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Overlook of Pine Lake Community. Near the end of Hualapai Mountain Road, just past the Hualapai Mountain Park ranger station, is a community known as Pine Lake. The lake itself, for which the valley gets its name, is privately owned, and is not available to the public, however, it is viewable from a number of high points surrounding the valley ...
Pine Lake is located in central Mohave County at (35.088699, −113.873928), on the east side of the Hualapai Mountains. It is 14 miles (23 km) southeast of Kingman, the county seat, via Hualapai Mountain Road. The community is bordered on the west, south, and east by Hualapai Mountain Park, managed by Mohave County.
Hualapai Valley is an endorheic basin and its watershed terminates in the dry lake or playa called Red Lake at an elevation of 2762 feet. [2] It is bounded on the east by the Grand Wash Cliffs and Peacock Mountains, on the south by the Hualapai Mountains, on the west by the Cerbat Mountains and the White Hills.
The woman, who has not been named, died eight days after being attacked by an animal on her property in the remote Pine Lake community in the Hualapai Mountains, 15 miles southeast of Kingman.
The Hualapai began to surrender, as whooping cough and dysentery weakened their ranks, on August 20, 1868. [5] They were led by Chief Leve Leve (Levi-Levi, half-brother to Sherum and Hualapai Charley) [6] of the Amat Whala Pa'a (Mad hwa:la Ba:' – "Hualapai Mountains band") of the Yavapai Fighters subtribe. The warrior Sherum, who was known ...
Rawhide Mountains, Dutch Flat, Hualapai Mountains, Black Mountains, Alamo Lake State Park, Buckskin Mtns, Butler Valley and U.S. Route 93 The Poachie Range is a moderate length mountain range and massif in southeast Mohave County , Arizona , and the extreme southwest corner of Yavapai County ; the range also abuts the northeast corner of La Paz ...
An Arizona woman died eight days after an elk apparently trampled her outside her home in what is believed to be the state’s first fatal elk attack on a person, wildlife officials said Tuesday.
Hualapai Peak is a 8,417-foot (2,566 m) mountain summit in Mohave County, Arizona and is the highest point of the Hualapai Mountains. [1] It is located about 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Kingman in Hualapai Mountain County Park. Picture taken of the surrounding landscape from near the summit of Hualapai Peak in Arizona.