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Northern Oregon Coast Range facts for kids

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Northern Oregon Coast Range
Lewis and Clark River 3641.JPG
The Northern Coast Range, seen from Saddle Mountain in Clatsop County
Highest point
Peak Rogers Peak
Elevation 3,706 ft (1,130 m)
Dimensions
Length 100 mi (160 km) north–south
Geography
Country United States
Parent range Oregon Coast Range, Pacific Coast Ranges
Geology
Orogeny Geologic fault, basalt flows
Age of rock Paleocene and Eocene
Type of rock volcanic and forearc basin

The Northern Oregon Coast Range is the northern section of the Oregon Coast Range, in the Pacific Coast Ranges physiographic region, located in the northwest portion of the state of Oregon, United States. This section of the mountain range, part of the Pacific Coast Ranges, contains peaks as high as 3,710 feet (1,131 m) for Rogers Peak. Forests in these mountains are considered to be some of the most productive timber land in the world. The Central Oregon Coast Range is directly south of this section with the Southern Oregon Coast Range beyond the central range.

Geology

The origins of these mountains began approximately 40 million years ago during the Eocene age. During this time-period, sandstone and siltstone formed in the area. Additionally, igneous rocks and basalt flows combined with basaltic sandstone to create many of the mountainous formations. Other sedimentary rock in the area formed more recently, around 20 million years ago. It is hypothesized that portions of the northern section of the range were islands during parts of the Eocene era. Other portions of the mountains consist of marine sedimentary rock. The entire coast range sits on a convergent tectonic margin interacting with the Juan de Fuca Plate that is subducting beneath North America tectonic plate. Also, weathering and erosion of the region is a major factor in shaping the landscape. Heavy rainfall and landslides have worked to alter the mountains.

The range is part of a broad, plunging structural arch of sedimentary and Tertiary volcanic strata that is being uplifted. Eocene and Miocene sections form the flanks of the uplifted sections. Some of the oldest rocks are submarine tholeiitic basalts from the Eocene era. The basalt came from the basalt flows that covered much of Oregon and originated from volcanoes in the central portion of the state. Other rocks include sandstone, mudstone, and siltstone. It was during the middle Miocene period that the range was uplifted in the broad, northeast-plunging arch.

Flora and fauna

Northern Oregon Coast Range logging
Logging in the mountains

Portions of the range are in the Siuslaw National Forest and Tillamook State Forest, and large sections of the range were burned in forest fires during the 1930s and 1940s as part of the Tillamook Burn. In the forested areas trees include Sitka spruce, western redcedar, Douglas fir, and western hemlock. Other plants that grow in the region are huckleberry, salmonberry, thimbleberry, salal, vine maple, sword and bracken ferns and Oregon grape to name a few.

Arthropods and molluscs found include collembolans, spiders, beetles, slugs, millipedes and various centipedes. Animals that inhabit the Northern Coast range are weevils, chipmunks, bears, rabbits, white-footed deer mice, Columbian black tail deer and others. Birds include chickadees, red-breasted nuthatches, kinglets, Western pileated woodpeckers, Oregon Canada jays, California creepers, and Sitka red crossbills among others.

Location and climate

The range begins at the Columbia River, with some mountainous features on the north side of the river, and continues south roughly 100 miles (160 km) to the Salmon River where Oregon Route 18 traverses the range from the Willamette Valley to the Oregon Coast. The width of the range varies but is roughly 35 miles (56 km).

The climate of the range is moderate because of marine influences, and annual precipitation is heavy, varying from 60 to 180 inches (1,500 to 4,600 mm).

Peaks

Northern Oregon Coast Range from near Balm Grove
Fog covering the mountains near Balm Grove
Youngs River from Astoria Column - Oregon
Youngs River, Saddle Mountain (Clatsop County, Oregon) and the Northern Oregon Coast Range from the Astoria Column

All mountains over 3,000 feet (910 m) in elevation in the Northern Coast Range.

Mountain Name Elevation County
feet metres
Rogers Peak 3,706 1,130 Tillamook
South Saddle Mountain 3,465 1,056 Washington
Larch Mountain 3,452 1,052 Washington
Trask Mountain 3,426 1,044 Yamhill
Saddle Mountain 3,288 1,002 Clatsop
Triangulation Point 3,235 986 Tillamook
Kings Mountain 3,226 983 Tillamook
Mount Hebo 3,154 961 Yamhill
Edwards Butte 3,136 956 Tillamook
Buck Mountain 3,097 944 Tillamook
Sheridan Peak 3,091 942 Yamhill
Woods Point 3,084 940 Tillamook
Gobblers Knob 3,058 932 Tillamook
Onion Peak 3,057 932 Clatsop

Other peaks

Rivers

USGS Oregon Northern Coast Range
Map of the region with major rivers in blue. Orange line shows divide between watersheds flowing to the east and those flowing north or west.

The following rivers have their headwaters in the Northern Oregon Coast Range:

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