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Devil Canyon Creek is a stream or arroyo, tributary to San Mateo Creek, in the Santa Margarita Mountains; all but its first and last part are within the Cleveland National Forest in San Diego County, California. Its source is at an altitude of 2440 feet on a flat private land in the Santa Margarita Mountains. [2]
Devils Canyon is a steep canyon in the Jacumba Mountains in Imperial and San Diego County, California, United States. Its mouth is located at an elevation of 1,109 feet (338 m) in Imperial County. Its mouth is located at an elevation of 1,109 feet (338 m) in Imperial County.
The 13-acre (5.3 ha) complex includes 13 contributing buildings and one contributing structure. Most of the structures were built for San Diego's Panama–California Exposition of 1915–16 and were refurbished and re-used for the California Pacific International Exposition of 1935–36.
Rainbow Falls at Devils Postpile National Monument. The monument was established in 1911 as "Devil Postpile National Monument," (no possessive) [6] but is widely referred to as Devils Postpile National Monument, [7] and has been officially styled as plural without the apostrophe since the 1930s. An alternate historic name was Devil's Woodpile.
By the early 1990s, San Diego had become home to more than one-sixth of the Navy's entire fleet. San Diego had more than a dozen major military installations, accounting for nearly 20 percent of the local economy with more than 133,000 uniformed personnel and another 30,000 civilians relying on the military for their livelihood.
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The In-Ko-Pah Mountains are one of the Peninsular Ranges in Southern California near the Mexico–United States border, west of the Jacumba Mountains.The range, which lies in a north-south direction, is located just north of Interstate 8, and east of the Manzanita Indian Reservation.
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