Rocky Mountain National Park Historic Structure Hikes

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Rocky Mountain National Park Historic Structure Hikes Rocky Mountain National Park Historic Structure Hikes 4 1 Y W H O L O C Corral Creek USFS (! 4 HWY 1 COLO Lost Falls #* North Fork Patrol Cabin Dunraven USFS D (! D D La Poudre Pass (! D D D D 4 3 Chapin Pass Bridal Veil Falls Y ! W ( #* H S McGraw RanchCow Creek U (! C!rater ! ( ( Cache La Poudre (! Milner Pass Chasm Falls Milner Pass Road Camp mess hall #* Horseshoe Falls Rock Cut (! Thousand Falls #* #* Lawn Lake (! Colorado River (! Timber Lake (! Beaver Ponds (! Lumpy Ridge U (! Ute Crossing S H (! WY 34 Deer Mountain/ Deer Ridge (! TOWN OF Never Summer ESTES PARK (! Upper Beaver Meadows (! U S 7 US HWY 36 HW Y Y 36 W H Moraine Park Visitor Center O Bowen / Baker Cub Lake L (! Fern Lake! ( O (! C Coyote Valley #* (! Fern Falls Hallowell Park Marguerite Falls (! Fern Lake Patrol Cabin #* East Portal Grace Falls (! #* Bierstadt Lake Sprague Lake (! (! Onahu Creek (! Bear Lake (! Green Mountain (!Glacier Gorge Green Mountain Ranch (! Lilly Lake Alberta Falls (! Twin Sisters #* (! Glacier Falls #* War Dance Falls #* Stone Radio Repeater #*Timberline Falls Sun Valley (! D Longs Peak (! C O Kawuneeche Visitor Center Ribbon Falls L (! #* O D D H AgnDes Vaille Memorial Shelter D Columbine Falls W #* Y TOWN OF (!(! 7 D GRAND LAKE D D (! East Inlet (! D #*Adams Falls Trio Falls #* Shadow Mountain Lookout Fan Falls #* #*Thunder Falls Sandbeach Lake (! Mertensia Falls #* Wild Basin (! (! East Shore (Dam) Finch Lake (! D Allenspark (! D D 2 7 Y W H O L O C Meters Rocky Mountain National Park Historic Structure Hikes - with ratings 0 2,150 4,300 8,600 12,900 17,200 McGraw Ranch 0.357 North Fork Patrol Cabin 2.3391 Agnes Vaille 18.3671 Main Roads Park Boundary Green Mountain Ranch 0.9417 Fern Lake Patrol Cabin 9.8461 HistStructureDisplay Roads Lakes or Ponds Moraine Park Vis Ctr. 1.1786 Stone Radio Repeater 10.5079 #* Waterfalls Streams Cities O Milner Pass Mess Hall 1.6854 Shadow Mountain Lookout 13.2531 (! Trail Heads Trails Counties Scale 1:100,000, Projection Universal Transverse Mercator Zone 13 N, Geographic Coordinate System North American Datum 1983 Sources: National Parks Service Datastore , http://science.nature.nps.gov/nrdata, Locations in Rocky Mountain National Park, Alan Siverstein http://estes.on-line.com/rmnp/dbs/rmnp-plc.txt, Natural Diversity Information Source, Colorado Division of Wildlife, http://ndis.nrel.colostate.edu/ftp Stephen H Willis and Brad Lindenmayer, Colorado State University November 25, 2007.
Recommended publications
  • Trait Ridge Road Guide
    Sign No. 9 Medicine Bow Curve (11,640 feet) succeeded more than 80 years ago in bringing water from Never The sign here points northwest to the Medi­ Summer streams through the Grand Ditch and La Poudre Pass Rocky Mountain National Park cine Bow Mountains which extend into Wyo­ to irrigate the semiarid lands east of the Rockies. He failed to 9 ming, 44 miles away. The Cache la Poudre find sufficient precious metals in Lulu City diggings to establish River twists through the glacial gorge before profitable mines. Broken stone chimneys and rotting founda­ you, separating this point from rounded, tion logs are all that remain of this once bustling mining camp. v 7 This country is also a favorite home of the beaver. Trait Ridge brownish Specimen Mountain to the west. Its color provides a clue to the mountain's orgin, Sign No. 12 Shadow Mountain National as a volcano, and the cliffs at Iceberg Lake Recreation Area are of lava from this source. Shadow Mountain Lake and Lake Granby Road Guide Sign No. 10 Continental Divide, Milner Pass are two reservoirs of the Colorado — Big (10,758 feet) 12 Thompson Project, built and operated by the Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Department of Surprise! You thought the Continental Divide \ 7 the Interior. From here water flows through would be the highest point on your trip. But Grand Lake and the 13.1-mile Adams Tunnel this delightful spot where an undecided rain­ to Estes Park. There, east of the Continental drop might flow either to the Atlantic or to \10/ Divide, it stairsteps down through penstocks the Pacific is more than a thousand feet below and turbines producing electric power and finally emptying into the Alpine Visitor Center, and 1,425 feet be- reservoirs and irrigation canals east of the Front Range.
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  • Thesis an Investigation Into Beaver-Induced Holocene
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  • Hiking in the Kawuneeche Valley Rocky Mountain
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  • To See the Hike Archive
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  • Rocky Mountain National Park News U.S
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  • Little Buckaroo Ranch Barn National Register
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  • A Guide to the Geology of Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
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  • Rocky Mountain National Park High Country Headlines
    Rocky Mountain National Park HIGH COUNTRY HEADLINES Winter 2006-07 October 29 - March 30 Your Park in Winter Reflected sunlight sparkles in the snow. Tracks of tiny mice and great elk cross INSIDE your trail. Frozen alpine lakes ringed 2 You Need to Know by massive peaks can be reached by snowshoe, ski, and even on foot. For 3 Survival those who are prepared, winter in Rocky Mountain National Park is a beautiful time 4 Ranger-led Programs full of crisp adventures. 5 Camping 6-7 Winter Tours 8 Park Map The park’s west side holds the best snow. photo: Harry Canon This newspaper is designed to help you most of the winter. Easy trails head toward drifts, Trail Ridge Road is too dangerous comfortably and safely enjoy this high Lulu City or Sun Valley, and many more to try to keep fully open through the and wild park during its longest season. challenging options are also available. On winter. Yet much of the park is still open Information on visitor centers, important the east side of the park (Estes Park area), year-round. You can drive to magnificent phone numbers, winter travel, and snowshoeing is more reliable than cross- view areas like Many Parks Curve and recreation are on pages 2 and 3. Free country skiing. The lofty peaks of Rocky Bear Lake on the east, and through the ranger-led programs are listed on page 4. Mountain National Park tend to catch and spectacular Kawuneeche Valley on the Camping is described on page 5. Some hold more snow on their western slopes west.
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