Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Crane Flat Fire Lookout in Yosemite National Park was built in 1931. An example of the National Park Service Rustic style, the lookout is a two-story structure with a lower storage or garage level and an upper observation level, with an overhanging roof. Design work was carried out by the National Park Service Landscape Division.
North of Big Oak Flat Rd., near Crane Cr., Yosemite National Park 37°45′34″N 119°49′10″W / 37.759444°N 119.819444°W / 37.759444; -119.819444 ( Crane Flat Fire Aspen Valley
Tuolumne Grove is a giant sequoia grove located near Crane Flat in Yosemite National Park, at the southeastern edge of the Tuolumne River watershed. [1] It is about 16 miles (26 km) west of Yosemite Village on Tioga Pass Road. The grove contains many conifers, including a few Sequoiadendron giganteum as well as Abies concolor and Pinus lambertiana.
Aspen Valley, California is an unincorporated community in Tuolumne County, California.Its elevation is 6,161 feet (1,878 m). [1] It is located in the western part of Yosemite National Park, about 8 miles southeast of Mather.
The prehistory of the area is divided into three cultural phases on archaeological grounds: the "Crane Flat" phase, (1000 BCE to 500 CE) is marked by hunting with the atl atl and the use of grinding stones; the "Tarmarack" phase (500 to 1200 CE), marked by a shift to using smaller rock points, indicating development and use of the bow and arrow ...
A rapidly expanding wildfire near Yosemite National Park, California’s largest of the season, at 17,000 acres, prompted thousands of evacuations Monday and
The area of Yosemite Valley includes the Serenity Crack and Super Slide rock climbing areas and also a section of the Yosemite Valley Loop Trail and the eastern portion of the parking area at The ...
The lake can be accessed by automobile from the west via Crane Flat, where the Tioga Pass Road meets the Big Oak Flat Road that connects the Big Oak Flat entrance (and CA120) to the park and Yosemite Valley (and CA41 and CA140). According to the US National Park Service, problems associated with visitor use have been persistent for decades.