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Unique and charming gift book about iconic Mount Rainier National Park from a beloved artist's perspective
Home to more than 120 alpine plant species, three of which are found nowhere else in the world, Mount Rainier remains a refuge for a diversity of flora and fauna. It is also a magnet for the hundreds of thousands of people who live within sight of its snowy slopes and for millions of visitors who arrive from around the world each year. O'Hara and McNulty explore the conflict this presents as park managers attempt to balance protection of the mountain's fragile ecosystems with the desires of the many who wish to seek solitude in its vast forests or challenge themselves on its daunting glaciers.
A description of the deposits of seven successive rockfalls and avalanches at Mount Rainier volcano, and of their origin and manner of transport.
An imposing geologic feature that once provided a variety of natural resources for the indigenous people who lived nearby, the sheer size of Mount Rainier prompted many to call it simply The Mountain, or "Takhoma." The volcanic cone towers to 14,410 feet and comprises about one-fourth of the 377-square-mile national park. The area's formidable physical characteristics had long impeded modern anthropological research. In 1963, when faculty at Washington State University decided to explore the locality's prehistory under contract with the National Park Service, its archaeological past was virtually unknown. Combining an exhaustive search of pre-existing data and literature with a field study c...