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Location: Missoula County, Montana, United States: Coordinates: 1]: Primary inflows: Holland Creek: Primary outflows: Holland Creek: Basin countries: United States: Max. length: 1.75 miles (2.82 km): Max. width: 2,500 feet (760 m): Surface area: 413.5 acres (167.3 ha) [2]: Average depth: 59 feet (18 m) [2]: Max. depth: 156 feet (48 m) [2]: Water volume: 24,424 acre-feet (30,127,000 m 3) [2 ...
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Lake Helena; Hidden Lakes; Holland Lake (Montana) ... Lake at Falls; Little Bitterroot Lake; M. Mud Lake (Montana) Murphy ...
Black Lake, el. 5,013 feet (1,528; Carter Lake, el. 6,293 feet (1,918; Glacier Lake, el. 6,968 feet (2,124; Jocko Lake, el. 4,767 feet (1,453; Lower Lake of Twin ...
The Swan Range is a mountain range in western Montana in the United States. [1] Its peaks typically rise to around 8,000 to 9,000 feet (2,400 to 2,700 m). The range is bounded by the South Fork Flathead River to the east, the Flathead River to the north and northwest, the Swan River to the west, and lie to the southwest of Glacier National Park, just south of the Canada–US border.
There are at least 3,223 named lakes and reservoirs in Montana.The following list contains lists of lakes and reservoirs in Montana by county. A lake is a terrain feature (or physical feature), a body of liquid on the surface of a world that is localized to the bottom of basin (another type of landform or terrain feature; that is not global).
On an 1884 Rand McNally map, the Swan River and Swan Lake are referred to as the Sweatinghouse River and the Sweatinghouse Lake. However, by 1895, most maps had adopted Swan, a name apparently proposed by early English hunters in the area and acknowledged by the locals, according to Ken Wolf’s 1980 Montana Magazine article “History of the Swan Valley.” [4] Henry Coale quoted a local 1914 ...
[4] [3] The second table below ranks the 50 most prominent summits of Montana. The topographic isolation (or radius of dominance) of a summit measures how far the summit lies from its nearest point of equal elevation. [5] The third table below ranks the 50 most isolated major summits of Montana.
Montana Highway 83 (MT 83) is a 91.118-mile-long (146.640 km) north–south state highway in Flathead, Lake, and Missoula counties in Montana, United States, that connects Montana Highway 200 (MT 200) in Clearwater (east of Missoula) with Montana Highway 35 (MT 35) on north edge of Bigfork.