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Mount Nebo is a 8,261-foot (2,518 m) [2] mountain in the Eagle Cap Wilderness of Oregon, in the United States. Named after the biblical Mount Nebo overlooking Israel, which is said to be the place of Moses' death. [3] [4] It is the centerpiece of the Imnaha Divide, inside the Wallowa–Whitman National Forest. [5]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Pages in category "Fire lookout towers in Oregon" ... Waldo Mountain Fire Lookout;
Mt Coolidge Fire Lookout Custer State Park still in service; Battle Mountain Fire Lookout, Hot Springs, SD, Fall River Co, 4,363', 22' tower; Seth Bullock/Scruton Mt Fire Lookout, Pennington Co, SD, 5,817', wood tower built in 1939, replaced 1975 with metal tower; SD Lookout Towers that no longer exist: Crook's Tower; Crow's Nest Peak; Signal ...
One of Oregon’s more popular mountaintop fire lookouts is set to be rebuilt after it was destroyed in the 2020 Labor Day wildfires. Bolan Mountain Fire Lookout, located just above the Oregon ...
Sex Peak is a summit in Sanders County, Montana, in the United States. [1] It is located within the Kootenai National Forest. [2] It has an elevation of 5,751 feet (1,753 m) [3] A conversation between a park official and a forester about sex supposedly caused the name Sex Peak to be selected. [4] [5]
The Watchman Lookout Station is located 8,025 feet above sea level on Watchman Peak, a high point on the western rim above Crater Lake. [5] [6] Watchman Peak was named by William Gladstone Steel in 1886 when he brought a survey team to Crater Lake to measure its depth. [7]
Columnar andesite at Pilot Rock, Oregon. The Pacific Crest Trail runs through the monument area. There is a fire lookout tower on the top of Soda Mountain built in 1962 to replace the original 1933 structure. Although the top of the mountain is also the site of dozens of television and radio broadcast and relay dishes, the view from the fire ...
The McCart Fire Lookout, near Sula, Montana, was built in 1939.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. [1]It is an L-4 Fire Lookout, located at 7,115 feet (2,169 m) elevation, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of the East Fork Forest Service Station in Bitterroot National Forest.