Black Canyon Wilderness (Oregon)

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Black Canyon Wilderness
IUCN Category Ib (Wilderness Area)
Black Canyon Wilderness
Location Oregon, USA
Nearest city Paulina, Oregon
Coordinates 44°20′13″N 119°39′15″W / 44.33694, -119.65417
Area 13,400-acre (54.2 km²)
Established 1984
Governing body United States Forest Service

Black Canyon Wilderness is a wilderness area in the Ochoco National Forest. It drainage basin of the South Fork of the John Day River. It lies in Grant and Wheeler counties of Oregon. The nearest city is Dayville, in Grant County.[1] It was established in 1984 and encompasses 13,400 acres (21 mi², 54 km²).

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[edit] Topography

The elevation ranges from 2,850 to 6,483 feet (870–1975 m). There are about seventeen miles of developed trail; eighty percent of the wilderness has a grade exceeding thirty percent, typically steep canyons and sharp ridges.[2] Three sides of the canyon reach elevations to 6,000 feet (1,829 m), while waters in the gorge have downcut through basalt lava, emptying into the South Fork of the John Day River at 2,800 feet (853 m).[1][3]

[edit] Vegetation

Sagebrush
Sagebrush

Much of the Black Canyon Wilderness consists of a dry sagebrush environment, but ponderosa pine, mountain mahogany, juniper, and fir forests can also be explored.

[edit] Wildlife

A wide range of vegetative conditions in the Wilderness provide habitat for nearly 300 different species of wildlife, including Black Bear, cougar, deer, elk, and rattlesnake. Steelhead trout can be found in perennial streams, which they use for spawning. Wildflowers such as Crimson Columbine, Lupine, and Indian paintbrush flourish throughout the Wilderness.[1][2][4]

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links