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The main features are St. Jacob's Well, a water-filled sinkhole which lies in the Little Basin, and the Big Basin, a lush mile-wide crater-like depression, also resulting from a sinkhole. The area is stocked with buffalo and is open to the public. The Big Basin is transected by U.S. Route 283 and U.S. Route 160 which run together for a short ...
Also note sometimes there are often slight discrepancies in mileages, for instance NPS and Hahn [184] reports Lock 75 at 175.60 miles, Davies lists "175.35 (175.50)", [185] and Hahn also reports the NPS mile markers are in the wrong place from Milepost 117 to Lock 51, [186] further adding to the confusion. Also note that Some streets in ...
Downstream of Black Creek, the Little River turns northwest and receives Little Taft and Poore creeks from the right and White Creek from the left. White Creek Campground is on the left at the mouth of White Creek. Below this, Negro Creek enters from the left, and Cool Water Campground is on the right at river mile (RM) 17. About 2 miles (3 km ...
Great Basin National Park spans 77,000 acres of the much larger Great Basin, which stretches from Utah to California and up to Oregon.. The park boasts one of the highest points in Nevada, Wheeler ...
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Historical marker (prehistoric river) 7 20.56: Horse Ridge summit, elevation 4,291 feet (1,308 m) 7 35.65: OR 27 north – Prineville Reservoir: Lake: No major junctions: Harney 7 103.03: Historical marker (Bannock War) 7 104.69: US 395 south – Wagontire, Valley Falls, Lakeview: Western end of concurrency with US 395: Burns: 7 131.50
The Little Luckiamute River is a stream in Polk County in the U.S. state of Oregon. It rises in the Central Oregon Coast Range near Fanno Peak and joins the Luckiamute River about 4 miles (6 km) upstream of the Sarah Helmick State Recreation Site southwest of Monmouth .
A half mile below Final Falls, Copper Creek joins from the left and, a mile later, Bighorn Creek joins from the left and the river leaves the wilderness area. About 1.5 miles (2.4 km) later, the South Fork Salmon River —which drains about 25 square miles (65 km 2 ) of rugged mountains northeast of Squaw Mountain—enters from the left about a ...