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Treasure Mountain! is an educational video game published by The Learning Company in 1990 [1] for DOS, Windows and Macintosh. It teaches children aged five to nine reading, basic math, and logic skills. [1] Treasure Mountain is the third installment of the Super Seekers series.
Treasure MathStorm! is the second of four games in The Learning Company's "Treasure" series along with Treasure Mountain!, Treasure Cove!, and Treasure Galaxy!. The "Treasure" series is a subgroup of the company's Super Solvers series. All the games in this series are math and reading comprehension oriented educational adventure games aimed at ...
Treasure Mountain, elevation 13,535 ft (4,125 m), is a summit in the Elk Mountains of western Colorado. The mountain is in the Raggeds Wilderness southeast of Marble . The massif has been the site of marble mining and a legend of lost French gold.
Treasure Mountain may refer to: Treasure Mountain!, a computer game; Treasure Mountain (Colorado), a mountain peak; See also. Monte Tesoro; Treasure Hill;
Arizona place-name expert Byrd Granger wrote, as of 1977, the Lost Dutchman's story had been printed or cited at least six times more often than two other fairly well-known tales, the story of Captain Kidd's lost treasure, and the story of the Lost Pegleg mine in California.
Treasure Isle's Fire God Mountain has brought a whole new style and element of gameplay to everyone's favorite treasure game - mystery, tactics, competition, and suspense.It's a bit more complex ...
The leading families of products were the Reader Rabbit series for ages 2–8, the Treasure Mountain Reading-Math-Science series for ages 5–9, the Super Solver series for ages 7–12, the Student Writing & Publishing Center for ages 7-adult, and the Foreign Language Learning series for ages 15-adult.
Treasure Mountain's name was changed to the Park City Ski Area for its fourth season of 1966–67; in 1996, it was renamed Park City Mountain Resort. The resort had grown to include eight peaks and nine bowls, with 3,300 acres (5.2 sq mi; 13.4 km 2 ) of skiing and sixteen chairlifts. [ 6 ]