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The Rattlesnake Mountain Observatory was established at the summit in 1966, utilizing some of the former missile base infrastructure, and remained there until its relocation near Wallula, WA in 2009. The observatory's main telescope was installed in 1971 and is a 32-inch (0.8-meter) telescope housed inside a 24-foot domed enclosure.
Rattlesnake Ridge, known as daʔšədabš to the Snoqualmie people, is the ridge of Rattlesnake Mountain located south of North Bend, Washington, United States.The western end is near the intersection of State Route 18 and I-90 in Snoqualmie, Washington, and runs southeast about 7 miles (11 km) or 11 miles (18 km) by trail.
Rattlesnake Mountain sacred to tribes. Rattlesnake Mountain, including its 3,600-foot peak, has remained relatively untouched for 80 years, after it was used as part of a security buffer around ...
The Rattlesnake Hills, also known as Rattlesnake Ridge, [3] is a 16-mile (26 km) long anticline mountain ridge in Yakima County and Benton County in the U.S. state of Washington. It should not be confused with the much smaller Rattlesnake Ridge located near the west end of Ahtanum Ridge just south of Yakima, Washington and west of Union Gap ...
The Yakama Nation will hold its first ceremonial elk hunt since World War II on the Rattlesnake Mountain area of the Hanford Reach National Monument in Eastern Washington.. No date has been made ...
No tours have been allowed on the tallest mountain in the Tri-Cities region for nearly 10 years after the tribes won a federal ruling. Rattlesnake Mountain access still closed to public, despite ...
Rattlesnake Mountain is a prominent NNW trending ridge just west of North Bend (about 25 miles east of Seattle). It is coincident with, and possibly a result of uplift on, the Rattlesnake Mountain Fault Zone (RMFZ), a band of at least eleven faults that show both dip-slip (vertical) and right-lateral strike-slip motion. [88] (See the adjacent map.
There’s a lot of land on Rattlesnake Mountain, enough for everyone to enjoy responsibly. Open Rattlesnake Mountain to all. Tribal rights, limited public access can coexist | Opinion