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The Siletz River flows about 67 miles (108 km) [3] to the Pacific Ocean through coastal mountains in the U.S. state of Oregon. Formed by the confluence of its north and south forks near Valsetz in Polk County , it winds through the Central Oregon Coast Range . [ 6 ]
Oregon Route 229 is an Oregon state highway that runs along the lower reaches of the Siletz River, on the central Oregon coast. The highway is also known as the Siletz Highway No. 181 (see Oregon highways and routes ).
The Siletz River Volcanics, located in the Oregon Coast Range, United States, are a sequence of basaltic pillow lavas that make up part of Siletzia. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The basaltic pillow lavas originally came from submarine volcanoes that existed during the Eocene .
Roaring River (South Fork McKenzie River) Rogue River (Oregon) Rogue River (South Yamhill River) Row River; Salmon River (Clackamas County, Oregon) Salmon River (Lincoln County, Oregon) Salmonberry River; Salt Creek (Middle Fork Willamette River) Sandy River; Santiam River; Scoggins Creek; Shitepoke Creek; Shitten Creek; Siletz River; Siltcoos ...
Drift Creek is a tributary, about 18 miles (29 km) long, of Siletz Bay in the U.S. state of Oregon. [3] The creek begins near Stott Mountain in the Central Oregon Coast Range in Lincoln County and follows a winding course generally west through the Siuslaw National Forest to enter the bay south of Lincoln City on the Pacific Ocean.
Siletz (/ s ɪ ˈ l ɛ t s / suh-LETS, Tolowa: sii-let-ts’i [5]) is a city in Lincoln County, Oregon, United States. The population was 1,212 at the 2010 census . The city is located next to the Siletz Reservation and is the site of the annual Nesika Illahee Pow Wow in August.
Source data for the table below came from topographic maps created by the United States Geological Survey and published on-line by TopoQuest, [2] and from the Atlas of Oregon; [1] the Oregon Atlas and Gazetteer; [3] two federally produced geographic information system (GIS) datasets—the National Hydrography Dataset and the National Watershed ...
The Siletz Reef is a large and shallow reef, just offshore the central coast of Oregon. [1] It runs about 1 mile (1.6 km) mile offshore from a southern boundary off Depoe Bay, though some references have it going as far south as Cape Perpetua [1] to a northern boundary off Lincoln City, Oregon, [2] though a northern boundary of Cascade Head is in some references. [3]