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Highest point; Elevation: 3,426 ft (1,044 m) NAVD 88 [1] Prominence: 3,424 ft (1,044 m) [2] Listing: Oregon county high points: Coordinates: 1]: Geography; Location: Yamhill County, Oregon, U.S.: Parent range: Northern Oregon Coast Range: Topo map: USGS Trask Mountain: Climbing; Easiest route: Trask Toll Road to just below the summit. [3]: Trask Mountain in the Northern Oregon Coast Range, is ...
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Blank_Map_of_Oregon.svg licensed with PD-self . 2011-04-06T04:39:36Z Ninjatacoshell 6461x4821 (151328 Bytes) {{Information |Description=A blank SVG map of Utah showing the 36 counties.
Elbridge Trask also known as Eldridge Trask (July 15, 1815 – June 23, 1863) was an American fur trapper and mountain man in the Oregon Country.Immortalized by a series of modern historical novels by Don Berry, he is best known as an early white settler along Tillamook Bay on the coast of the U.S. state of Oregon.
The Trask River is in northwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a mountainous timber-producing area of the Northern Oregon Coast Range west of Portland into Tillamook Bay and the Pacific Ocean. [3] [6] It is one of five rivers—the Tillamook, the Trask, the Wilson, the Kilchis, and the Miami—that flow into the bay. [7]
Alaskan halibut often weigh over 100 pounds (45 kg). Specimens under 20 pounds (9.1 kg) are often thrown back when caught. With a land area of 586,412 square miles (1,518,800 km 2), not counting the Aleutian islands, Alaska is one-fifth the size of lower 48 states, and as Ken Schultz [4] notes in his chapter on Alaska [5] "Alaska is a bounty of more than 3,000 rivers, more than 3 million lakes ...
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They nest on Alaska's Copper River Delta and winter almost exclusively in the Willamette Valley. Habitat loss , predation, and hunting have caused a decrease in population. Located ten miles south of Corvallis, Oregon , the refuge protects many of the historic habitats of the valley, including the largest remaining tract of native Willamette ...
The North Fork John Day Wilderness is a wilderness area within the Umatilla and Wallowa–Whitman National Forests in the Blue Mountains of northeastern Oregon. [1] [2]The wilderness consists of four separate units: the main 85,000-acre (34,000 ha) unit of the North Fork John Day drainage; the Greenhorn Unit to the south; the Tower Mountain Unit to the north; and the Baldy Creek Unit to the east.