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These included the Lincoln Forest Reserve, a 545,256 acre area established July 26, 1902 around Capitan and Lincoln, the 78,480 acre Gallinas Forest Reserve established on November 5, 1906, in the Gallinas Mountains west of Gallinas, the Guadalupe National Forest, established April 19, 1907 in the mountains along the Texas border, and the ...
Monjeau Lookout was completed in 1940 by the Civilian Conservation Corps to serve as a fire lookout tower within Lincoln National Forest, New Mexico, United States, and remains in active use as a destination for forest visitors. The structure is a 14-by-14-foot (4.3 m × 4.3 m) native stone tower which contains living quarters, and is topped ...
Lightning started the fire May 16 which had burned 7,532 acres as of Wednesday. An updated map of the Blue 2 Fire near Ruidoso as of June 5, 2024, Fire danger remains high in Lincoln National Forest
It consists of a 45-foot-tall (14 m) fire lookout tower and associated buildings in Lincoln National Forest in Otero County, New Mexico. The tower has a 7 by 7 feet (2.1 m × 2.1 m) steel cab and is either an Aermotor LX-E4 model or an International Derrick Company tower.
The Wofford Lookout Complex consists of an 80-foot-tall (24 m) [2] fire lookout tower and associated buildings in Lincoln National Forest in Otero County, New Mexico.. Wofford Lookout Complex was built in 1933 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 28, 1988, as part of a thematic group of United States Forest Service fire lookouts in the forest service's Southwestern ...
The U.S. Forest Service announced it would close portions of the Lincoln National Forest where two wildfires continue to burn as a precaution.. The South Fork Fire and Salt Fire ignited earlier ...
The Lincoln National Forest has planned prescribed burns for the 16 Springs Area for early November.
The structure is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, [1] as well as the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties. [3] The first detonation of a nuclear device by the Manhattan Project at Trinity Site was observed by Herbert Lee Traylor, [4] the forest ranger on duty at the Ruidoso Lookout tower at the time of the explosion.