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Mount Scott is a volcanic cinder cone with its summit in Clackamas County, Oregon.The summit rises to an elevation of 1,091 feet (333 m). [1] It is part of the Boring Lava Field, [3] a zone of ancient volcanic activity in the area around Portland, and was named for Harvey W. Scott, a 19th and 20th century editor of The Oregonian newspaper.
BARK is an Oregon, United States, non-profit organization that was created to combat logging, clear-cutting, deforestation and projects members say cause "commercial destruction" [1] in Oregon forests, specifically those of the Mt. Hood National Forest.
Mt. Scott Park is an 11.22-acre (4.54 ha) public park in Portland, Oregon's Mt. Scott-Arleta neighborhood, in the United States. Named after Harvey W. Scott , the park was acquired in 1922 and houses the Mt. Scott Community Center .
The Mt. Scott-Arleta neighborhood of Portland, Oregon is located in the city's southeast quadrant.It is bounded on the north by SE Foster Road, west by SE 60th Avenue, east by SE 82nd Avenue, and south by SE Duke. Mt. Scott-Arleta borders the neighborhoods of Woodstock on the west, Foster-Powell on the north, Lents on the east, and Brentwood-Darlington on the south.
Mount Scott (Oklahoma), a mountain in the Wichita Mountains of southwestern Oklahoma; Mount Scott (Clackamas County, Oregon), a minor volcano in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area; Mount Scott (Klamath County, Oregon), a stratovolcano in Crater Lake National Park in southern Oregon; Mount Scott (Washington), a mountain summit in Olympic ...
Mount Scott is a small stratovolcano and a so-called parasitic cone on the southeast flank of Crater Lake in southern Oregon. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It is approximately 420,000 years old. [ 3 ] Its summit is the highest point within Crater Lake National Park , and the tenth highest peak in the Oregon Cascades . [ 6 ]
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Rocky Butte (previously known as Mowich Illahee [4] and Wiberg Butte) is an extinct cinder cone butte in Portland, Oregon, United States.It is also part of the Boring Lava Field, a group of volcanic vents and lava flows throughout Oregon and Washington state.