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Locating Native American history of area [to come] Crater Lake National Park celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2005.
- The second deepest lake in the Western Hemisphere.
- The seventh deepest lake in the world.
- Maximum lake depth: 1932 feet.
For more information, click here to visit the National Park Service website.
http://www.nps.gov/crla/
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Lava Beds National Mounument is located approximately 25 miles south of the Oregon/California border.
It is included on the Klamath County map because of its geologic and historic ties to the region. For centuries, the Tulelake area was home to the Modoc Indians. An attempt to forcibly remove the Modoc Chief Captain Jack and his 52 warriors from the Lava Beds led to a 5-month standoff with the U.S. Army.
Battle sites from the Modoc Was have been carefully preserved. The National Mounument has the largest concentration of lava tubes in the Continental United States.
For more information, click here to visit the National Park Service website.
http://www.nps.gov/archive/labe/content/HISTORY_Oregon.htm
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Over 430 species of wildlife have been identified in the Klamath Basin's seven National Wildlife Refuges.
In the spring and fall, millions of migrating duck, geese, and swans descend from the Pacific Flyway for rest and nourishment. A winter population of 1,000 bald eagles begins arriving in the basin by mid-February. The broad range of habitat within the refuges supports an equally broad range of wildlife: cranes, pelicans, marmots, owls, otters, deer, sheep, porcupine and an estimated 263 bird species.
For more information, click here to visit the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service website.
http://www.fws.gov/klamathbasinrefuges/
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