning more frequently.
[Carle, David (2008). ''Introduction to Fire in California.'' Berkeley: University of California Press.] It has been estimated the chaparral plant community can persist over the long term only with a fire frequency at a given site of no shorter than several decades, or perhaps longer, although there is variability in the tolerance of different species. Repeated shorter intervals between fires promote so-called "type conversion," in which the shrubby species are replaced by grasses, particularly non-native grasses, and other weedy species.
The Verdugo Mountains have been subject to repeated wildfires in historical times. Major occurrences in the twentieth century include the December, 1927 Burbank Canyon Fire, which started in Haines Canyon in the San Gabriel Mountains and burned south into the range, consuming approximately 100 homes in Burbank's Sunset Canyon.
The La Tuna Canyon Fire of November, 1955 burned over almost the entire western portion of the range, ultimately destroying approximately .
[
]
The Whiting Woods Fire of March, 1964, started by a power line downed by high winds, burned from the northern edge of the range southward over to crest to consume homes in Glendale.
A fire in November, 1980, also called the La Tuna Canyon Fire, burned in the northern and western portions of the range.
Since 2000, three major fires have occurred in the Verdugo Mountains. In September, 2002, the Mountain Fire burned over two days approximately above Glendale, largely on the southern side of the range.
The Harvard Fire started on September 29, 2005, and consumed both north and south sides of the range north of Burbank during a six-day period.
In September, 2017, the
La Tuna fire
The La Tuna Fire was a wildfire that started on September 1, 2017, and burned through the Verdugo Mountains in Los Angeles, California. It led to the destruction of 5 homes and the evacuations of over 300 homes. It was the largest wildfire in the ...
started north of the Verdugos, jumping
Interstate 210 forcing the closure of it, burning both the north and south face of the ranges. The fire ultimately destroyed four homes and of land.
Beginning in 1921, the
Los Angeles County Fire Department began a county-wide program of building fire breaks (or more properly,
fuel breaks) to slow the spread of fire, and by 1923 the initial breaks had been constructed in the Verdugos. In 1934, the City of Glendale built a 60-foot lookout tower on Verdugo Peak, which was staffed with an observer until it closed in the mid-1950s. In order to conduct the work necessary to build fire breaks and roads, temporary construction camps were located throughout the fire-prone areas of the county. In the Verdugo Mountains, Construction Camp #2 was located in the lower reaches of Deer Canyon, at the end of present-day Beaudry Blvd, for a period during the late 1930s and early 1940s.
[Boucher, David, 1991. ''Ride the Devil Wind: a History of the Los Angeles County Forester & Fire Warden Department and Fire Protection Districts.'' Bellflower, CA: Fire Publications, Inc.] It is difficult to determine from published sources the dates of construction for the fire roads so important to present-day recreational use of the mountains. The report of the 1955 La Tuna Canyon fire,
however, indicates that at least some of these roads were in place by that date.
Protected areas
*Verdugo Mountains State Park,
California Department of Parks and Recreation
The California Department of Parks and Recreation, more commonly known as California State Parks, manages the California state parks system. The system administers 279 separate park units on 1.4 million acres (570,000 hectares), with over 280 ...
*Verdugo Mountains Open Space Preserve, jointly operated by the
Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and the City of Glendale
*Brand Park, Glendale
*
Stough Canyon Nature Center, Burbank
*Wildwood Canyon Park, Burbank
*La Tuna Canyon Park, Los Angeles
*Tujunga Ponds, Los Angeles
The Verdugo Mountains are being considered as part of the proposed Rim of the Valley Corridor
National Park
A national park is a nature park, natural park in use for conservation (ethic), conservation purposes, created and protected by national governments. Often it is a reserve of natural, semi-natural, or developed land that a sovereign state dec ...
.
Access and recreational use
Other than the
Foothill Freeway (I-210) and the nearly parallel La Tuna Canyon Road, both of which traverse only the northwestern tip of the range, the Verdugo Mountains are crossed by no paved roads. By contrast, the range contains more than of graded and well maintained fire roads that are used extensively by hikers and
mountain bike
A mountain bike (MTB) or mountain bicycle is a bicycle designed for off-road cycling. Mountain bikes share some similarities with other bicycles, but incorporate features designed to enhance durability and performance in rough terrain, which ...
riders. Several abandoned and overgrown fire roads and ridge-top fire breaks are used recreationally as well. Trails, in the sense of engineered and maintained footpaths, are few, the most notable being the 2.2 mile (3.5 km)-long La Tuna Canyon Trail, which was constructed in 1989 by the Los Angeles Conservation Corps with funds provided by the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.
[McKinney, John (1994). ''Walking Los Angeles'' New York: HarperCollinsWest.]
See also
*
La Tuna Fire
The La Tuna Fire was a wildfire that started on September 1, 2017, and burned through the Verdugo Mountains in Los Angeles, California. It led to the destruction of 5 homes and the evacuations of over 300 homes. It was the largest wildfire in the ...
References
Further reading
*
Tectonics of the San Gabriel Basin and surroundings, southern California'. Robert S. Yeats.
Corvallis, Oregon
Corvallis ( ) is a city and the county seat of Benton County in central western Oregon, United States. It is the principal city of the Corvallis, Oregon Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Benton County. As of the 2020 United ...
:
Oregon State University, Department of Geosciences, 2004.
*''Los Angeles River: Its Life, Death, and Possible Rebirth''. Blake Gumprecht.
Baltimore
Baltimore ( , locally: or ) is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Maryland, fourth most populous city in the Mid-Atlantic, and the 30th most populous city in the United States with a population of 585,708 in 2020. Baltimore was d ...
&
London: The
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999. .
*''Afoot & Afield in Los Angeles County'', 2nd edition, Area B-5. Jerry Schad.
Berkeley, California: Wilderness Press, 2000. .
*
Tectonics of the San Gabriel Basin and surroundings, southern California'. Robert S. Yeats.
Corvallis, Oregon
Corvallis ( ) is a city and the county seat of Benton County in central western Oregon, United States. It is the principal city of the Corvallis, Oregon Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Benton County. As of the 2020 United ...
:
Oregon State University, Department of Geosciences, 2004.
*''Paleoseismology, active tectonics, and seismic hazards of the Verdugo fault zone, Los Angeles County, California''. James F. Dolan. The University, 1997.
*''Segmentation, slip rates and earthquake dimensions in the active fold-thrust belt of northern Los Angeles Basin, California''. Robert S. Yeats. Dept. of Geosciences, Oregon State University, 1996.
*''Geology of Earthquakes''. Robert S. Yeats,
Kerry E. Sieh, and
Clarence R. Allen. Oxford University Press, 1997. .
*''Living with Earthquakes in California: A Survivor's Guide''. Robert S. Yeats. Oregon State University Press, 2001. .
*''The geology of a portion of the western Verdugo mountains''. Robert L. Johnston, 1938.
*''Geology Underfoot in Southern California''. Robert Sharp and Allen Glazner. Mountain Press, 1993. (2nd Edition released in 2020).
*''Assembling California''. John McPhee. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1993. .
*''Cycles of Rock and Water: At the Pacific Edge''. Kenneth A. Brown. HarperCollins, 1993. .
*''Birds of Los Angeles: Including Santa Barbara, Ventura and Orange Counties''. Chris C. Fisher and Herbert Clarke. Lone Pine Publications, 1997. .
*''A Flora of Southern California''. Philip A. Munz. University of California Press, 1974.
*''Native Trees of Southern California''. Victor P. Peterson. University of California Press, 1970.
*''Illustrated Guide to the Oaks of the Southern Californian Floristic Province: The Oaks of Coastal Southern California and Northwestern Baja California''. Fred M. Roberts Jr. F. M. Roberts Publishing, 1995. .
*''Plant Life in the World's Mediterranean Climates: California, Chile, South Africa, Australia and the Mediterranean Basin''. Peter R. Dallman. University of California, 1998. .
*''Island Called California: An Ecological Introduction to Its Natural Communities''. Elna Bakker. Second Edition. University of California Press, 1984. .
*''Natural History of Vacant Lots (California Natural History Guides)''. Matthew F. Vessel and Herbert H. Wong. University of California Press, 1987. .
*''Growing California Native Plants''. Marjorie D. Schmidt. University of California Press, 1981. .
*''Introduction to California Beetles''. Arthur V. Evans and James N. Hogue. University of California Press, 2004. .
*''Geography and evolution in the pocket gophers of California''. Joseph Grinnell. USGPO, 1927.
*''Evolutionary Dynamics of the Pocket Gopher'' Thomomys Bottae'', With Emphasis on California Populations''. James L. Patton and Margaret F. Smith. University of California Press, 1990. .
*''The Verdugos of Hispanic California''. Marie E. Northrop. 1978.
Maps
*''Angeles Front Country Trail Map''.
San Rafael, California: Tom Harrison Maps, 2001. .
*''Verdugo Mountains trail map''. Matt Maxon, 2005 http://pctmap.homeip.net/data/PDF/Verdugo%20Mtns%2001-16-05.pdf
*Burbank, California, 7.5 minute topographic quadrangle map.
United States Geological Survey.
*Pasadena, California, 7.5 minute topographic quadrangle map.
United States Geological Survey.
*''Mount La Tuna'' -
*''Verdugo Peak'' -
*''Tongva Peak'' -
*''Mount Thom'' -
External links
Outdoor LA Hiking Trails- Hiking trails in the area with maps and directions to the trailheads.
Verdugo Mountains Park Property- California State Parks page for the Verdugo Mountains Park Property
Rim of the Valley Corridor Special Resource Study- National Park Service page about the Rim of the Valley Corridor
- a listing of most of the hiking trails in the Verdugo Mountains.
Verdugo Hills Community Hike- an annual community hike and trail run in the Verdugos involving the Glendale, Burkbank, and Crescenta Valley communities
Parks in the Verdugo & San Rafael Mountains Region- Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy page, with an interagency list of parks and other protected areas in the Verdugo Mountains/San Rafael Hills area
{{Authority control
Transverse Ranges
Mountain ranges of Los Angeles County, California
Geography of Los Angeles
Geography of the San Fernando Valley
Burbank, California
Glendale, California
Sun Valley, Los Angeles
Mountain ranges of Southern California