Garnet Range

Garnet Range
Range
Garnet Ghost Town, Garnet Range
Country United States
State Montana
Highest point Old Baldy Mountain
 - elevation 7,511 ft (2,289 m)
 - coordinates

The Garnet Range, highest point Old Baldy Mountain, elevation 7,511 feet (2,289 m),[1] is a mountain range northeast of Drummond, Montana in Powell County, Montana.

A popular historic site, Garnet Ghost Town, is in the Garnet Range. Situated on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land, the ghost town is the remnant of a mining settlement that was inhabited from the late 1800's to the 1930's.[2] The town's population reached several thousand during its peak.[2] A visitor center and self-guided tours are available.[2]

Although heavily forested, no portion of the Garnet Range is part of the National Forest system. The BLM owns much of the range, including the 11,580-acre Wales Creek Wilderness Study Area.[3] The Wales Creek WSA is the last major unroaded drainage in the western Garnets, and features dense forests of lodgepole pine, spruce, douglas fir, larch, aspen, and subalpine fir.[4] Wales Creek WSA also hosts a thriving moose herd, goshawk nesting sites, a native cutthroat trout fishery, and four hot springs used in the past by miners and now by skiers and hunters.[4]

Another BLM Wilderness Study Area is in the eastern Garnets: the 11,380-acre Hoodoo Mountain WSA. This WSA is separated from unprotected BLM land in the Gallagher Creek drainage by a dirt road. Petrified wood is found along streams in the Gallagher Creek area.[4]

On the southern slope of the Garnets near the town of Drummond, the BLM's Rattler Gulch Area of Critical Environmental Concern protects 20 acres of exposed Madison Group limestone cliffs.[5] Parking is provided, as Rattler Gulch is a popular rock-climbing area.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Recreational Map of Western Montana. Canon City, CO: Western GeoGraphics. 1990. ISBN 0-528-92551-2. 
  2. ^ a b c Montana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, ME: DeLorme. 2004. p. 13. ISBN 0-89933-339-7. 
  3. ^ "National Landscape Conservation System - Wilderness Study Areas". http://www.blm.gov/pgdata/etc/medialib/blm/ut/natural_resources/nlcs/wilderness_study_areas.Par.88202.File.dat/WSAs%20throughout%20the%20Country.pdf. Retrieved 7 December 2011. 
  4. ^ a b c Cunningham, Bill (1990). Montana Wildlands. Helena, MT: American Geographic Publishing. pp. 43-44. ISBN 0-938314-93-9. 
  5. ^ Montana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, ME: DeLorme. 2004. pp. 5. ISBN 0-89933-339-7. 
  6. ^ rockclimbing.com. "Rattler Gulch". http://www.rockclimbing.com/routes/North_America/United_States/Montana/South_West/Rattler_Gulch/. Retrieved 14 December 2011. 

External links