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swakane canyon fire: Floods, Faults, and Fire Peter L. Stelling, David Samuel Tucker, 2007-01-01 The ten geological field guides presented in this volume explore key areas of the geologist's paradise that is Washington State and British Columbia. These trips investigate a wide variety of geological and geographical terrains, from the dry steppe of the channeled scablands and Columbia River basalt group to the east, across the glaciated and forested Cascade arc and Coast Mountains, to the geologically complex islands in the west. This guidebook may be unique in that four of the trips utilize boats to reach remote field areas and are therefore rarely visited by geologists. |
swakane canyon fire: Final Environmental Impact Statement, Land and Resource Management Plan United States. Forest Service. Pacific Northwest Region, 1990 |
swakane canyon fire: Atala , 1986 |
swakane canyon fire: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Reports United States. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, |
swakane canyon fire: Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations for 2002 United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Department of the Interior and Related Agencies, 2001 |
swakane canyon fire: Fourth of July Butterfly Counts ... Report , 1985 |
swakane canyon fire: Report of Investigations Washington (State). Division of Mines and Geology, 1943 |
swakane canyon fire: Proposed Land and Resource Management Plan , 1986 |
swakane canyon fire: Wenatchee National Forest (N.F.), Land and Resource(s) Management Plan (LRMP) , 1990 |
swakane canyon fire: Report of Investigations - Division of Geology , 1943 |
swakane canyon fire: What I've Always Known Tom Harmer, 2003 The spiritual autobiography of a young white American telling of his apprenticeship to a Salish Indian elder in teh north of Washington State shortly after Wounded Knee. Under the tutelage of his somewhat curmudgeonly teacher, Harmer enters the wilderness, tracking and hunting animals, participating in sweat lodges and amazing healing ceremonies, and learning the Okanagan language. On a quest to understand what a human being truly is and how to live in a way that benefits and serves the land and the creatures who call it home, he growns in stature and eventually recognises and develops his innate power to fortel and influence the weather. Here is a man who takes us across a threshold we haven't the courage to cross on our own. |
swakane canyon fire: Rhodora Benjamin Lincoln Robinson, Merritt Lyndon Fernald, 1999 |
swakane canyon fire: Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations for 2002: U.S. Forest Service, Secretary of Energy United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Department of the Interior and Related Agencies, 2001 |
swakane canyon fire: The Buckhorn Iron Deposits of Okanogan County, Washington William Albert Broughton, 1943 |
swakane canyon fire: Mesozoic Assembly of the North American Cordillera Robert S. Hildebrand, 2013-01-01 In this well-illustrated book, Hildebrand expands upon his model for the development of the North American Cordillera detailed in Special paper 457. Starting with an overview of Cordilleran geology he goes on to provide an in depth look at how the Rubian ribbon continent was assembled. He integrates the complex geology of the Cordillera into an actualistic model involving arc magmatism, arc-continent collision, slab failure magmatism, and transcurrent motion in both Rubia and the western North American margin. While much of the focus is on the assembly of the Rubian ribbon continent, Hildebrand explores its interactions with North America during the Sevier and Laramide events and concludes that North America was the lower plate in both--Provided by publisher. |
swakane canyon fire: Natural Areas Journal , 1982 |
swakane canyon fire: Bulletin - Division of Mines and Geology Washington (State). Division of Mines and Geology, 1949 |
swakane canyon fire: Mountain Goats and Mountain Sheep of Washington Rolf L. Johnson, Frank R. Lockard, 1983 |
swakane canyon fire: Draft Environmental Impact Statement, Proposed Land and Resource Management Plan, Wenatchee National Forest , 1986 |
swakane canyon fire: A Birders Guide to Washington, Second Edition Washington Ornithological Society, 2015-05-21 Few states show more dramatic contrasts in their environment than Washington. Elevations range from sea level to over 14,000 feet. Precipitation varies from over 200 inches annually on the Olympic Peninsula, nurturing a temperate rain forest and mountaintop glaciers, to a mere six inches in parts of the Columbia Basin, where near-desert conditions prevail. Between these extremes, an array of aquatic and terrestrial communities supports a remarkable diversity of bird species. This revised version of A Birder's Guide to Washington brings current the 2003 first edition, and, in the process, adds a number of new destinations, while eliminating a few that are no longer worthwhile. The guide details hundreds of birding routes and sites in the state, together with year-round access instructions and birding advice. Over 220 maps pinpoint the most productive destinations in the field and offer regional overviews to help with trip planning. An annotated checklist of 510 species recorded in the state through 2014 gives information about status and habitat associations, while the seasonal abundance and regional occurrence bar graphs will assist birders in locating regularly occurring species. |
swakane canyon fire: Land and Resource Management Plan United States. Forest Service. Pacific Northwest Region, 1990 |
swakane canyon fire: Western Cordillera and Adjacent Areas Terry W Swanson, 2003 This title includes guides for field trips held in conjunction with the 2003 GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle. Topics covered include Glacial Lake Missoula and the Clark Fork Ice Dam; the Sauk Sequence in Utah; the geology of wine in Washington state; the Columbia River basalt and Yakima Fold Belt; Alpine glaciation of the North Cascades; and recent geoarchaeological discoveries in central Washington. Quaternary geology of Seattle, engineering geology in the central Columbia Valley, and the tephrostratigraphy and paleogeography of southern Puget Sound are also covered. |
swakane canyon fire: Game Bulletin , 1949 |
swakane canyon fire: Wenatchee National Forest (N.F.), First Creek Basin Restoration Project , 1996 |
swakane canyon fire: Pacific Architect and Builder , 1959 |
swakane canyon fire: River Hydraulics U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, 2004-12-01 This manual presents the techniques and procedures that are used to investigate and resolve river engineering and analysis issues and the associated data requirements. It also provides guidance for the selection of appropriate methods to be used for planning and conducting the studies. Documented herein are past experiences that provide valuable information for detecting and avoiding problems in planning, performing, and reporting future studies. The resolution of river hydraulics issues always requires prediction of one or more flow parameters; be it stage (i.e., water surface elevation), velocity, or rate of sediment transport. This manual presents pragmatic methods for obtaining data and performing the necessary computations; it also provides guidance for determining the components of various types of studies. |
swakane canyon fire: Cascade Alpine Guide; Stevens Pass to Rainy Pass Fred Beckey, 2003-06-09 * Cascades climbing routes -- the guidebooks relied on for more than 25 years * Northwest climbing legend Fred Beckey has summited and explored hundreds of Cascade peaks * Hand-drawn maps and photos with route overlays, as well as approach information Volume II in the classic Cascade Alpine Guide series features expert information on more than 300 climbing and high routes in the Cascades. This volume covers the middle of the Cascade Range, from the foothills east of Puget Sound to Lake Chelan. You'll find geographical, historical, and geological overviews of the majestic mid-Cascade region, plus important tips on safety and backcountry usage. Legendary author/climber Fred Beckey includes technical and grade information for each route to make clear exactly what type of climb you are embarking upon. |
swakane canyon fire: Detrital thermochronology Matthias Bernet, Cornelia Spiegel, 2004-01-01 |
swakane canyon fire: Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forests (N.F.), Natapoc Ridge Restoration Project, Chelan County , 2007 |
swakane canyon fire: Signpost for Northwest Trails , 1995 |
swakane canyon fire: Manual of Field Geology. Robert R Compton, 2020-12-04 Describes the methods, procedures, and specialized equipment of field work in geology and includes a guide to making maps of specific areas. A guide to advances in the increasingly broad and interpretive discipline of formation mapping theory. Thorough, yet compact enough for use in the field, it consists of brief descriptions of textures and structures useful in interpreting depositional environments, kinds of volcanic activity, and plutonic events and conditions. Included are procedures often reserved for the laboratory or office: staining rocks, correcting orientations of current indicators, constructing profile sections of folds, measuring strains, making photogeologic interpretations, and more. Covers pre-field considerations, methods of observation and measurement, recognition of key geologic features, and preparation of a report. Illustrated with composite drawings |
swakane canyon fire: The Timberman , 1912 |
swakane canyon fire: The Lumber Manufacturer and Dealer , 1912 |
swakane canyon fire: Washington Wildlife , 1949 |
swakane canyon fire: Commerce Business Daily , 1998-08 |
swakane canyon fire: Information Circular Washington (State). Division of Mines and Geology, 1953 |
swakane canyon fire: Research Studies of the State College of Washington State College of Washington, 1956 Vols. 8- include: Proceedings of the Pacific Sociological Society, 11th Annual Meeting (Dec. 27-29, 1939)- |
swakane canyon fire: Information Circular - State of Washington, Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines and Geology Washington (State). Division of Mines and Geology, 1953 |
swakane canyon fire: Visible Bones Jack Nisbet, 2014-04-01 How can you know a place? Historian and naturalist Jack Nisbet&—author of Sources of the River: Tracking David Thompson Across Western North America&—looks to the relics of a region to connect the present moment to the distant past. In the vast Western territory defined by the Columbia River, Nisbet tracks the stories and meaning of relics such as a trilobite fossil that points to a tropical prehistoric ecology; the nearly extinct California condor, once the largest thing in the skies, described with amazement by Meriwether Lewis; the indelible stain of the smallpox pandemic that overcame the native peoples of the West; a rare and socially potent strain of indigenous wild tobacco that reveals the presence of vestigial Indian practices; and the remains of one Jaco Finlay, a mixed-blood trapper and scout who seems to have been everywhere in the region two hundred years ago. All of these relics are the visible bones that show how past is present in the Columbia River Country. Together the stories these bones tell lays out a wholly original, hybrid history that connects nature with human endeavor, geography with the passage of time&—all contribute to the biography of a place. The arrow of time travels in one direction, and this is usually how history is told: beginning to end. But Jack Nisbet is up to something else: journeys across time through a place, knitting past to present and back again to assemble a portrait of the land that marked the culmination of Lewis & Clark’s expedition, that saw the sad end of the Indian Wars with the flight of Chief Joseph, that has offered up fossil proof of mammoth species long extinct. In this western territory, the storied past is much in evidence. |
swakane canyon fire: Mineral Resources of the Wenatchee-Ellensburg-Yakima Region Sheldon Latta Glover, 1942 |
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