North Cascades National Park

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

North Cascades National Park S To Hope, B.C. il Chilliwack ve 40mi 64km r- Lake S Sk 01 5 Kilometers k ag B ag i ritis it t h Co SKAGIT VALLEY R 01 5 Miles lum o bia a Manning Park W R d S as i hing PROVINCIAL PARK ve Headquarters, Lodge, il to r North e n MANNING and Visitor Center s ia PROVINCIAL PARK 3 MOUNT BAKER WILDERNESS C re Ross Lake e 4-wheel-drive Twin Lakes k conditions east of this point Silver Mount Spickard Lake l i S Hozomeen a B 8980ft il 542 Copper Mountain r ve T e 2737m r To Glacier Goat Mountain 7142ft ar (Forest Service and 6890ft 2177m k C CAN Noo c Mount Redoubt re H AD ks 2100m a C e oz A National Park Service a 8957ft k o U c w r r m N l i e cie Hozomeen Mountain I k i l R la T information) a l 2730m edoubt G E r i e e D T 8068ft S k e T 4mi 6km r h AT n E Silver Fir e C Little Jackass 2459m S R e iv iv g R Mountain T e id r I a r R n 4386ft d P i k e 1337m l c i rr a a y Hozomeen Castle Peak er n pp iw 8307ft o ll R Lake i e C W N C h d re 2532m Mount Winthrop O C o ek i u ll 7851ft O C b Jack o Ridley Lake Mount Herman Mount K ree t w 2393m S il k Point L 6286ft Baker A ra ak 1916m C T C e Trail Ski Area K n r R k Joker Mountain ga e Willow e e O e n k Trail 7602ft R r e Galena Chain n B ve Lake Bagley Hannegan a r I H ittle Bea S 2317m r L Castle Pass D B u C Lakes Pass E Lakes 4741ft G S r s E A 5086ft u h S 1445m s Heather Meadows 1544m Y Austin Pass h C 5218ft Visitor Center S R r Desolation Peak H e 1588m ek Skagit Peak Price I ek re U D C Tr ver C 6102ft K G a Whatcom Pass a 6663ft le S Lake r il Be st F A E e 1860m 2031m a o Artist N e C r k A k k k Cree R ttle ee n Point M Li Cr Hopkins tee Mount Shuksan Beaver Pass Pass an 3619ft De il uw Coleman Pinnacle 9131ft NOOKSACK solation Tra h 1103m l c 2783m CIRQUE i u 6414ft C E a h Whatcom Peak r r a ic C 1955m Lake y s t T s t 7575ft rc Cat t N A k k Ann a oo e Island k e l ks 2309m e e e G ack Ch Cr re r la Gla allen B htning C C Sulfide c cie ger Glacier ig e L Lig T ie r m g hree Glacier r a A n Fools MOUNT BAKER N tni B K igh NORTH CASCADES e L o a Mount Prophet E WILDERNESS v N C S ck Mount Baker Luna Peak e i Ro C Mount Challenger r 7579ft n k re ker R n ul ek 10781ft S Ba ive P 8248ft 8284ft 2310m a l w r I m Woody Pass 3286m C 2525m T Spratt Mountain i 2512m r o f a Cree n t K k 7257ft C i Dr l y E 2212m C r n T o ree e a B ym k e s i k Tenmile k uk g S C Sh k e Island r e l e e i Cr Mount Fury e C k MOUNT BAKER 8291ft M k r R e PASAYTEN WILDERNESS e 2527m e e r e A NATIONAL Creek n il i k B a N C r n Shuksan T e r G an a y il RECREATION Lake e ill v t a Dry Creek E e ir r iv M r T c h Pass De R M C ROSS LAKE vils T k 7362ft AREA r r D e n o e e m 2244m k k a e a NATIONAL PARK B Holman Pass (Forest Service) B Mount Blum D L k Elephant Butte e Devils Dome E NATIONAL t v o e 7680ft Mount Terror s ils 6982ft o re G 7379ft a p C D Park Creek B 2341m IRES 8151ft E C 2128m I P 2249m r R C lu S ee m NT 2484m C k Deception Shannon Creek re E y re n C a e N e RECREATION e t I ES McMillan Spire Azure Lake Pass k R M k y K Panorama Point S Baker Lake e C 8000ft Devils Pass a Lak s K a Resort 2439m S C ail te AREA P U r B Boulder r Lake T ta Spencer’s B ke t a N Pinnacle Peak t Creek l Island e k r o 6805ft Sourdough r i 7815ft e o s Mount Despair 2075m Lake Nohokomeen Jack Mountain y k F 2382m C Roland 9065ft a 7293ft Go Glacier o r Sourdough Mountain Point 2763m Shadow of B 2223m de e Berdeen ll e 6106ft t Sentinels k s C Lake S 1861m e t Ross Lake Resort Maple Grove r Davis Peak Horseshoe e Mtn W e t Tr 7051ft a ail Boat taxi Cove e NORTH UNIT t h HELLS ek k tle g Boat Cougar re G 2149m T u BASIN C ra o 5985ft o i fuel Island Green r l rd 1824m Skagit River g u k Lake e o Hidden Hand e Mount Triumph Hazardous Area S e r C Ross Dam Pass Komo Kulshan 7271ft Be wary of extreme, Tra C Jerry p r Gorge Creek R E t il u M o 2216m unpredictable fluctua- a Glacier o L b k o n B Falls Diablo abl a il y c yo Kulshan i s a tions in water levels. D k a a L an r t c e T J C o C D Crater Peak n Thornton ia e r b B e lo a 8127ft m Lakes A n e La o Upper Baker ke rm k 2477m k D Ross r s Dam Bacon Peak Thornton Gorge Diablo Happy Creek vil S Gorge Lake T e e Dam ra t D la 7067ft Lakes Trail Dam Lake Forest Walk i a t NOISY- Pyramid Lake Overlook l r e 2154m Damnation Peak Trail Diablo C y Goodell a 5643ft Lake w Group h C 1720m g Overlook Ru B i r Campground Ruby Creek by H e Creek o OKANOGAN u C DIOBSUD e NEWHALEM M e Pyramid Peak Colonial Creek Ruby Peak l r n k d k e e il a o 7182ft 7408ft l e L Newhalem Creek r r n 2189m 2258m k e k n nder il G C a a Thu ra Harts Pass T T M r B WILDERNESS Goodell r h C e C h k a l e C i S r e eek Creek u e n r Colonial r K e a i k Paul Bunyan’s Stump n C e r Thornton t A D North T e Glacier d r S Y k T 7480ft h e t i Lakes e i o u th l Cascades 2280m r l R n n w Mount Ballard b Road Colonial Peak I Diobsud d a e D s 8301ft Visitor Center 7776ft e P ll G ic u Buttes r E 2530m en Meadows d 5892ft 2370m C Beebe Mountain c r S 1796m Neve e 7415ft Majestic Mountain e Fourth of July ek k Glacier C 7451ft r Pass 2260m a The Portage e 2271m e L C C 3501ft E r k C as e k t NATIONAL MOUNT BAKER- ek r 1067m r C l e Snowfield Peak e e ree na e e P e k o T r i k 8346ft k T a t r o r n To Sedro-Woolley C a 2544m a th N u i l t 23mi 37km T e N E r E m o C B e O l r r Baker Dam a r t e N ste lli Creek h e ek E h A Cre c k w M C CONCRETE an R R e I Gabriel Peak a m o D Cr N e t ck c s Ja k G 7723ft s ic y E c f r 2354m i Me a c thow River To Mazama e d a v 12mi 19km i Cr e P e s R ek Red Mountain H Concre t te Sauk Mountain SNOQUALMIE i Lookout Mountain Monogram 7657ft Mesahchie Pass ig FOREST 5416ft g 5592ft 2334m h a Lake Trail 6739ft w 1688m Wilderness Information Center k 1743m it Monogram NORTH CASCADES 2055m a S Backcountry permits ag S y a Sk Lake u R k ( o C c ley a Val r MARBLEMOUNT d l e F Klawatti is o 20 e Marble h C McAllister Glacier er s k ree Fi k she e To Winthrop Glacier r C C R Klawatti Peak re re il d (Forest Service Rockport scade ek e Mesahchie Peak ra Tower i Ca T k T m information) v Eldorado Peak 8484ft ra s Mountain I i 8796ft s 21mi 34km e State Park l Ea n s a i 8672ft 2586m y P d s r Marble Creek 2681m G 2703m p - Methow Pass i r N r a a n t Easy Pass o eek Rockport i i r o t C 6562ft e v p NATIONAL Eldorado n wam G NATIONAL PARK t S B R Mount Arriva 2000m o Barnaby Glacier la Mount Logan k J o i T ee Howard Miller v c 8215ft A Lone Fir r o Moraine h Granite Pass C Slough u e ie 9088ft r u p Steelhead Park l r r 2504m d d Lake n 2770m 20 y d Hidden r 6800ft e a a e C d n o i R n e in cade r a Lake l 2073m s ) F rt Ca s Forbidden Peak r Fremont Douglas kpo Fisher Peak C oc c Trail C Fisher Pass R C Hidden Glacier Glacier Cutthroat Pass C a 8816ft r 8005ft r e r r d Lake e roat e e Cutth e e 2687m 2440m e e k k e k Porcupine il Silver Star k T Tra R B r Mountain a Creek iv o t C s i bo re Falls Lake e No to l 8875ft la e r rth 8894ft n Il k Fo Gla Washington Pass 2705m R R rk 2713m cie Black Peak o I o r Overlook a ll a 8970ft Rainy Pass 5477ft d a d Boston Peak b Jordan Granite SOUTH UNIT 2734m 1669m SNAGTOOTH o Park Creek Pass t Lakes Sahale Mtn Buckner N Washington Pass K RIDGE Lakes A FOREST 6063ft ort h Wheelchair access N 8484ft Mountain 1848m Rainy Pass Doubtful 2586m 9080ft Fo to Rainy Lake 4860ft G rk A 8182ft Lake 2768m 1481m Blue Lake R B O 2494m C Johannesburg Mtn Cascade Pass Goode r Trail Whale Lake i Lake Ann O r Mineral Park 8200ft Glacier d eek 5384ft 1641m g 2499m Goode e Liberty Bell Early Winter Spires r P te R Ot a Mountain Rainy Blue Mtn 7807ft C Cascade I r T D r C k e P r 7600ft S Slide e Peak P a 9206ft a Frisco Mountain Lake Lake 2380m G k Found a i a s l 2316m E a 7428ft s c r 2806m Green View Lake Lakes s a Cottonwood k 7760ft r u d C 2264m T e re Lake 2365m e r k a e Copper Pass v il k G i K M Suiattle Mountain S o R Stilletto Peak i id Magic o n rk T o d Fo Trapper C 4874ft le r d 7684ft d u Mountain r a e e S i B 1519m y Lake te h l t ek e rid Creek Trail 2342m Cyclone Lake h 7610ft in R ge (P R k id CNST) 2320m iv g e T Snowking e Bridge wi r T s Trai F Middle C l C reek p ss 6063ft r Pa o Mountain Trapper a r Cascade Flat Creek i 1848m r l 530 e h Jug Lake 7270ft k Glacier Mountain Dagger is e Glory Park Creek Twisp Pass 2266m k m 7530ft Mountain Lake a 2295m R u Mount 7228ft a R il Bridge Creek g a i 2203m Tr n M a i Formidable l b l v Group Campground c i 8324ft k e o A Hock Mountain t e re C w l S r 2537m Spider Mountain e 7749ft Mount Chaval at s 8287ft Fl t 2362m 6969ft e 2526m Shady L r 2172m a ek T re k r C e a McAlester Lake il LAKE CHELAN- Crater Lake Sandalee T lat r South F Glacier a i McAlester Pass l 7894ft Cascade LeConte Mountain Dolly Varden McGregor Mountain 2406m North Mount Buckindy Lake 7763ft 8124ft Bowan Mountain Mountain Hurricane Peak 7175ft 2366m 2476m 3741ft 6272ft 2187m South Pass S Tumwater LAKE CHELAN 6300ft 1166m u 1955m l i Boulder Bench South Coon Lake i a LeConte 1920m a t t Lake Lake Cascade r l Glacier T e Pear Glacier High Bridge Bullion k To Arlington e R Lake Sentinel Peak McAlester i k e 28mi 45km v r Mountain e e 8261ft C r e NATIONAL 8123ft To White Horse r 2518m w R C k 2476m 1mi 0.6km e o o e Rainbow Mountain r b a We C st n d 6017ft i es 1834m a SAWTOOTH 530 k F gn R Huckleberry Mountain c k or A u e k 5361ft B re Spire Point RECREATION AREA 1671m C 8082ft Green Mountain 2519m Bo y uld e e 6499ft n C r Prairie Mountain k k 1981m w h r ee C 5670ft o ic o Rainbow r r DARRINGTON k C e 1703m D a F e Dome m Falls r k S Itswoot in de Glacier l ul u G i Harlequin o
Recommended publications
  • North Cascades Contested Terrain
    North Cascades NP: Contested Terrain: North Cascades National Park Service Complex: An Administrative History NORTH CASCADES Contested Terrain North Cascades National Park Service Complex: An Administrative History CONTESTED TERRAIN: North Cascades National Park Service Complex, Washington An Administrative History By David Louter 1998 National Park Service Seattle, Washington TABLE OF CONTENTS adhi/index.htm Last Updated: 14-Apr-1999 http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/noca/adhi/[11/22/2013 1:57:33 PM] North Cascades NP: Contested Terrain: North Cascades National Park Service Complex: An Administrative History (Table of Contents) NORTH CASCADES Contested Terrain North Cascades National Park Service Complex: An Administrative History TABLE OF CONTENTS Cover Cover: The Southern Pickett Range, 1963. (Courtesy of North Cascades National Park) Introduction Part I A Wilderness Park (1890s to 1968) Chapter 1 Contested Terrain: The Establishment of North Cascades National Park Part II The Making of a New Park (1968 to 1978) Chapter 2 Administration Chapter 3 Visitor Use and Development Chapter 4 Concessions Chapter 5 Wilderness Proposals and Backcountry Management Chapter 6 Research and Resource Management Chapter 7 Dam Dilemma: North Cascades National Park and the High Ross Dam Controversy Chapter 8 Stehekin: Land of Freedom and Want Part III The Wilderness Park Ideal and the Challenge of Traditional Park Management (1978 to 1998) Chapter 9 Administration Chapter 10 http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/noca/adhi/contents.htm[11/22/2013
    [Show full text]
  • The Complete Script
    Feb rua rg 1968 North Cascades Conservation Council P. 0. Box 156 Un ? ve rs i ty Stat i on Seattle, './n. 98 105 SCRIPT FOR NORTH CASCAOES SLIDE SHOW (75 SI Ides) I ntroduct Ion : The North Cascades fiountatn Range In the State of VJashington Is a great tangled chain of knotted peaks and spires, glaciers and rivers, lakes, forests, and meadov;s, stretching for a 150 miles - roughly from Pt. fiainier National Park north to the Canadian Border, The h undreds of sharp spiring mountain peaks, many of them still unnamed and relatively unexplored, rise from near sea level elevations to seven to ten thousand feet. On the flanks of the mountains are 519 glaciers, in 9 3 square mites of ice - three times as much living ice as in all the rest of the forty-eight states put together. The great river valleys contain the last remnants of the magnificent Pacific Northwest Rain Forest of immense Douglas Fir, cedar, and hemlock. f'oss and ferns carpet the forest floor, and wild• life abounds. The great rivers and thousands of streams and lakes run clear and pure still; the nine thousand foot deep trencli contain• ing 55 mile long Lake Chelan is one of tiie deepest canyons in the world, from lake bottom to mountain top, in 1937 Park Service Study Report declared that the North Cascades, if created into a National Park, would "outrank in scenic quality any existing National Park in the United States and any possibility for such a park." The seven iiiitlion acre area of the North Cascades is almost entirely Fedo rally owned, and managed by the United States Forest Service, an agency of the Department of Agriculture, The Forest Ser• vice operates under the policy of "multiple use", which permits log• ging, mining, grazing, hunting, wt Iderness, and alI forms of recrea• tional use, Hov/e ve r , the 1937 Park Study Report rec ornmen d ed the creation of a three million acre Ice Peaks National Park ombracing all of the great volcanos of the North Cascades and most of the rest of the superlative scenery.
    [Show full text]
  • The Wild Cascades
    THE WILD CASCADES October-November 1969 2 THE WILD CASCADES FARTHEST EAST: CHOPAKA MOUNTAIN Field Notes of an N3C Reconnaissance State of Washington, school lands managed by May 1969 the Department of Natural Resources. The absolute easternmost peak of the North Cascades is Chopaka Mountain, 7882 feet. An This probably is the most spectacular chunk abrupt and impressive 6700-foot scarp drops of alpine terrain owned by the state. Certain­ from the flowery summit to blue waters of ly its fame will soon spread far beyond the Palmer Lake and meanders of the Similka- Okanogan. Certainly the state should take a mean River, surrounded by green pastures new, close look at Chopaka and develop a re­ and orchards. Beyond, across this wide vised management plan that takes into account trough of a Pleistocene glacier, roll brown the scenic and recreational resources. hills of the Okanogan Highlands. Northward are distant, snowy beginnings of Canadian ranges. Far south, Tiffany Mountain stands above forested branches of Toats Coulee Our gang became aware of Chopaka on the Creek. Close to the west is the Pasayten Fourth of July weekend of 1968 while explor­ Wilderness Area, dominated here by Windy ing Horseshoe Basin -- now protected (except Peak, Horseshoe Mountain, Arnold Peak — from Emmet Smith's cattle) within the Pasay­ the Horseshoe Basin country. Farther west, ten Wilderness Area. We looked east to the hazy-dreamy on the horizon, rise summits of wide-open ridges of Chopaka Mountain and the Chelan Crest and Washington Pass. were intrigued. To get there, drive the Okanogan Valley to On our way to Horseshoe Basin we met Wil­ Tonasket and turn west to Loomis in the Sin- lis Erwin, one of the Okanoganites chiefly lahekin Valley.
    [Show full text]
  • Seattle the Potential for More Depth and Richness Than Any Other Culture I Can Think Of
    WWW.MOUNTAINEERS.ORG ANNUAL REPORT SPECIAL EDITION SPRING 2016 • VOLUME 110 • NO. 2 MountaineerEXPLORE • LEARN • CONSERVE The Doug Walker I Knew PAGE 12 Your Go-To Adventure Buddy PAGE 16 Leading the Way - Annual Report PAGES 19 - 40 Rescue on Dome Peak PAGE 41 2 mountaineer » spring 2016 tableofcontents Spring 2016 » Volume 110 » Number 2 Annual Report The Mountaineers enriches lives and communities by helping people explore, conserve, learn about and enjoy 19 Leading the Way the lands and waters of the Pacific Northwest and beyond. The Mountaineers Annual Report 2015 Features 12 The Doug Walker I knew a special tribute by Glenn Nelson 16 Your Go-To Adventure Buddy an interview with Andre Gougisha 41 Rescue on Dome Peak Everett Mountaineers save the day 16 Columns 6 PEAK FITNESS reducing knee pain 7 MEMBER HIGHLIGHT Tom Vogl 8 OUTDOOR EDUCATION from camper to pioneer 10 SAFETY FIRST VHF radios and sea kayaking 14 CONSERVATION CURRENTS our four conservation priorities 46 RETRO REWIND Wolf Bauer - a wonderful life 50 BRANCHING OUT your guide to the seven branches 52 GO GUIDE activities and courses listing 60 OFF BELAY 41 celebrating lives of cherished members 63 LAST WORD explore by Steve Scher Mountaineer magazine would like to thank The Mountaineers Foundation for its financial assistance. The Foundation operates as Discover The Mountaineers a separate organization from The Mountaineers, which has received about one-third of the Foundation’s gifts to various nonprofit If you're thinking of joining — or have joined and aren’t sure where organizations. to start — why not set a date to Meet The Mountaineers? Check the Branching Out section of the magazine for times and locations of Mountaineer uses: informational meetings at each of our seven branches.
    [Show full text]
  • Review Article Magma Loading in the Southern Coast Plutonic Complex, British Columbia and Washington
    GeoScienceWorld Lithosphere Volume 2020, Article ID 8856566, 17 pages https://doi.org/10.2113/2020/8856566 Review Article Magma Loading in the Southern Coast Plutonic Complex, British Columbia and Washington E. H. Brown Department of Geology, Western Washington University, USA Correspondence should be addressed to E. H. Brown; [email protected] Received 2 May 2020; Accepted 22 September 2020; Published 10 November 2020 Academic Editor: Tamer S. Abu-Alam Copyright © 2020 E. H. Brown. Exclusive Licensee GeoScienceWorld. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0). The southen end of the 1800 km long Coast Plutonic Complex (CPC), exposed in the Harrison Lake area of British Columbia and in the North Cascades of Washington, bears a record of great crustal thickening -20 to 40 km in localized zones during Late Cretaceous times. During this period, the CPC was positioned at the continental margin during collision/subduction of the Farallon plate. Arc magmatism and regional orogenic contraction were both active as potential crustal thickening processes. Magmatism is favored in this report as the dominant factor based on the delineation of four spatially and temporally separate loading events, the close association of the loaded areas with emplacement of large plutons, and a paucity of evidence of deep regional tectonic contraction. The timing and spatial location of crustal loading events are documented by the following: zircon ages in plutons; an early event of low pressure in pluton aureoles evidenced by andalusite, now pseudomorphed by high- pressure minerals; high pressures in country rock in pluton aureoles measured by mineral compositions in the assemblages garnet-biotite-muscovite-plagioclase and garnet-aluminum silicate-plagioclase; high pressures recorded in plutons by Al-in- hornblende barometry; and uplift ages of plutons derived from K-Ar and Ar-Ar ages of micas and hornblende in plutons.
    [Show full text]
  • Stratigraphy, Age, and Provenance of the Eocene Chumstick Basin
    Stratigraphy, age, and provenance of the Eocene Chumstick basin, Washington Cascades; implications for paleogeography, regional tectonics, and development of strike-slip basins Erin E. Donaghy1,†, Paul J. Umhoefer2, Michael P. Eddy1, Robert B. Miller3, and Taylor LaCasse4 1 Department of Earth, Planetary, and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA 2 School of Earth Sciences and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011, USA 3 Department of Geology, San Jose State University, San Jose, California 95192, USA 4 Department of Geology, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota 55057 USA ABSTRACT tions can be constrained at high temporal Here we present a large provenance data set resolution (0.5–1.5 m.y. scale) for an ancient coupled with new lithofacies mapping from Strike-slip faults form in a wide variety strike-slip basin and permits a detailed re- the Chumstick basin within the framework of a of tectonic settings and are a first-order construction of sediment routing pathways recently developed precise depositional chronol- control on the geometry and sediment accu- and depositional environments. As a result, ogy (Eddy et al., 2016b). This basin formed in mulation patterns in adjacent sedimentary we can assess how varying sediment supply a strike-slip setting in central Washington and basins. Although the structural and depo- and accommodation space affects the depo- provides a unique opportunity to track changes sitional architecture of strike-slip basins is sitional architecture during strike-slip basin in sediment routing systems that are related well documented, few studies of strike-slip evolution. to rapidly changing paleogeography in basin- basins have integrated depositional age, bounding basement blocks.
    [Show full text]
  • THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST: WASHINGTON and ORGEGON PART 2 NORTH and MIDDLE CASCADES and NORTH CASCADES
    THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST: WASHINGTON AND ORGEGON PART 2 NORTH AND MIDDLE CASCADES and NORTH CASCADES Mt Baker Park Butte Mt Baker with my son Ethan Park Butte 2009 Hannigan Pass hike with my daughter clara Hannigan Pass 2017 with Clara, Right: Mt Shuksan and Price Glacier 2006 Philip and Ethan on the summit of Mt Ruth. Mt Shuksan in 2006 Mt Ruth climb with Ethan and Philip and in background Mt Shuksan 2006 Mt Shuksan climb I led from Lake Ann through the Fishure chimneys route 1981, right summit Above and below: Mt Shuksan climb 1981 Mt Shuksan I led with friends climb 1981 base camp at Lake Ann. Above and below Mt Baker climb 1968 with George Dalton Mt Baker from skyline 2014 with bekah, clara and ethan NORTH CASCADES Mt Eldorado and Sahale Arm, North Cascades Summit of Bostan Peak with Eric Pentila, 1966. Eric played center for the U of W footballs team Mt Eldado, climbed several times in one day ascents, 1968 and 1973 Above and Below: Summit pyramids of Mt Eldorado 1973 Inspiration glacier on mt Eldorado Dome Peak climb 1984 Dome Peak climb 1984 STEHEKIN AND HOLDEN VILLAGE Mountaineers Summer outing 1963 Park Creek Meadows and Mt Buckner. Summit of Mt Booker, Buckner Left Mt Booker with the summit of Mt Buckner to the right; Glacier Peak from High Pass to the south of Stehekin Buckner, Torment, Sahale and far right Mt Eldrado from summit of Mt Logan, Mountaineers Summer outing 1963 Lake Chelan, a 55 mile long lake that with the boat Lady of the Lake, took passengers to Lucerne, and Stehekin Holden Village reached from Lucerne and the Lake
    [Show full text]
  • Federal Register / Vol
    Wednesday, August 13, 2008 Part III Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service 50 CFR Part 17 Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised Designation of Critical Habitat for the Northern Spotted Owl; Final Rule VerDate Aug<31>2005 17:05 Aug 12, 2008 Jkt 214001 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 4717 Sfmt 4717 E:\FR\FM\13AUR2.SGM 13AUR2 rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2 47326 Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 157 / Wednesday, August 13, 2008 / Rules and Regulations DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Background habitat designation in the westside It is our intent to discuss only those provinces. The landscape management Fish and Wildlife Service topics directly relevant to the revised approach for the eastside provinces, designation of critical habitat in this identified in the 2008 final recovery 50 CFR Part 17 rule. For more information on the plan (USFWS 2008) and by the northern spotted owl and critical Sustainable Ecosystems Institute (SEI) [FWS-R1-ES-2008–0051; 92210-1117-0000- Scientific Panel (SEI 2008) as the most FY08-B4] habitat, please refer to the proposed rule published in the Federal Register on effective approach for managing RIN 1018-AU37 June 12, 2007 (72 FR 32450). northern spotted owl habitat in dry Prior and subsequent to the listing of forests, was not incorporated into this Endangered and Threatened Wildlife the northern spotted owl in 1990 (55 FR rule because it cannot be translated into and Plants; Revised Designation of 26114), many committees, task forces, critical habitat at this time, until the Critical Habitat for the Northern and work groups were formed to new approach called for by the recovery Spotted Owl develop conservation strategies for the plan is further defined.
    [Show full text]
  • 1967, Al and Frances Randall and Ramona Hammerly
    The Mountaineer I L � I The Mountaineer 1968 Cover photo: Mt. Baker from Table Mt. Bob and Ira Spring Entered as second-class matter, April 8, 1922, at Post Office, Seattle, Wash., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published monthly and semi-monthly during March and April by The Mountaineers, P.O. Box 122, Seattle, Washington, 98111. Clubroom is at 719Y2 Pike Street, Seattle. Subscription price monthly Bulletin and Annual, $5.00 per year. The Mountaineers To explore and study the mountains, forests, and watercourses of the Northwest; To gather into permanent form the history and traditions of this region; To preserve by the encouragement of protective legislation or otherwise the natural beauty of North­ west America; To make expeditions into these regions m fulfill­ ment of the above purposes; To encourage a spirit of good fellowship among all lovers of outdoor life. EDITORIAL STAFF Betty Manning, Editor, Geraldine Chybinski, Margaret Fickeisen, Kay Oelhizer, Alice Thorn Material and photographs should be submitted to The Mountaineers, P.O. Box 122, Seattle, Washington 98111, before November 1, 1968, for consideration. Photographs must be 5x7 glossy prints, bearing caption and photographer's name on back. The Mountaineer Climbing Code A climbing party of three is the minimum, unless adequate support is available who have knowledge that the climb is in progress. On crevassed glaciers, two rope teams are recommended. Carry at all times the clothing, food and equipment necessary. Rope up on all exposed places and for all glacier travel. Keep the party together, and obey the leader or majority rule. Never climb beyond your ability and knowledge.
    [Show full text]
  • 1934 the MOUNTAINEERS Incorpora.Ted T�E MOUNTAINEER VOLUME TWENTY-SEVEN Number One
    THE MOUNTAINEER VOLUME TWENTY -SEVEN Nom1-0ae Deceml.er, 19.34 GOING TO GLACIER PUBLISHED BY THE MOUNTAIN�ER.S INCOaPOllATBD SEATTLI: WASHINGTON. _,. Copyright 1934 THE MOUNTAINEERS Incorpora.ted T�e MOUNTAINEER VOLUME TWENTY-SEVEN Number One December, 1934 GOING TO GLACIER 7 •Organized 1906 Incorporated 1913 EDITORIAL BOARD, 1934 Phyllis Young Katharine A. Anderson C. F. Todd Marjorie Gregg Arthur R. Winder Subscription Price, $2.00 a Year Annual (only) Seventy-five Cents Published by THE MOUNTAINEERS Incorporated Seattle, Washington Entered as second class matter, December 15, 1920, at the Postofflce at Seattle, Washington, under the Act of March 3, 1879. TABLE OF CONTENTS Greeting ........................................................................Henr y S. Han, Jr. North Face of Mount Rainier ................................................ Wolf Baiter 3 r Going to Glacier, Illustrated ............... -.................... .Har iet K. Walker 6 Members of the 1934 Summer Outing........................................................ 8 The Lake Chelan Region ............. .N. W. <J1·igg and Arthiir R. Winder 11 Map and Illustration The Climb of Foraker, Illitstrated.................................... <J. S. Houston 17 Ascent of Spire Peak ............................................... -.. .Kenneth Chapman 18 Paradise to White River Camp on Skis .......................... Otto P. Strizek 20 Glacier Recession Studies ................................................H. Strandberg 22 The Mounta,ineer Climbers................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Notice Concerning Copyright Restrictions
    NOTICE CONCERNING COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS This document may contain copyrighted materials. These materials have been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study, but may not be used for any commercial purpose. Users may not otherwise copy, reproduce, retransmit, distribute, publish, commercially exploit or otherwise transfer any material. The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specific conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be "used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. 1 g 6 •19 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY RESEARCH 1968 QUARTZ DIORITE-QUARTZ MONZONITE AND GRANITE PLUTONS OF THE PASAYTEN RIVER AREA, WASHINGTON- PETROLOGY, AGE, AND EMPLACEMENT By R. W. TABOR, J. C. ENGELS; and M. H. STAATZ, Menlo Park, Calif.; Denver, Colo. ibstract.-Quartz diorite to granite plutons intrude Lower of plutonic igneous and metamorphic rocks. On the Cretaceous sedimentary and volcanic rocks lying between two blocks of metamorphic and granitoid rocks. As indicated by west is the core of the North Cascade crystalline block, K-Ar dates, the large Pasayten and Rock Creek dikes were and on the east is the Okanogan Highlands crystalline emplaced about 86 m.y.
    [Show full text]
  • 1976 Bicentennial Mckinley South Buttress Expedition
    THE MOUNTAINEER • Cover:Mowich Glacier Art Wolfe The Mountaineer EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Verna Ness, Editor; Herb Belanger, Don Brooks, Garth Ferber. Trudi Ferber, Bill French, Jr., Christa Lewis, Mariann Schmitt, Paul Seeman, Loretta Slater, Roseanne Stukel, Mary Jane Ware. Writing, graphics and photographs should be submitted to the Annual Editor, The Mountaineer, at the address below, before January 15, 1978 for consideration. Photographs should be black and white prints, at least 5 x 7 inches, with caption and photo­ grapher's name on back. Manuscripts should be typed double· spaced, with at least 1 Y:z inch margins, and include writer's name, address and phone number. Graphics should have caption and artist's name on back. Manuscripts cannot be returned. Properly identified photographs and graphics will be returnedabout June. Copyright © 1977, The Mountaineers. Entered as second·class matter April8, 1922, at Post Office, Seattle, Washington, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published monthly, except July, when semi-monthly, by The Mountaineers, 719 Pike Street,Seattle, Washington 98101. Subscription price, monthly bulletin and annual, $6.00 per year. ISBN 0-916890-52-X 2 THE MOUNTAINEERS PURPOSES To explore and study the mountains, forests, and watercourses of the Northwest; To gather into permanentform the history and tra­ ditions of thisregion; To preserve by the encouragement of protective legislation or otherwise the natural beauty of NorthwestAmerica; To make expeditions into these regions in fulfill­ ment of the above purposes; To encourage a spirit of good fellowship among all loversof outdoor life. 0 � . �·' ' :···_I·:_ Red Heather ' J BJ. Packard 3 The Mountaineer At FerryBasin B.
    [Show full text]