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Yosemite National Park [PDF] To Carson City, Nev il 395 ra T Emigrant Dorothy L ake Lake t s Bond re C Pass HUMBOLDT-TOIYABE Maxwell NATIONAL FOREST S E K Lake A L c i f i c IN a Mary TW P Lake Tower Peak Barney STANISLAUS NATIONAL FOREST Lake Buckeye Pass Huckleberry Twin Lakes 9572 ft EMIGRANT WILDERNESS Lake 2917 m HO O k N e V e O E r Y R C N Peeler A W Lake Crown C I Lake L D Haystack k e E Peak e S R r A Tilden W C TO N Schofield OT Rock Island H E Lake R Peak ID S Pass G E S s Styx l l Matterhorn Pass a F Peak Slide Otter ia Mountain Lake r e Burro h Green c Pass D n Many Island Richardson Peak a Lake L Lake 9877 ft R (summer only) IE 3010 m F E L Whorl Wilma Lake k B Mountain e B e r U N Virginia Pass C T O Virginia S Y N Peak O N Y A Summit s N e k C k Lake k A e a ic L r C e Kibbie N r d YO N C Lake n N A I C e ACK A RRICK J M KE ia K in N rg I i A r V T e l N k l i U e e p N O r C S M O Lundy Lake Y L Piute Mountain N L te I 10541 ft iu A T P L C I 3213 m T (summer only) Smedberg Benson k Lake e Pass k e e r e C r Benson C Lake k Lake ee Cree r Vernon k C r o e Upper n Volunteer cCab a M e McCabe l Mount Peak E Laurel k n r Lake Lake Gibson e u e N t r e McC C a R b R e L R a O O A ke Rodgers I s N PLEASANT A E H N L Lake I k E VALLEY R l Frog e i E k G K e E e a LA r R e T I r C r Table Lake V T T North Peak C Pettit Peak N A 10788 ft INYO NATIONAL FOREST O Y 3288 m M t ls Saddlebag al N s Roosevelt F A e Lake TIL a r Lake TILL ri C VALLEY (summer only) e C l h Lake Eleanor il c ilt n Mount Wapama Falls T a (summer only) N S Conness R I Virginia c HALL A R i T Lake f 12590 ft Gardisky N E i MIGUEL U 3837 m NATURAL Lake c HETCH Rancheria Falls O G N Highway 120 Y D a MEADOW M O CH AREA Tioga Peak closed in winter O Y O’Shaughnessy T R P E ES IA R 11526 ft H E N Dam R R V E A 3513 m 120 O H I C R C White Mountain Hetch Hetchy N A Y wilderness permit required R E To 395 L L HE T A n T U k and Lee Vining V o O R e PATE LU I e MNE V D r b OF E o R L C T a VALLEY Young Lakes tin O Ellery Lake U g A C Ragged N N Peak E YO P d Smith Peak N O a A Waterwheel O o 7751 ft Tioga Lake R C Falls Granite P 2363 m ND A s Lakes R s er G e Gaylor iv T n n Tioga Pass Entrance R u o Peak o C ne y YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK l 9945 ft m h um 3031 m lu c Glen Aulin k o t ne ee e r u Hetc C Gaylor Lakes h H Tioga Road closed T Mo November to May S r R r i s west of this point o i n Ten v W W e O Lakes y r e Mount Dana Hetch Hetchy Entrance Harden Lake n D a l A 13057ft Creek e Dog Lake D E 3979m M Pothole A Dome N Grant Lembert Dome A Fork Mather Lakes D R Birch i a v TU an Lake olu er Tuolumne Peak OLUMNE D Tu mne Mount Gibbs 10845 ft Facilities along Tioga Road Fairview M 12764 ft 3306 m EADOWS available summer only White Wolf 120 Dome 3890 m L y e l d W l le k a d e d Lukens o i e Medlicott M r R Lake C Dome E v Bald Mountain a l Tuolumne Meadows Mammoth Peak e g i r g 7261 ft May io a F 12117 ft Mono Pass r k o r T Visitor Center e 2213 m Lake e r 3693 m 10604 ft T e Cathedral Peak k e r n Siesta 3232 m 10940 ft C d Lake R a Mount Hoffmann 3335 m o o R 10850 ft May Lake a Elizabeth Lake Cathedral Lakes d a e 3307 m Budd g it K o Lake Unicorn Peak U i m Parker Pass T e N L s Tresidder A r Y o i Y Peak Echo Peaks C E u L A ASPEN C T L M R Tenaya E VALLEY H 120 S E T Lake Johnson D y C n t R Peak r A e h A f N Porcupine o f L a Y To J R O Manteca Yosemite Flat Nelson N Sunrise Lake Potter Koip Peak Information Station Riv Creek 120 er k Point K 12962 ft Olmsted e Big Oak Flat Entrance e O r 3950 m Point I Facilities along Tioga Road C Vogelsang P Evelyn th u o available summer only W Lake S k lumn e Sunrise Lakes o e C u re T R F R O ork C E A ld S N o T B k h G ig e c e c E l r P Hodgdon o N E s O C O s e a a Y d k n Meadow i to F k N c l t Vogelsang v at A k Amelia Earhart e R a C i h w e Ireland Lake Lake J f ic o W e Peak r i le Tioga Road closed o Hiking in Ten aya C anyon t a C o c r k a n t ffic d e is dangero us and strongly November to May S M h T 120 e a east of this point r d iscour aged Emeric r n m e Vogelsang C k h Lake a e c t C Donohue Peak r e le Peak a r r a F c C Clo uds Rest e 12023 ft k n y k a s O e o n B TUOLUMNE 9926 ft 3665 m a y t ig e e k r T n e r GROVE t 3025 m T a C a i il ek k e C A m r Bernice M C e Y Road Flat a A e h N r Lake u n Tamarack Flat North e Babcock Lake e E s C ir a i Donohue T Yosemite i L Dome r T n Waugh d r Pass Falls u Crane Flat n a I Lake Valley Visitor Center SEE DETAIL MAP ON OTHER SIDE S e Merced i d s l a i w c Lake e C s RIBBON L MERCED r a rced e e Mount GROVE e C MEADOW M k Half Maclure Dome Little Yosemite Valley (summer only) er Mount Lyell B Riv Mount Florence 13114 ft i g Y Merced Lake 12561 ft 3997 m C E O El Capitan L Bunnell 3829 m r L a a 7569 ft Glacier Point A n L V Point k Tunnel 2307 m Y IT TE Merced Lake e E (summer TLE YOSEMI F (summer only) l l L only) a e L t n Valley View A R n V u d T Tun E nel Y T M OSEMI o s C s a Cre th Taft Point Illilouette Washburn ek Bridalveil R e o d Fall Lake F C c or Tunnel View Fall r k r k a e s l Mount Starr King e Inspiration k Point Dewey 9092 ft Lyell Point 2771 m Banner Peak Foresta d 12936 ft a 3943 m o Old Mount Ansel Adams R STANISLAUS NATIONAL FOREST Mount Clark Inspiration 11760 ft Arch Rock 11522 ft Point 3584 m Entrance Gro C use re 3512 m ek Foerster Peak Mount Ritter l Glacier Point Road 12057ft 13142 ft ta closed November to E or 3675m 4006 m l P May east of this point Illi k l r ouett e o F er v i d R G Gray e El Portal l Po SUMMIT a in c 140 c Road MONO Peak r ie t r e MEADOW MEADOW C k Long Mountain L a M 11502 ft Bridalveil Creek A e To P H C R 3506 m O Merced r K R e e W k Badger Pass I k M Z E e S B O E e Red Peak Chinquapin Ski Area A T r r i N ANSEL ADAMS WILDERNESS D F d Isberg (winter only) A a C 11699 ft Yosemite O l L v Peak W L e R R 3566 m West il I A S D e l H G N E p NN DGE G i ESS RI E r E T Isberg Pass O tt ow ay L akes S Merced Peak a o Cr Ostrander t Post Peak Pass u ee is 11726 ft Triple k Ski Hut V th 3574 m Divide Post Peak Lower Merced Peak F Hart Pass Lake o Ostrander Lake r k Lakes k Upper M e e e HOR Merced Pass rc r SE e R d River C ID Merced Pass Lake G a W E n a e w u B o ishop T B n S a E R C ISTA R k BUENA V k ee o e r C e a r d C Buena Vista Peak Moraine r 9709 ft Mountain lde A Fernandez 2959 m Givens Lake Pass Royal Arch SIERRA NATIONAL FOREST Lake E G Breeze D na I al Lake R u iln R h Ch E C ai Gale Peak N n Caution: Due to park UR La 10693 ft SIERRA NATIONAL FOREST T Johnson kes Lake 3259 m improvement efforts, Chilnualna Fall Crescent North Lake some roads may Wawona Dome Buck Camp experience closures, (summer only) detours, or delays.
Recommended publications
  • Sketch of Yosemite National Park and an Account of the Origin of the Yosemite and Hetch Hetchy Valleys
    SKETCH OF YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK AND AN ACCOUNT OF THE ORIGIN OF THE YOSEMITE AND HETCH HETCHY VALLEYS DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY 1912 This publication may be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington. I). C, for LO cents. 2 SKETCH OP YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK AND ACCOUNT OF THE ORIGIN OF THE YOSEMITE AND HETCH HETCHY VALLEYS. By F. E. MATTHES, U. S. Geological Surrey. INTRODUCTION. Many people believe that the Yosemite National Park consists principally of the Yosemite Valley and its bordering heights. The name of the park, indeed, would seem to justify that belief, yet noth­ ing could be further from the truth. The Yosemite Valley, though by far the grandest feature of the region, occupies only a small part of the tract. The famous valley measures but a scant 7 miles in length; the park, on the other hand, comprises no less than 1,124 square miles, an area slightly larger than the State of Rhode Island, or about one-fourth as large as Connecticut. Within this area lie scores of lofty peaks and noble mountains, as well as many beautiful valleys and profound canyons; among others, the Iletch Hetchy Valley and the Tuolumne Canyon, each scarcely less wonderful than the Yosemite Valley itself. Here also are foaming rivers and cool, swift trout brooks; countless emerald lakes that reflect the granite peaks about them; and vast stretches of stately forest, in which many of the famous giant trees of California still survive. The Yosemite National Park lies near the crest of the great alpine range of California, the Sierra Nevada.
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  • Red Peak Pass Red Peak Pass
    Tentative Itinerary – Red Peak Pass On your trip to Yosemite, our goal would be to give you an adventure that you will remember forever while also pointing out (and getting you up and behind) some of the major points in the park that most tourists want to see. Many people come for their first trip and just drive into Yosemite Valley and look up in awe. They then make plans to come back and see and do more in the future. By contacting us, we can design an outing where you can see the valley and also complete a backcountry trip that enables you to get away from the crowds and on top of some of the more famous peaks and beside some amazing waterfalls! You will finish this adventure feeling “success” and “accomplishment” and with a greater view and experience of Yosemite then most people ever receive! Red Peak Pass Trip Length: 7 Days/6 Nights Trip Highlights: Glacier Point, Illilouette Creek, unlimited high alpine lakes, rivers, Red Peak Pass, Merced Peak, Washburn Lake, Merced Lake, the Lost Valley, Little Yosemite Valley, and the Mist Trail. Total Milage: 50 miles Rating: Moderate to Strenuous. Day 1 : Meet your guide in the afternoon. Get acquainted with the group and with gear. Valley highlights (food in the front-country not included.) Camp in Yosemite Valley Backpackers camp. Day 2: After taking the 8am morning shuttle (approx. 1.5 hours) to Glacier Point where we will take in the views before heading downhill into the Illilouette Creek Valley. We will cross the creek and continue on a gradual uphill climb before picking a creek side location to camp at.
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  • YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK O C Y Lu H M Tioga Pass Entrance 9945Ft C Glen Aulin K T Ne Ee 3031M E R Hetc C Gaylor Lakes R H H Tioga Road Closed
    123456789 il 395 ra T Dorothy Lake t s A Bond C re A Pass S KE LA c i f i c IN a TW P Tower Peak Barney STANISLAUS NATIONAL FOREST Mary Lake Lake Buckeye Pass Twin Lakes 9572ft EMIGRANT WILDERNESS 2917m k H e O e O r N V C O E Y R TOIYABE NATIONAL FOREST N Peeler B A Lake Crown B C Lake Haystack k Peak e e S Tilden r AW W Schofield C TO Rock Island OTH IL Peak Lake RI Pass DG D Styx E ER s Matterhorn Pass l l Peak N a Slide E Otter F a Mountain S Lake ri e S h Burro c D n Pass Many Island Richardson Peak a L Lake 9877ft R (summer only) IE 3010m F LE Whorl Wilma Lake k B Mountain e B e r U N Virginia Pass C T O Virginia S Y N Peak O N Y A Summit s N e k C k Lake k c A e a C i C e L C r N r Kibbie d YO N C n N CA Lake e ACK AI RRICK K J M KE ia in g IN ir A r V T e l N k l U e e pi N O r C S O M Y Lundy Lake L Piute Mountain N L te I 10541ft iu A T P L C I 3213m T Smedberg k (summer only) Lake e k re e C re Benson Benson C ek re Lake Lake Pass C Vernon Creek Mount k r e o Gibson e abe Upper an r Volunteer McC le Laurel C McCabe E Peak rn Lake u Lake N t M e cCa R R be D R A Lak D NO k Rodgers O I es e PLEASANT EA H N EL e Lake I r l Frog VALLEY R i E k G K C E LA e R a e T I r r Table Lake V North Peak T T C N Pettit Peak A INYO NATIONAL FOREST O 10788ft s Y 3288m M t ll N Fa s Roosevelt ia A e Mount Conness TILT r r Lake Saddlebag ILL VALLEY e C 12590ft (summer only) h C Lake ill c 3837m Lake Eleanor ilt n Wapama Falls T a (summer only) N S R I Virginia c A R i T Lake f N E i MIGUEL U G c HETCHY Rancheria Falls O N Highway 120 D a MEADOW
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  • Wilderness-Use.Pdf
    Trailhead Quota System Acquiring A Wilderness Permit Acquiring A Wilderness Permit Continued Welcome! Yosemite is a popular destination for backpackers, By reservation. Advance reservations are available From May through October, you can get permits at and it includes over 700 miles of trail and 54 for trips occurring from May through October. the following locations: The greater the obstacle, • Yosemite Valley Wilderness Center in Yosemite Most of Yosemite National Park is trailheads. Yosemite National Park has a trailhead Reservations are available up to 24 weeks (168 days), the more glory quota system limiting the number of overnight but no later than two days, before your start date. Village next to the Post Office in overcoming it. designated Wilderness—designated by • Tuolumne Meadows Wilderness Center, one mile visitors entering a particular trailhead on a given Jean Baptiste Molière Congress because the American people To reserve a permit, download a reservation form east of the Tuolumne Store, off Tioga Road wanted areas where nature and its day. This system is designed to reduce impacts from www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/wild and to avoid overcrowding, in keeping with the • Big Oak Flat Information Station, immediately community of life remain unchanged by permits.htm, completely fill out the form, and Wilderness Act’s mandate of providing after the 120 West park entrance humans. You will experience nature on its fax to 209/372-0739. You may also call “outstanding opportunities for solitude.” The • The Wawona Visitor Center at Hill’s Studio own terms in Yosemite’s wilderness– 209/372-0740 or write to Wilderness Permits; quota system is based on where you begin your • Hetch Hetchy Entrance Station natural fires, falling rocks, high water stream PO Box 545; Yosemite, CA, 95389.
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  • 9.0 Bibliography
    9.0 BIBLIOGRAPHY Archaeological Resources Technology (ART) [Revised by EDAW]. 2007. Historical Context and Archaeological Survey Report for the Hetch Hetchy Water & Power Communication System Upgrade Project. Bates, C. D., and M. J. Lee. 1990. Tradition and Innovation: A Basket History of the Indians of the Yosemite-Mono Lake Area. Yosemite Association, Yosemite National Park. Bennyhoff, J. A. 1953. High Altitude Occupation in the Yosemite National Park Region. University of California Archaeological Survey Reports 21:31–32. Berkeley. Bennyhoff, J. A. 1956. An Appraisal of the Archaeological Resources of Yosemite National Park. University of California Archaeological Survey Reports 34. Berkeley. Bridgman, Roy. 2006-2007. Wildlife Biologist. Stanislaus National Forest. United States Forest Service. Groveland Ranger District. Groveland, CA. December 15 and 18, 2006, and January 10 and February 6, 2007 – Email correspondence and telephone conversation regarding biological resources in the project area. Bunnell, L. H. 1990. Discovery of the Yosemite and the Indian War of 1851 Which Led to That Event. Reprint of the 4th ed., 1911. Yosemite Association, Yosemite National Park, California. California Air Resources Board (CARB) 2007. Ambient Air Quality Standards and Attainment Designations. Available: <http://www.arb.ca.gov>. Accessed March 2007. 2003. HARP User Guide. Sacramento, CA City and County of San Francisco (CCSF) Utilities and Engineering Bureau. 1992. Structural Rehabilitation Study of Old Moccasin Powerhouse. Appendix H, p.3. January 23. California Department of Forestry (CDF). 2007. California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Cooperative Efforts. http://www.fire.ca.gov/fire_er_cefedgov.php. Accessed January 2007. California Department of Conservation (CDC). Stanislaus County 2002-2004 Land Use Conversion.
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  • Emigrant Wilderness: a Profile ROG 16-25 12/2019
    United States Department of Agriculture Emigrant Wilderness: A Profile ROG 16-25 12/2019 The 113,000-acre Emigrant Wilderness is located in the Stanislaus National Forest, on the upper west- ern slope of the central Sierra Nevada mountain range. Bordered on the south by Yosemite National Park and on the east by the Hoover Wilderness on the Toiyabe National Forest, this wilderness measures roughly 25 miles long and 15 miles wide. Major watersheds drain to the Stanislaus and Tu- olumne rivers. The area is entirely within Tuolumne County. Driving distance is approximately 138 miles from San Francisco and 125 miles from Lake Tahoe. The Emigrant Wilderness is a glaciated landscape of great scenic beauty. The northeastern section of the wilderness is characterized by volcanic ridgelines and peaks. The remaining sections are sparsely vegetated granite ridges, with lakes and meadows scattered around the area. Elevations range from below 5,000 feet near the Cherry Reservoir to the majestic 11,750-foot Leavitt Peak. The range of ele- vation in the most popular high use areas lies between the 7,500-foot to 9,000-foot levels. Precipitation averages 50 inches annually; 80 percent is in the form of snow. The snowpack typically lingers into June, and sometimes even later after a very wet winter. Summers are generally dry and mild, but after- noon thundershowers occur periodically and nighttime temperatures can dip below freezing. Always be prepared for cold and wet weather! History as the Emigrant Basin Primitive Area. The Wilder- Various Native American tribes (among them ness Act of 1964 established the National Wilder- the Me-Wuk) populated this area for 10,000 ness Preservation System, “to secure for the Amer- years, spending the summer and early autumn ican people of present and future generations the months hunting game and gathering acorns in the benefits of an enduring source of wilderness.” On high country.
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  • Conservationists and the Battles to Keep Dams out of Yellowstone: Hetch Hetchy Overturned
    Conservationists and the Battles to Keep Dams Out of Yellowstone: Hetch Hetchy Overturned Michael J. Yochim Abstract Between 1919 and 1938 irrigation interests in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming repeatedly tried to construct reservoirs in Yellowstone National Park by damming several large park lakes and Bechler Meadows. Conservationists of the time joined forces with Horace Albright and Steven Mather of the National Park Service to oppose the dams. Ultimately successful in all their efforts, their key victory came in 1923 when they defeated an attempt to dam Yellowstone Lake. This victory reversed the loss of protected status for national parks that had occurred just ten years earlier at Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park. By chronicling the protracted conflict over dams in Yellowstone, I illustrate that the conservationists (including Mather and Albright) reestablished the funda- mental preservation policy of the national parks and empowered the newly cre- ated National Park Service to carry out its mission of park protection. This effort was the key battle in proving national parks and wilderness to be inviolate to industrial, exploitive uses. Conservationists both defined and tested the inviolate policy in Yellowstone; their battles in Dinosaur National Monument and the Grand Canyon cemented it into place. Introduction Far off, there lies a lovely lake Which rests in beauty, there to take Swift pictures of the changing sky, Ethereal blues, and clouds piled high. When black the sky, when fall the rains, When blow fierce winds, her face remains Still beautiful, but agitate, Nor mirrors back their troubled state. Within a park this treasure lies, — Such region ne’er did man devise — The hand of Mighty God, alone, Could form the Park of Yellowstone.
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  • 2021 D6 Zone Hunt Info
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE DEER MANAGEMENT PROGRAM Wildlife Branch 1010 Riverside Parkway, West Sacramento, CA 95605 ZONE D6 2021 General Deer Hunting Information (Includes Additional Hunts G-37, J-15 and A-21) GENERAL INFORMATION This information sheet has been prepared to assist deer hunters applying for, or planning to hunt in, Zone D-6 located in portions of Alpine, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, Stanislaus, and Tuolumne counties. The following information should be useful to hunters for archery and general seasons, as well as any “additional hunts” within this geographic area. For more specific information or additional questions regarding this area, contact the following Department office(s): • Central Region Office (Region 4), 1234 E. Shaw Avenue, Fresno, CA 93710 (559-243-4005 ext. 151) encompassing Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Stanislaus, Tulare, and Tuolumne counties. REGULATIONS Laws and regulations are designed to conserve wildlife and to provide for an equitable distribution of game mammals. All hunters should read and be familiar with the Current Hunting Regulations. Remember, if you are hunting on private property you must obtain, and have in your possession written permission to hunt on private property. Hunter trespass laws are strictly enforced. NON-LEAD RESTRICTIONS As of July 1, 2019, all hunters must use nonlead ammunition when taking any wildlife in California, except when hunting with a pellet rifle for approved species. • CCR T14 250.1(d)(3) Effective July 1, 2019, it shall be unlawful to use, or possess with any firearm capable of firing, any projectile(s) not certified as nonlead when taking any wildlife for any purpose in this state.
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  • Yosemite National Park Foundation Overview
    NATIONAL PARK SERVICE • U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Foundation Document Overview Yosemite National Park California Contact Information For more information about Yosemite National Park, Call (209) 372-0200 (then dial 3 then 5) or write to: Public Information Office, P.O. Box 577, Yosemite, CA 95389 Park Description Through a rich history of conservation, the spectacular The geology of the Yosemite area is characterized by granitic natural and cultural features of Yosemite National Park rocks and remnants of older rock. About 10 million years have been protected over time. The conservation ethics and ago, the Sierra Nevada was uplifted and then tilted to form its policies rooted at Yosemite National Park were central to the relatively gentle western slopes and the more dramatic eastern development of the national park idea. First, Galen Clark and slopes. The uplift increased the steepness of stream and river others lobbied to protect Yosemite Valley from development, beds, resulting in formation of deep, narrow canyons. About ultimately leading to President Abraham Lincoln’s signing 1 million years ago, snow and ice accumulated, forming glaciers the Yosemite Grant in 1864. The Yosemite Grant granted the at the high elevations that moved down the river valleys. Ice Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove of Big Trees to the State thickness in Yosemite Valley may have reached 4,000 feet during of California stipulating that these lands “be held for public the early glacial episode. The downslope movement of the ice use, resort, and recreation… inalienable for all time.” Later, masses cut and sculpted the U-shaped valley that attracts so John Muir led a successful movement to establish a larger many visitors to its scenic vistas today.
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  • Wilderness Inventory and Evaluation Planning
    U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region Wilderness May 2015 Update Wilderness Inventory and Evaluation Background: The Inyo, Sequoia and Sierra National Forests are revising their land and resource management plans using the 2012 Planning Rule. This rule requires the agency to identify and evaluate lands that may be suitable for inclusion in the National Wilderness Preservation System (NWPS). In 1964, Congress created the NWPS to protect some of the most natural and undisturbed places in America. Only Congress can designate wilderness; however, federal land managers, citizens or other groups can make wilderness recommendations to Congress. In August 2014, the Forest Service shared a preliminary wilderness inventory with the public and tribes to gather feedback on the lands that had been inventoried to determine those areas that should or should not be further considered for wilderness recommendation. Forest Service Current Work: The inventory and evaluation (steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step wilderness inventory process) on the Inyo, Sequoia, and Sierra National Forests have been completed. The results will be included as an appendix in the draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) being prepared for these forest plan revisions. Not all lands included in the inventory and subsequent evaluations are required to be carried forward. In total, the Forest Service is considering 10 areas for analysis as recommended wilderness. Of these areas, 3 are potential new recommended wilderness areas, and 7 are potential recommended additions to current
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  • Pathways: a Story of Trails and Men (1968), by John W
    Pathways: A Story of Trails and Men (1968), by John W. Bingaman • Title Page • Acknowledgements • Foreword • Preface • Contents • 1. Pioneer Trails of the West • 2. Traders, Trail Breakers, Mountain Men, & Pathmarkers of the West • 3. First Explorer of Yosemite Valley, James D. Savage • 4. First Tourist Party in Yosemite • 5. Yosemite Trails • 6. Excerpts from Reports of Army Officers & Acting Superintendents • 7. Harry Coupland Benson • 8. Gabriel Sovulewski, Dean of Trail Builders, and Frank B. Ewing • 9. Crises in Trail Maintenance • 10. My Last Patrol • Bibliography • Maps About the Author John Bingaman at Merced Grove Ranger Station, 1921 (From Sargent’s Protecting Paradise). John W. Bingaman was born June 18, 1896 in Ohio. He worked for the railroad in New York and California, then made tanks and combines during World War I. He first worked in Yosemite starting in 1918 as a packer and guide. John was appointed park ranger in 1921 and worked in several parts of Yosemite National Park. His wife Martha assisted her husband during the busy summer season. John retired in 1956. After retiring he lived in the desert in Southern California and spent summers touring various mountain areas and National Parks with their trailer. In retirement he wrote this book, Pathways, Guardians of the Yosemite: A Story of the First Rangers (1961), and The Ahwahneechees: A Story of the Yosemite Indians (1966). His autobiography is on pages 98-99 of Guardians of the Yosemite. John’s second wife was Irene. John Bingaman died April 5, 1987 in Stockton, California. Bibliographical Information John W. Bingaman (1896-1987), Pathways: A Story of Trails and Men (Lodi, California: End-kian Publishing Col, 1968), Copyright 1968 by John W.
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  • Phil Collh CHAPTER IV
    Phil Collh CHAPTER IV. Management Direction Introduction This chapter documents how the Inyo National Forest vnll be managed during this planning pericd. It provides dj"x'on to Forest land managers and explains to the public the rem why specific areas are managed for specific reasons and how that will be accanplxshed. The chapter is divided into five sections: 1. Forest Goals lists the resources of the Forest with their respective manag-t goals. 2. Forest Objectives lists outputs for each resource that will result fran inplementing the Plan. 3. Forest-wide Standards and Guidelines are the bases for all management activities on the Forest. Each resource has a set of standards and guides to that the resource is protected, maintained or developd in an emimmentally sound and ewnanically cost-effective way. These standards and guides apply to all areas of the Forest. 4. w"t PresQliptiOns prescribe how areas on the Forest will be managed with a specific resource -is. For example, any Wildemess on the Forest no matter where it is located will be managed under Prescription #1 - Designated Wildemess. Each prescription describes the ObJeCtive of manag€inent and the area's resource -is. 5. Manag5wn t Area D-im delineates boundaries of the twenty management areas on the Forest. Each of these has a different mix of prescriptions, but all are managed under the Forest-wide Standards and Guidelines. National Forests are managed under a variety of federal laws rqirg fmthe U.S. Minirq Laws of 1872 to the National Forest Managmt Act of 1976. Forest Semice iVamals and Handbooks and the Pacific southwest Regimal Guide provide additional policy diredion.
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