Salt Flat, Texas
Salt Flat is a ghost town in northeastern Hudspeth County, Texas, United States. It lies along the concurrent U.S. Routes 62 and 180 north of the Census-designated place (CDP) of Sierra Blanca, the county seat of Hudspeth County.[1] Its elevation is 3,730 feet (1,137 m).[2] Although Salt Flat is unincorporated, it has a ZIP Code of 79847.[3] The headquarters of the nearby Guadalupe Mountains National Park uses this ZIP Code although it is located closer to Pine Springs, which has no post office.
Salt Flat, Texas | |
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![]() ![]() Salt Flat ![]() ![]() Salt Flat | |
Coordinates: 31°44′37″N 105°5′34″W | |
Country | United States |
State | Texas |
County | Hudspeth F |
Elevation | 3,730 ft (1,140 m) |
Time zone | UTC−07:00 (Mountain (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−06:00 (MDT) |
ZIP Code | 79847 |
GNIS feature ID | 1367427 |
Salt deposits

Just outside the community there is a dry salt pan called Salt Flat Playa or Salt Basin. It straddles the New Mexico-Texas border and is about 150 miles long, and 5 to 15 miles wide making it one of the largest gypsum playas in the United States. The playa occupies the north-south oriented Salt Basin Grabben, which lies between the Guadalupe and Delaware Mountains on the east and the Sierra Diablo and Diablo Plateau on the west. Originally the playa was a lake during the late Pleistocene, but drying of the climate since then has left a salt pan.[4] Today, a briny water table is about three feet below the surface. Capillary evaporation in the dry, hot weather pulls brine upwards and evaporite (gypsum, halite) and carbonate (calcite, dolomite) minerals precipitate.[4] Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) grow on the surface and immediately below the surface when the playa is wet. Alternating light and dark bands are either gypsum-rich (light) or dolomite-rich (dark)[5] When the playa is dry during the summer, winds blow the gypsum into sand dunes.
The San Elizario Salt War was a dispute over ownership and access to these salt deposits.[6]



References
- Rand McNally. The Road Atlas '08. Chicago: Rand McNally, 2008, p. 99.
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Salt Flat, Texas
- ZIP Code Lookup
- Hussain, M., Rohr, D. M., and Warren, J. X., 1988, Depositional environments and facies in a Quaternary continental sabkha, West Texas, in Guadalupe Mountains revisited, Texas and New Mexico: West Texas Geological Society Publication 88-84, p. 177-185.
- Chapman, J.E.B., 1984, Hydrogeochemistry of the unsaturated zone of a salt flat in Hudspeth County, Texas: Austin, University of Texas at Austin, M.S Thesis, 132p.
- The Salt War of San Elizaro, The Handbook of Texas Online
External links
- Kohout, Martin Donell. Salt Flat, TX, Handbook of Texas Online (accessed December 22, 2012)
- Guadalupe Mountains NP (Official Site) (accessed December 22, 2012)