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The Little Lake Hotel, which had evolved into an apartment building for local residents, burned in 1989 and was never rebuilt. [2] In 1997, the United States Postal Service ended service at Little Lake, and by the early 2000s Little Lake Road, building foundations, off ramps and even its road signs were bulldozed into oblivion and hauled away.
Incorporated municipalities in the state are listed separately in a list of cities and list of towns. Due to unreliability of the source data in the Geographic Names Information System , items in this list may be historical places that no longer exist, places that are part of an incorporated city or town or a CDP, or never a community in the ...
Pages in category "Bureau of Land Management areas in California" The following 107 pages are in this category, out of 107 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Washington is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. As of the 2020 U.S. census, it is the 13th-most populous state, with 7,705,281 inhabitants, and ranked 18th by land area, spanning 66,456 square miles (172,120 km 2) of land. [1] [2] Washington is divided into 39 counties and contains 281 municipalities that are ...
Little Lake, California may refer to: Little Lake, Inyo County, California; Little Lake, Los Angeles County, California. Little Lake City School District; Little Lake, California, former name of Willits, California
This category is for named communities in the state of Washington that have no political existence, whether neighborhoods in unincorporated areas or communities in census-designated places. This does not, however, include census-designated places, which are included under their appropriate category.
Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) is a conservation ecology program in the Western United States, managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The ACEC program was conceived in the 1976 Federal Lands Policy and Management Act ( FLPMA ), which established the first conservation ecology mandate for the BLM.
Horses on the Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range in Montana. The BLM distinguishes between "herd areas" (HA) where feral horse and burro herds existed at the time of the passage of the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, and "Herd Management Areas" (HMA) where the land is currently managed for the benefit of horses and burros, though "as a component" of public lands, part of ...