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Great Falls Baseball Club, Inc. Capacity: 4,000: Field size: Left field: 328 feet (100 m) Center field: 415 feet (126 m) Right field: 335 feet (102 m) Surface: Natural grass: Construction; Opened: 1940; 85 years ago () Renovated: 2005: Expanded: 1945: Tenants; Great Falls Voyagers (1969–present) Great Falls Electrics (1940–1963) Great Falls ...
Simplified geologic map of the Adel Mountain volcanic field. The Adel Mountains Volcanic Field (also known as the Adel Mountains, Adel Volcanics, and Adel Mountain Volcanics) is an ancient volcanic field of heavily eroded 75-million-year-old [1] [2] [3] igneous rocks about 40 miles long and 20 miles wide (800 square miles, or 2,071 square kilometers) [1] [4] [5] in west-central Montana about ...
Uploaded a work by William C. Alden from William C. Alden; Physiography and Glacial Geology of Eastern Montana and Adjacent Areas, Professional Paper 174; Geological Survey, W. C. Mendenhall, Director; United States Department of the Interior, Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary; United States; Government Printing Office; Washington, D.C.; 1932 with ...
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October 13, 1988 (River Dr., N. Great Falls: 9: Timothy Edwards Collins Mansion: Timothy Edwards Collins Mansion: August 27, 1980 (1003-1017 2nd Ave., NW.
Great Falls is the third most populous city in the U.S. state of Montana and the county seat of Cascade County.The population was 60,442 according to the 2020 census. [4] The city covers an area of 22.9 square miles (59 km 2) [5] and is the principal city of the Great Falls, Montana, Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Cascade County.
Relief map of Montana. The state's topography is roughly defined by the Continental Divide, which splits much of the state into distinct eastern and western regions. [4] Most of Montana's hundred or more named mountain ranges are in the state's western half, most of which is geologically and geographically part of the northern Rocky Mountains.
Giant Springs is a large first-magnitude spring located near Great Falls, Montana and is the central feature of Giant Springs State Park.Its water has a constant temperature of 54 °F (12 °C) and originates from snowmelt in the Little Belt Mountains, 60 miles (97 km) away.