Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest

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Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest
IUCN Category VI (Managed Resource Protected Area)
Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest
Location: Montana, USA
Nearest city: Butte, MT
Coordinates: 46°08′0″N, 112°50′0″W
Area: 3.32 million acres (13,435 km²)
Established: 1905
Governing body: U.S. Forest Service

The Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest is the largest of the National Forests in Montana, United States. Covering 3.32 million acres (13,435 km²), the forest is broken into nine separate sections and stretches across eight counties in the southwestern area of the state. President Theodore Roosevelt named the two forests in 1908 and they were merged in 1996. In Roosevelt's original legislation, the Deerlodge National Forest was called the Big Hole Forest Reserve. He created this reserve because the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, based in Butte, Montana, had begun to clearcut the upper Big Hole River watershed. The subsequent erosion, exacerbated by smoke pollution from the Anaconda smelter, was devastating the region. Ranchers and conservationists alike complained to Roosevelt, who made several trips to the area. (Munday 2001)

The Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness is located in the Beaverhead portion of the forest. The Beaverhead section includes most of the Pioneer, Gravelly, and Sapphire Ranges. Both the Centennial and Bitterroot mountain ranges are also located here with the Continental divide found in the Bitterroot range. "Lemhi Pass, at elevation 7,323 feet (2,300 m) above sea level, is a rounded saddle in the Beaverhead Mountains of the Bitterroot Range, along the Continental Divide, between Montana and Idaho. Here, in 1805, the Lewis and Clark Expedition first saw the headwaters of the Columbia River, which flow to the Pacific Ocean, and crossed what was then the western boundary of the United States." Lemhi Pass was the point at which the members of the expedition realized that there was not a waterway that would lead from east to west across the continent. Lemhi Pass was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960.

The Deerlodge portion of the forest encompasses much of the Tobacco Root Mountains and Flint Creek Range, parts of the Elkhorn Mountains, and also straddles parts of the continental divide in the Boulder and Highland Mountains and has a number of ghost towns as reminders of the extensive mining history of the region. The Lee Metcalf Wilderness, in the Madison mountain range, is a part of what is known as the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

 Lemhi Pass in the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest
Lemhi Pass in the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest

Ponderosa pine, and various species of fir, spruce and juniper are the dominant tree species. Almost a third of the forest lands have no forest at all, and are instead rangeland with sagebrush, grass and the occasional cactus. The forest is also home to the threatened grizzly bear, lynx, bald eagle, bull trout, Arctic grayling, and the endangered wolf, the latter being a migrant from northern Montana and from the Yellowstone wolf reintroduction program. elk, mule deer, moose, bighorn sheep and pronghorn antelope and black bear are more commonly found.

The highest mountains in the forest top out at over 11,000 feet (3,400 m). The Continental Divide National Scenic Trail and the Nez Perce National Historical Trail both pass through sections of the forest. In total, there are over 1,500 miles (2,400 km) of hiking trails, 50 campgrounds, dozens of lake and river boating access points and even 250 miles (400 km) of groomed snowmobile trails.

Forest Service offices administering the National Forest are in Butte, Dillon (which is the headquarters location), Philipsburg, Deer Lodge, Whitehall, Boulder, Ennis, Sheridan, Wise River, Wisdom, and Lima. Interstate 15 and Interstate 90, State Highways 43 and 278, and the Pioneer Mountains Scenic Byway all provide access to forest service roads, trailheads and local communities near the forest.

[edit] References

Pat Munday 2001. Montana's Last Best River: The Big Hole River and its People (Lyons Press).

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