Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Flatirons are rock formations in the western United States, near Boulder, Colorado, consisting of flatirons.There are five large, numbered Flatirons ranging from north to south (First through Fifth, respectively) along the east slope of Green Mountain (elev. 8,148 ft or 2,484 m), and the term "The Flatirons" sometimes refers to these five alone.
Flagstaff Mountain is a foothill on the eastern flank of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America, located in the Flatirons region. [4] The 6,983-foot (2,128 m) peak is located in Boulder Mountain Park in Boulder County, Colorado, United States. [2] [3] [1]
The Flatirons near Boulder, Colorado, is both an example of these landforms and the source of their name. Other well-developed flatirons are found in the eastern Uinta Mountains in northwestern Colorado, [6] the Waterpocket Fold in Capitol Reef National Park, the Superstition Mountains near Phoenix, Arizona, and on the flanks of the Marathon Uplift in west Texas.
A man’s arduous climb up the Boulder’s Flatirons in Colorado took an unexpected turn, prompting a call for rescue. Last Thursday, on Mar. 28, Austin Wolff started the ascent with his cat, Link ...
Boulder-Grand Pass [h] 12,077 feet 3,681 m French Pass [h] 12,046 feet 3,672 m ... Continental Divide Trail Colorado Trail Kokomo Pass [h] 12,027 feet 3,666 m ...
Trice – Boulder, Colorado – 1975 – Ungraded and unrepeated for 32 years, but is now considered the world's first 8A+ (V12), by Jim Holloway. [ 13 ] [ 173 ] [ 178 ] Slapshot – Flatirons ( US ) – 1977 – Ungraded and unrepeated for years, but considered one of the world's first 8A+ (V12), by Jim Holloway , [ 13 ] and possibly V13 (8B).
The Flatiron, a 1904 photograph by Edward Steichen; Flatiron Books, a division of Macmillan Publishers; Flat Iron, a First Nations lacrosse player who competed in the 1904 Summer Olympics for Canada; Flat-iron gunboat, a 19th-century iron gunboat typified by a single large gun fitted in the bow
Flatirons, rock formations near Boulder, Colorado that are part of Green Mountain Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Flatiron Mountain .