Index of Oregon USGS 7.5' Topographic Maps 1949 to 2009
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Historic Fire Lookouts? the View and the Solitude Can’T Be Beat
ince shortly after the turn of the century, ¢ government personnel have stood guard Bonus Points 25 S over western lands. In Klamath, Lake, W ant to spend more time in one of the area’s and Modoc Country, fire lookouts open to the historic fire lookouts? The view and the solitude can’t be beat. public offer breathtaking views from the top of • Bald Butte Lookout Rental - Many historic area lookouts HISTORIC the world as well as a chance to visit history . are being made available as rustic vacation rentals. Reservations are required. For Bald Butte Lookout Rental, arly fire lookouts were simply scaffolds, and outdoor recreation activities including skiing and FIRE E snowmobiling, contact the Paisley Ranger District, attached precariously to trees and offering 541-943-3114. Bald Butte Lookout is available little shelter to early fire observers. year-round. • Hager Mountain Lookout Rental - While a little more LOOKOUTS ost surviving fire lookout towers, built in difficult to get to, this lookout offers the adventurous a M the 20’s and 30’s, are 14' by 14' structures breathtaking view year-round from over 7,000 feet. On a assembled from pre-manufactured kits and clear day you might see as far north as Mt. Hood, and south to Mt. Shasta. Contact the Silver Lake Ranger packed up to mountain peaks by truck or even District, 541-576-2107, for information and reservations. mule train. Windows offered a 360-degree view Reservations also can be made for the Fremont Point Cabin of the area for the occupant. All the comforts of perched on the edge of the massive escarpment west of home were available: wood stove, bed and Summer Lake. -
Our Staff Compiled a List of Their Favorite Top 3 Local Spots for Each Category. We Hope That You Enjoy Them As Much As We Do!
Pronghorn Staff Top 3 Favorites Our staff compiled a list of their favorite top 3 local spots for each category. We hope that you enjoy them as much as we do! Breakfast Bike Trails 1. The Victorian Cafe 1. Phil’s Trail Complex 2. The Sparrow Bakery 2. Wanoga Trail Complex 3. McKay Cottage 3. Swampy Lakes Area Coffee: Hiking Trails 1. Looney Bean 1. Tumalo Falls 2. Backporch Coffee 2. Broken Top, No Name Lake 3. Thump Coffee 3. Elk Lake Elevated Dining: Non-sport Activities 1. The Blacksmith 1. Summer Concerts 2. Bos Taurus 2. Old Mill & Downtown Bend 3. Arianna 3. Cascade Lakes Highway Drive Casual Dining Outdoor Activities 1. Wild Rose 1. Deschutes River float 2. Spork 2. Mt. Bachelor 3. Brother Jon’s Alehouse 3. Fly fishing Local Breweries Must See 1. 10 Barrel Brewing Co. 1. Smith Rock State Park 2. Deschutes Brewery 2. 360 city view from Pilot Butte 3. Crux Fermentation Project 3. Tumalo Falls Contact our Concierge team for more information. 541.693.5311 | [email protected] “Why We Recommend” & More | Breakfast | Chow | Locally-sourced American cuisine served at an artful & comfortable eatery with a full bar & patio. Rotating menu based on region and sourcing. The Sparrow Bakery | Lively, family-friendly bakery for breakfast & lunch, in industrial-chic digs with a patio. Northwest Crossing location has a larger lunch menu. Eastside location is set in a historic building with a large patio. Famous for their ocean roll. Lemon Tree | Downtown, river-facing. Creative breakfast & lunch fare with craft cocktails, coffee & kombucha on tap plus, a gift shop. -
New Titles for Spring 2021 Green Trails Maps Spring
GREEN TRAILS MAPS SPRING 2021 ORDER FORM recreation • lifestyle • conservation MOUNTAINEERS BOOKS [email protected] 800.553.4453 ext. 2 or fax 800.568.7604 Outside U.S. call 206.223.6303 ext. 2 or fax 206.223.6306 Date: Representative: BILL TO: SHIP TO: Name Name Address Address City State Zip City State Zip Phone Email Ship Via Account # Special Instructions Order # U.S. DISCOUNT SCHEDULE (TRADE ONLY) ■ Terms: Net 30 days. 1 - 4 copies ........................................................................................ 20% ■ Shipping: All others FOB Seattle, except for orders of 25 books or more. FREE 5 - 9 copies ........................................................................................ 40% SHIPPING ON BACKORDERS. ■ Prices subject to change without notice. 10 - 24 copies .................................................................................... 45% ■ New Customers: Credit applications are available for download online at 25 + copies ................................................................45% + Free Freight mountaineersbooks.org/mtn_newstore.cfm. New customers are encouraged to This schedule also applies to single or assorted titles and library orders. prepay initial orders to speed delivery while their account is being set up. NEW TITLES FOR SPRING 2021 Pub Month Title ISBN Price Order February Green Trails Mt. Jefferson, OR No. 557SX 9781680515190 18.00 _____ February Green Trails Snoqualmie Pass, WA No. 207SX 9781680515343 18.00 _____ February Green Trails Wasatch Front Range, UT No. 4091SX 9781680515152 18.00 _____ TOTAL UNITS ORDERED TOTAL RETAIL VALUE OF ORDERED An asterisk (*) signifies limited sales rights outside North America. QTY. CODE TITLE PRICE CASE QTY. CODE TITLE PRICE CASE WASHINGTON ____ 9781680513448 Alpine Lakes East Stuart Range, WA No. 208SX $18.00 ____ 9781680514537 Old Scab Mountain, WA No. 272 $8.00 ____ ____ 9781680513455 Alpine Lakes West Stevens Pass, WA No. -
Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities
Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities Alaska Aialik Bay Alaska Highway Alcan Highway Anchorage Arctic Auk Lake Cape Prince of Wales Castle Rock Chilkoot Pass Columbia Glacier Cook Inlet Copper River Cordova Curry Dawson Denali Denali National Park Eagle Fairbanks Five Finger Rapids Gastineau Channel Glacier Bay Glenn Highway Haines Harding Gateway Homer Hoonah Hurricane Gulch Inland Passage Inside Passage Isabel Pass Juneau Katmai National Monument Kenai Kenai Lake Kenai Peninsula Kenai River Kechikan Ketchikan Creek Kodiak Kodiak Island Kotzebue Lake Atlin Lake Bennett Latouche Lynn Canal Matanuska Valley McKinley Park Mendenhall Glacier Miles Canyon Montgomery Mount Blackburn Mount Dewey Mount McKinley Mount McKinley Park Mount O’Neal Mount Sanford Muir Glacier Nome North Slope Noyes Island Nushagak Opelika Palmer Petersburg Pribilof Island Resurrection Bay Richardson Highway Rocy Point St. Michael Sawtooth Mountain Sentinal Island Seward Sitka Sitka National Park Skagway Southeastern Alaska Stikine Rier Sulzer Summit Swift Current Taku Glacier Taku Inlet Taku Lodge Tanana Tanana River Tok Tunnel Mountain Valdez White Pass Whitehorse Wrangell Wrangell Narrow Yukon Yukon River General Views—no specific location Alabama Albany Albertville Alexander City Andalusia Anniston Ashford Athens Attalla Auburn Batesville Bessemer Birmingham Blue Lake Blue Springs Boaz Bobler’s Creek Boyles Brewton Bridgeport Camden Camp Hill Camp Rucker Carbon Hill Castleberry Centerville Centre Chapman Chattahoochee Valley Cheaha State Park Choctaw County -
Notes from the Desk of the Drc's Executive Director
Summer 2011 VOLUME 5 NUMBER 2 NEWSLETTER OF THE DESCHUTES RIVER CONSERVANCY The mission of the DRC: To restore streamflow and improve water quality in the Deschutes Basin. MARISA CHAPPELL HOSSICK The DRC is beginning to successfully navigate the serpentine nature of water to restore flows to the lower Crooked River while helping North Unit irrigators maintain a viable agricultural economy on the plateaus above. NOTES FROM THE DESK OF THE DRC’S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, TOD HEISLER Making a Difference by Working Together sults on Whychus Creek, Lake Creek and districts. The net result will be 50 cfs Here at the Deschutes River Conservancy the Crooked River. In four short years of restored streamflows in the Crooked (DRC) we are living proof that when The Deschutes Collaborative imple- River, $300,000 pumping cost savings people of differing views are brought to mented nearly $20 million dollars of for NUID, improved irrigation infra- a table where the expectation is coopera- integrated projects where they are needed structure, and a more reliable supply tion and forging consensus, significant most for salmonid reintroduction. The of water for commercial farmers. This results achieved include 15 cubic feet per long-lasting results can be achieved in model project would not be possible second (cfs) of streamflow restored, six relatively short timeframes. We know without the cooperation of many part- fish passage barriers eliminated, three this because we are coming off another ners including state and federal agen- fantastic year of results on Whychus miles of stream protected from develop- cies, several irrigation districts, Portland Creek and have laid the groundwork for ment, and five miles of habitat restored. -
Trask River CONTEXTUAL ANALYSIS
Trask River CONTEXTUAL ANALYSIS CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................................................14 Trask Landscape Setting ..............................................................................................15 Trask Physical Setting ..................................................................................................16 Geology......................................................................................................................... 17 Geomorphology............................................................................................................... 19 Stream Channel Morphology............................................................................................... 21 Soils .............................................................................................................................. 24 Hydrology and Water Quality ............................................................................................ 26 Climate..........................................................................................................................................26 Daily Flows for Trask and Rock Creeks .................................................................................................26 Peak flows ......................................................................................................................................26 Water Quality: Temperature ................................................................................................................27 -
DOGAMI Open-File Report O-76-05, Preliminary Report on The
PRELIMINARY REPORT ON THE RECONNAISSANCE GEOLOGY OF THE UPPER CLACKAMAS AND NORTH SANTIAM RIVERS AREA, CASCADE RANGE, OREGON by Paul E. Hammond Geologist Portland, Oregon July 1976 DRAFT COpy TABLE OF CONTENT S Summary of Main Geologic Findings . i" ~o~ s~, t- ,'j > <:},. Preliminary Evaluation of Geothermal Resource~ti~ ~ Introdul:tion Objectlves Accessibility Method of Mapping Rock Nomenclature Rock Units Introduction Western Cascade Group Beds at Detroit (Td) Breitenbush Tuff (Tbt) Nohorn Formation (Tnh) Bull Creek Beds (Tbc) Outerson Formation (To) Cub Point Formation (Tcp) Gordan Peak Formation (Tgp) Columbia River Basalt (Ter) Rhododendron Formation (Tr) Cheat Creek Beds (Tee) Scar Mountain Beds (sm) Miscellaneous Lava Flows: Vitrophyric Basalt of Lost Creek (TIc) Vitrophyric Andesite of Coopers and Boulder Ridges (Tcbr) Intrusive Rocks Trout Creek Vitrophyre (Titc) Basalt Dikes and Plugs (Tib) Hornblende Andesite (Tiha) Pyroxene Andesite (Tipa) Pyroxene Diorite (Tlpd) Possible Ouaternary Intrusions (Ql) High Cascade Group Older High Cascade Volcanic Rocks (OTb) Younger High Cascade Volcanic Rocks (Qb) Mount Jefferson Volcanic Deposits (OJ) Surficial Depo.its Glacial Deposits (f(jt, Qjo; Qst I Qso) Landslides (Qls) Talus (Qts) Alluvium (Qal) Structure Introduction Folds Faults Some General Observations High Cascade Graben or Volcano-Tectonic Depression Arching of the Cascade Range References - 1 - SUMMARY OF MAIN GEOLOGIC FINDINGS The upper Clackamas and North Santiam River area, covering about 635 square miles (1645 sq. km.) lies in the northwestern part of the Cascade Range, just west of Mount Jefferson. The area is underlain by over 20,000 feet (6100 m.) of volcanic strata of the probable upper part of the western Cascade Volcanic Group. -
Trask River Watershed Analysis
Trask River Watershed Analysis TRASK RIVER WATERSHED ANALYSIS FINAL REPORT AUGUST 2003 A Report by E&S Environmental Chemistry, Inc. P.O. Box 609 Corvallis, OR 97339 Kai U. Snyder Timothy J. Sullivan Deian L. Moore Richard B. Raymond Erin H. Gilbert Submitted to Oregon Department of Forestry and U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Land Management John Hawksworth, Project Manager Trask River Watershed Analysis ii Table of Contents LIST OF FIGURES ...................................................................................................................... x LIST OF TABLES......................................................................................................................xii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .........................................................................................................xiv CHAPTER 1. CHARACTERIZATION...................................................................................1-1 1.1 Physical ........................................................................................................1-1 1.1.1 Size and Setting ..........................................................................................1-1 1.1.2 Topography.................................................................................................1-1 1.1.3 Ecoregions..................................................................................................1-3 1.1.4 Geology and Geomorphology.....................................................................1-3 1.1.5 Soils ........................................................................................................1-5 -
A Portion of South-Central Oregon
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEORGE OTIS SMITH, DIRECTOR WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 220 GEOLOGY AND WATER RESOURCES OF A PORTION OF SOUTH-CENTRAL OREGON BY GERALD A. WARING WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT FEINTING OFFICE 1908 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEORGE OTIS SMITH, DIKEOTOK WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 22O GEOLOGY AND WATER RESOURCES OF A PORTION OF SOUTH-CENTRAL OREGON BY GERALD A. WARING WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1908 CONTENTS. Vage. Introduction.............................................................. 7 Objects of reconnaissance.............................................. 7 Area examined........................................................ 7 Acknowledgements..................................................... 8 Previous study......................................................... 8 Geography................................................................. 9 General features....................................................... 9 Topography............................................................. 9 Mountains........................................................ 9 Scarps.............................................................. 9 Minor features..................................................... 10 Lakes.................................................................. 11 Character of the lakes................................................ 12 Alkalinity........................................................ 12 . Climate............................................................... -
Lower South Yamhill-Deer Creek Watershed Assessment
Yamhill Basin Council September 20, 2000 Lower South Yamhill-Deer Creek Watershed Assessment - 1 - Funding for the Lower S. Yamhill-Deer Creek Watershed Assessment was provided by the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board (OWEB) and Resource Assistance for Rural Environments (RARE) Lower S. Yamhill-Deer Creek Watershed Project Manager: Denise Hoffert-Hay, Author Contributors: Dave Hanson, local resident and writer, assisted with historic vegetation and conditions. Liz Gifford, Linfield College intern, assisted with Channel Habitat Types. Robert Grover, Linfield College intern, assisted with fish research. Editor: Melissa Leoni Acknowledgements Many people gave their time and talents to assist in the completion of this document. Where actual written material was used, it is noted in the document. Many people assisted me with learning the computer or analytical techniques needed to complete different sections of the assessment. Others gave me stories of this place they call home. Any errors or omissions are not intentional and are my own. (In no particular order) Robert Grover, Linfield College Graduate Liz Gifford, Linfield College Graduate Gary Galovich, Fish Biologist, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. Al White, Oregon Watersheds. Ryan Dalton, GIS Coordinator, Bureau of Land Management Willamette/North Coast Providence Bill Gille, Public Works Department, Yamhill County Dave Carter, Roadmaster, Yamhill County Robert Bower, former Watershed Assessment Project Manager, Yamhill Basin Council Dave Hanson, local watershed resident Glen -
Comprehensive Plan
Deschutes County Transportation System Plan 2010 - 2030 Adopted by Ordinance 2012-005 August 6, 2012 By The Deschutes County Board of Commissioners EXHIBIT C ORDINANCE 2012-005 Page 1 of 268 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary ...................................................................................................... 10 Chapter One Introduction ...................................................................................................................................30 1.1 Geographic Setting .......................................................................................................30 1.2 Transportation Planning ..............................................................................................31 Goal 12 .....................................................................................................................31 Transportation Planning Rule (TPR) ..................................................................31 TPR Requirements for Deschutes County ......................................................33 1.3 Major Changes Since the Adoption of the 1998 Plan ...........................................35 Regional Growth and Destination Resorts ......................................................35 Urban Growth and County Coordination .......................................................36 Public Transportation ...........................................................................................36 Financial Impacts ....................................................................................................37 -
Some Little-Known Scenic Pleasure Places in the Cascade Range in Oregon by IRA A
.. VOLUME 2 NUMBER 1 '/ MAY, 1916 THE MINERAL RESOURCES OF ORE·GON Published M~nthly By The Oregon Bureau of Mines and Geology See Capitalize Oregon I Oregon First Scenery Waterfall in Cascade Range Photo by Weister Some Little-Known Scenic Pleasure Places in the Cascade Range in Oregon By IRA A. WILLIAMS 114 Pages ,66 Illustrations Entered as second cl""s matter at Corvallis, Ore. on Feb. 10, 1914, according to the Act of Aug. 24, 1912. OREGON BUREAU OF MINES AND GEOLOGY COMMISSION OniCE ON THE CoMMISSION AND EXHIBIT OREGON BUILDING, PORTLAND, OREGON OniCE o• THE DIRECTOR CORVALLIS, OREGOl-1 JAHES WITHYCOHBE, Governor HENRY M. PARKS, Director COMMISSION ABTHUR M. SwARTLEY, Mining Engineer H. N. LAWRIE, Portland IRA A. WILLIAMS, Ceramist W. C. FELLOWS, Sumpter 1. F .• REnnr, Medford 1. L. Woon, Albany R. M. BETTS, CO\"nucopia P. L. CAMPBELL, Eugene W. 1. KERR, Corvallis Volume 2 Number 1 May Issue of the MINERAL RESOURCES OF OREGON Published by ,.. The Oregon Bureau of Mines and Geology I • CONTAINING Some Little-Known Scenic Pleasure Places in the 1 Cascade Range in Oregon By IRA A. WILLIAMS l . 114 Pages 66 Illustrations 1916 ANNOUNCEMENT With this issue we present the first number of Volume.2 of The Mineral Resources of Ore gon. This is the first issue since December, 1914, and the first to be completed for publica tion giving results of field work during the past season. It is a preliminary paper involving the general geology of the Cascade Range and is to be followed by detailed reports upon the various other economic resources of the Range.