PL 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census)
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ADIRONDACK FORTY-SIXERS - Questionnaire & List of Mountains
ADIRONDACK FORTY-SIXERS - Questionnaire & List of Mountains Please answer ALL questions on front page, fill in the List of Mountains on back, include $8 initial dues* payable to ADIRONDACK 46ERS and return to: Adirondack Forty-Sixers, The Office of the Historian, P.O. Box 46, Fort Edward, NY 12828 (*This fee is waived for one member at each aspiring 46ers address) Use this form only and print using black ballpoint/ink - no pencil. Incomplete forms will be returned to climber. NAME _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ As you wish it to appear on your Certificate of Accomplishment ADDRESS ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CITY ____________________________________ STATE ______________________ ZIP ________________________________________ E-mail Address ___________________________________________________________ Phone Number (_______) ________-____________ Your Age ______________ Male: _________ Female: ____________ Occupation: _________________________________________________ First 4,000-ft. Adirondack Peak climbed by you: __________________________________ Date _____________________________________ 46th / last 4,000-ft. Adirondack Peak climbed by you: _______________________________________________________________________ Date: _______________________ Exact arrival time on summit _____________________________________________________________ 100 (or less) word autobiography: (Please use this -
Directions*** Follow Directions Closely
__________________________________________________________________________________________ Office Use Only- Do Not Write Above Line ADIRONDACK FORTY-SIXERS - Questionnaire & List of Mountains ***Directions*** Follow Directions Closely. Incorrectly completed forms will be returned to the climber. 1) Use these official forms ONLY 2) DO NOT write on back of forms 3) Print Clearly 4) Use BLACK INK ONLY 5) Completed forms should be 2-pages in length when printed. Mail Completed Forms to: Adirondack Forty-Sixers, Office of the Historian, P.O. Box 46, Fort Edward, NY 12828. Each Climber Should Mail $10 Initial Dues to the Treasurer: Adirondack Forty-Sixers, Membership Coordinator, P.O. Box 4383, Queensbury, NY 12804 NAME: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ As you wish it to appear on your Certificate of Accomplishment ADDRESS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CITY: ____________________________________ STATE / PROVINCE: __________ ZIP: _____________ COUNTRY: _________________ (Abbreviation) (If other than USA) E-mail Address: ___________________________________________________________ Phone Number (_______) ________-____________ Your Age: ______________ Male: _________ Female: ____________ Occupation: _________________________________________________ First 4,000-ft. Adirondack Peak climbed by you: __________________________________ Date: _____________________________________ (Month/Day/Year) th -
THE ADIRONDACK FORTY-SIXERS POK-O-Maccready BRANCH
THE ADIRONDACK FORTY-SIXERS POK-O-MacCREADY BRANCH 46R # NAME MOUNTAIN DATE 1 101 Duane H. Nash III Allen August 29, 1955 2 119 Peter Welles Sawteeth June 21, 1957 3 120 Tim Welles Sawteeth June 21, 1957 4 179 Gillette Welles, Jr. Nye August 29, 1959 5 219 Charles L. Brayton Couchsachraga May 27, 1962 6 223 Ole Borchsenius Panther July 18, 1962 7 224w Philip B. Corell Panther July 18, 1962 8 225 Mark Gibson Panther July 18, 1962 9 226 Gary Kukura Panther July 18, 1962 10 230 Alfred W. Latham Whiteface August 13, 1962 11 233 James G. Bailey Emmons August 25, 1962 12 251 Charles Gibson, Jr. Couchsachraga July 23, 1963 13 260 O'Donnell Boyce Couchsachraga August 20, 1963 14 261 Jan Farfalla Colden August 22, 1963 15 267 Jack Swan Big Slide Sept. 1, 1963 16 279 Russell Van Korb Couchsachraga June 13, 1964 17 360 Culver S. Tefft Redfield August 18, 1966 18 422 Christopher A. Stokes Redfield August 13, 1967 19 438 Jeffrey Storer Couchsachraga August 30, 1967 20 468 Charlotte Fletcher Nye July 19, 1968 21 --- John Konowitz Emmons August 12, 1968 22 487s Ronald T. Konowitz Emmons August 12, 1968 23 488 Gary Kwok Emmons August 12, 1968 24 489 Jeffrey Reel Emmons August 12, 1968 25 490 Jeffrey W. Scott Emmons August 12, 1968 26 491 Wally Young Emmons August 12, 1968 27 533 Douglas Close Rocky Peak July 16, 1969 28 543 Gregory Kucera Saddleback August 9, 1969 29 544 James Raporte Emmons August 14, 1969 30 561 Barbara P. -
Massachusetts Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism, 10 Park Plaza, Suite 4510, Boston, MA 02116
dventure Guide to the Champlain & Hudson River Valleys Robert & Patricia Foulke HUNTER PUBLISHING, INC. 130 Campus Drive Edison, NJ 08818-7816 % 732-225-1900 / 800-255-0343 / fax 732-417-1744 E-mail [email protected] IN CANADA: Ulysses Travel Publications 4176 Saint-Denis, Montréal, Québec Canada H2W 2M5 % 514-843-9882 ext. 2232 / fax 514-843-9448 IN THE UNITED KINGDOM: Windsor Books International The Boundary, Wheatley Road, Garsington Oxford, OX44 9EJ England % 01865-361122 / fax 01865-361133 ISBN 1-58843-345-5 © 2003 Patricia and Robert Foulke This and other Hunter travel guides are also available as e-books in a variety of digital formats through our online partners, including Amazon.com, netLibrary.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and eBooks.com. For complete information about the hundreds of other travel guides offered by Hunter Publishing, visit us at: www.hunterpublishing.com All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a re- trieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechani- cal, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. Brief extracts to be included in reviews or articles are permitted. This guide focuses on recreational activities. As all such activities contain ele- ments of risk, the publisher, author, affiliated individuals and companies disclaim any responsibility for any injury, harm, or illness that may occur to anyone through, or by use of, the information in this book. Every effort was made to in- sure the accuracy of information in this book, but the publisher and author do not assume, and hereby disclaim, any liability for loss or damage caused by errors, omissions, misleading information or potential travel problems caused by this guide, even if such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident or any other cause. -
FOR JUST $4.95, the BASE APP INCLUDES ALL the HIKING CENTRAL and HIKING HIGH PEAKS REGION TRAILS BELOW, for a Total of 64 Trails – All Without Reception
Trails and Waterways within our Adirondack Trails phone app – no reception needed once downloaded. Visit http://adktrailmap.com/ for latest information, app store links and complete app descriptions and screenshots. Apps available for iPhones and Android phones. You can preview all these trails and waterways in the interactive map at http://adktrailmap.com/ FOR JUST $4.95, THE BASE APP INCLUDES ALL THE HIKING CENTRAL AND HIKING HIGH PEAKS REGION TRAILS BELOW, for a total of 64 trails – all without reception. Hiking Central Adirondack Region Bald Mountain John Mack Pond Rocky Mountain Beaver Lake Limekiln Nature Trail Sargent Ponds Black Bear Mountain Lost Ponds Sawyer Mountain Blue Mountain Middle Settlement Lake Seventh Lake Trail Bug Lake Mitchell Ponds Snowy Mountain Buttermilk Falls Moss Lake South Branch Trail Cascade Lake Nicks Lake Loop Sucker Brook Bay Cascade and Stephens Ponds Norridgewock Trail Tirrell Pond Castle Rock Northville-Placid Trail North Uncas Black Bear Mountain Chimney Mountain Northville-Placid Trail South Vista Trail Fern Mt Perimeter Trail Owls Head West Mountain Frederica Mountain Pigeon Lake Wilderness Loop West, Safford & Goose Ponds Great Camp Sagamore Lake Puffer Pond Trail Hiking High Peaks Region Algonquin Peak Mt. Van Hoevenberg from south Ampersand Mountain Haystack Mountain Raquette Falls Avalanche Lake Hurricane Mountain Rocky Falls Bald Peak Blueberry Cobbles John Brown Farm Round Mountain Loop Baxter Mountain McKenzie Mountain Scarface Mountain Blueberry Mountain Mount Baker Snow Mountain Brewster -
Bedrock Geology of the High Peaks Region, Marcy Massif, Adirondacks
1 BEDROCK GEOLOGY of the HI G H PEAKS REGION, MARCY MASSIF, ADIRONDA CKS, N.Y. Howard w. Jaffe Elizabeth e. Jaffe pa u I W 0 1111 a+ • L e o M. Ha I I LOJ Bo Jc 8 6 7 lAKe PLAc10 N.y. CONTRIBUTION NO. 46 DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY& GEOGRAPHY (I NI VE RSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST MASSACHUSETTS ' N ... 7"'1';;···, ' ~.::':.'I. -~:,: .. Plate 1. Mt. Marcy, 5344'(1629m), from the summit of Skylight Mt., 4926'(1502m), core of Marcy anorthosite massif, Mt. Marcy quadrangle. 3 Dedicated to Willie and Bud friends, colleagues, and Adirondack field geologists A. Williams Postel A.F. Buddington (1909 - 1966) (1890 - 1981) 15' quadrangles mapped in the Adirondacks Dannemora (1951) Antwerp (1934) Churubusco (1952) Hammond (1934) Lyon Mt. (1952) Lowville (1934) Clinton Co. Santa Clara (1937) Magnetite District (1952) Willsboro (1941) Mooers (1954) Big Moose (1950) Moira (1955) Port Leyden (1951) Chateaugay (1956) Saranac Lake (1953) Loon Lake (1956) St. Lawrence Co. Malone (1956) Magnetite District (1962) Nicholville (1959) ~ Plate 2. Mcintyre Range in the anorthosite core of the Marcy Massif, showing Algonquin Peak, 5114'(1559m), Boundary Peak, 4850'(1479m), Iroquois Peak, 4850'(1479m), and Mt. Marshall, 4360'(1329m). Mt. Marcy and Santanoni quadrangles. .-!:·: •, , .~ i ', "~.~ :;.·~~-:·-.·,. fa~ --~ff ..-" '.> .... , ••• ". -.: "'°-!~~'r,.':;1·~ •• :: v ·,. ~ ••• : • ·- • ' • ,:>:;;.t.J/!P,i"' 1~.... , ·:~~:;~>~~:.~)·;~·:-~ . -·~i-:~ :· ·'i·--·,. -~t~~- "'.'~~·ii»::-:~"';...,:.. ·r •:'+:~'.~' ''~(~~.~~~/· . ·;r·.:; ..~ .. i~.._.. ~.•:· Plate 3. View NE from summit of Skylight Mt. across prominent cone of Haystack Mt., 4960'(1512m), to Giant Mt.(center horizon), 462 7' (141lm) ; from left margin to center are: Basin Mt., 4827' (1472m), Gothics, 4376'(1444m), and Wolfj aw Mts. -
HEALTHY HAPPY ATTITUDES Sarah's News
HEALTHY HAPPY ATTITUDES Harrietstown Housing Authority Volume 18 Issue 8 www.harrietstownha.org August 2018 Sarah’s News The summer heat is not slowing my work. I’m busier than ever. Not all of you know that the Housing Authority is affiliated with a small non-profit organization, the Adirondack Housing Development Corporation (AHDC). Since 2012, AHDC has managed the Helen Hill Apartments on the corner of Front and Helen streets in Saranac Lake. AHDC is paid for its manage- ment of the apartments and, because AHDC contracts with the Housing Authority for the staff to do this work, the Housing Authority also is paid. This revenue enables the Housing Authority to operate closer to its budg- et. AHDC has been working for more than two years to ready itself to acquire the Helen Hill Apartments and obtain funding to make needed upgrades. In May, New York State Homes and Community Renewal awarded AHDC an almost $700,000 loan/award to make many of the needed improve- ments. AHDC and the owner have a signed purchase and sale agreement conditioned on the satisfaction of certain terms – terms that are being addressed over time. If all progresses as hoped, AHDC will own the Helen Hill Apartments this fall and commence upgrades immediately. AHDC will continue to contract with the Housing Authority for staff; and, AHDC will continue to pay the Housing Authority for staff’s work. AHDC’s mission, in part, is to provide decent, affordable housing and re- lated community services and facilities designed to meet the needs and requirements of low income families and individuals. -
High Peaks Wilderness Complex Draft UMP Amendment
HIGH PEAKS WILDERNESS COMPLEX Draft Amendment to the 1999 High Peaks Wilderness Complex Unit Management Plan Draft River Area Management Plan for the Opalescent River NYS DEC, REGION 5, DIVISION OF LANDS AND FORESTS PO Box 296, Ray Brook, NY 12977 [email protected] www.dec.ny.gov May 2018 This page intentionally left blank Contents I. Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1 A. Purpose of the Amendment ..................................................................................... 1 B. Planning Area Overview .......................................................................................... 4 C. Public Participation and Planning Process .............................................................. 7 D. General Guidelines and Objectives for Management of the Unit ............................ 8 II. Natural Resources ................................................................................................... 11 A. Soils ...................................................................................................................... 11 B. Topography ........................................................................................................... 11 C. Water Resources .................................................................................................. 12 D. Vegetation ............................................................................................................. 19 E. Wildlife .................................................................................................................. -
May 2016 Trailmarker.Indd
,6&+ 482 $3 2 7( ,5 5 $ % ' TRAILMARK ER 8 ,5 / 2 & 1 ' $,1 Adirondack Mountain Club Iroquois Chapter Est 1972 $&. 817 02 May 2016 Mt. Marcy, from Gray Peak Photo credit, Ed Kobos Our annual open house had a slow but steady stream The host chapter would need to secure lodging accommo- of members and non-members stopping by to visit and/or dations, develop an outing schedule, plan a dinner as well check out the various displays. I would like to recognize the as an informal get together for arriving guests. Should any- following presenters who had displays: Greg Smith, Carl An- one have an expertise with such endeavors and would like to derson, Norm Landis, Dave and Carol White, Bill and Mary show case your managing skills, please let me know ASAP Coffin, Carol Reese, Jay O’Hern, and Stephanie Graudons, in order to get the ball rolling. who is the young member coordinator for the ADK orga- As most of you are aware, the ADK has three “fun- nization. Thank you all. I also would like to acknowledge filled” weekends that need labor volunteers: JBL, Heart and thank Carol White and Allison Gaffney who contacted Lake and National Trails day, whose location will be at newspapers for advertisement, as well as Wendy and Brian Heart Lake. In exchange for a day of labor, generally a Sat- Sanders who provided the refreshments. urday, you get to camp free, or in the case at JBL, stay in It has been suggested that for the next year open house the lodge. -
High Peaks Wilderness Complex Unit Management Plan
Department of Environmental Conservation Office of Natural Resources - Region 5 High Peaks Wilderness Complex Unit Management Plan Wilderness Management for the High Peaks of the Adirondack Park March 1999 New York State Department of Environmental Conservation George E. Pataki, Governor John P. Cahill, Commissioner HIGH PEAKS UNIT MANAGEMENT PLAN FINAL DRAFT TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE ................................................. 1 NEED FOR A PLAN .......................................... 3 MANAGEMENT GOALS ....................................... 4 SECTION I INTRODUCTION TO THE HIGH PEAKS WILDERNESS COMPLEX AREA OVERVIEW ...................................... 7 UNIT DESCRIPTIONS ................................... 7 Ampersand Primitive Area .............................. 7 Johns Brook Primitive Corridor .......................... 8 High Peaks Wilderness ................................ 8 Adirondack Canoe Route ............................... 8 BOUNDARY .......................................... 8 PRIMARY ACCESS ...................................... 9 SECTION II BIOPHYSICAL RESOURCES GEOLOGY ............................................10 SOILS ...............................................11 TERRAIN .............................................13 WATER ..............................................13 WETLANDS ...........................................16 CLIMATE ............................................16 AIR QUALITY .........................................17 OPEN SPACE ..........................................17 VEGETATION -
DOCUMENT RESUME Elevations and Distances in the United
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 241 333 SE 044 120 TITLE Elevations and Distances in the United States. INSTITUTION Geological Survey (Dept. of Interior), Reston, Va. PUB DATE 80 NOTE 13p.; Photographs may not reproduce well. PUB TYPE Reference Materials - Geographic Materials (133) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC01 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Charts; *Distance; Earth Science; *Geographic Location; Geography; *Height; Instructional Materials; Physical Divisions (Geographic); *Physical Geography; *Proximity; Secondary Education; Tables (Data); Topography; Urban Areas IDENTIFIERS PF Project; Rocky Mountains; *United States ABSTRACT One of a series of general interest publications on science topics, the booklet proviees those interested in elevations and distances with a nontechnical introduction to the subject. The entire document consists of statistical charts depicting the nation's 50 largest cities, extreme and mean elevations, elevations of named summits over 14,000 feet above sea level, elevations of selected summits east of the Rocky Mountains, distances from extreme points to geographic centers, and lengths of United States boundaries. The elevations of features and distances between pbints in the United States were determined from surveys and topographic maps of the U.S. Geological Survey. (LH) *********************************************************************** Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document. *********************************************************************** . r Mee Notion's principal conservation agency, the Department AIthe *hider hoe responsibility for most of our nationally owned -MOM lends sad n,.twal ammo. This includes fostering the Elevations 'MN* Use of our land and water resources, protecting our fish and ilitillie,:ermervinj the emoironmentsi and cultural values of our and Distances Malone parks sad.historlcM places, and providing for the enjoy- s _meat of life tha.: oh outdoor recrecion. -
Adirondack Chronology
An Adirondack Chronology by The Adirondack Research Library of the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks Chronology Management Team Gary Chilson Professor of Environmental Studies Editor, The Adirondack Journal of Environmental Studies Paul Smith’s College of Arts and Sciences PO Box 265 Paul Smiths, NY 12970-0265 [email protected] Carl George Professor of Biology, Emeritus Department of Biology Union College Schenectady, NY 12308 [email protected] Richard Tucker Adirondack Research Library 897 St. David’s Lane Niskayuna, NY 12309 [email protected] Last revised and enlarged – 20 January (No. 43) www.protectadks.org Adirondack Research Library The Adirondack Chronology is a useful resource for researchers and all others interested in the Adirondacks. It is made available by the Adirondack Research Library (ARL) of the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks. It is hoped that it may serve as a 'starter set' of basic information leading to more in-depth research. Can the ARL further serve your research needs? To find out, visit our web page, or even better, visit the ARL at the Center for the Forest Preserve, 897 St. David's Lane, Niskayuna, N.Y., 12309. The ARL houses one of the finest collections available of books and periodicals, manuscripts, maps, photographs, and private papers dealing with the Adirondacks. Its volunteers will gladly assist you in finding answers to your questions and locating materials and contacts for your research projects. Introduction Is a chronology of the Adirondacks really possible?