Clear Range
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The Clear Range is a small mountain range located in the angle of the Fraser and Thompson Rivers in south-central British Columbia. It has a small subdivision just northeast of that confluence named the Scarped Range. The Clear Range totals c16,270 km² (6280 mi²) and is 75 km north to south and 35 km east to west (at its widest point).
It and the neighbouring Marble Range line the east bank of the Fraser River north of the town of Lytton, British Columbia. The Clear Range extends as far as the town of Pavilion and is bounded by the south wall of Marble Canyon on the north. The southeast flank of the Clear Range is the Thompson River between Ashcroft and Lytton, while to its northeast are the Cornwall and Trachyte Hills, and beyond them the Arrowstone Hills of the Bonaparte Plateau. The range is horseshoe-shaped, facing the high rangeland-plateau basin of Hat Creek, which drains northeast to join the Bonaparte River, a tributary of the Thompson All of these areas, including the Clear Range are classified by geographers as belonging to the Cariboo Plateau, itself part of the greater Fraser Plateau, aka the Interior Plateau.
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[edit] Terrain
The outer flanks of the range are extremely steep, particularly on the side of the Fraser, where the northerly peaks are a high plateau-edge almost 2000 metres (7000 ft) above the river below. The core of the range is extremely rugged and has a complex series of interlocking valley. Karst formations throughout the area suggest caves, though none have been discovered, and there are scores of intermittent waterfalls and subalpine swamps. The northern edge of the Clear Range is the south wall of Marble Canyon.
The highest summits are Blustry Mountain 2334 m (7657 ft), its neighbour Cairn Peak 2328 m (7638 ft), and north of them Moore Peak 2223 m (7293 ft) and Chipuin Mountain 2170 m (7119 ft). The highest peak in the southern part of the range is Botanie Mountain (bu-TAN-ee), just north of Lytton 2077 m (6814 ft), but higher in the centre of the range is Mount Murray 2153 m (7064 ft). A distinctly separate ridge across the Fraser River from Lillooet is named Fountain Ridge. It is geologically distinct, actually a sliver of plate between the Fraser and Yalakom Faults.
[edit] Flora and fauna
The climate is varied, though mostly dry, especially on the west and southeast. The interior of the range gets more waterfall and was heavily-treed relative to the canyons flanking it
Typical boreal forest and mountain wlidlife prevail: grizzly bear, black bear, black-tail deer, moose, and various rodents. The range's reptile populations includes several varieties of dryland lizard and also the timber rattlesnake; the Clear Range is the farthest northwest extent of the rattlesnake.
[edit] History and culture
The Clear Range is largely the domain of the Thompson First Nation or Nlaka'pamux, although the northwest edge of the range is occupied by communities of the St'at'imc First Nation and a rancherie of the Bonaparte River band of the Shuswap Nation at Marble Canyon. There are no urban settlements or towns in the range although it is skirted by three major highways and also three rail lines (the BCR, CPR and CNR).
Due to its location, it overlooked the great movement of goldseekers during the Fraser Canyon and Cariboo Gold Rushes although no major mines or deposits were found on its slopes. At its northern extremity there is a large deposit of low-grade lignite, adjacent to Marble Canyon on the northwestern edge of the Hat Creek basin that has long been proposed for a major open-pit coal mine and coal-powered generating plant.
The area is heavily logged but thereby interlaced with logging roads and other trails popular with 4x4 recreationists, mountain bikers and others.