Peninsulas of Oregon

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View of Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge and Three Arch Rocks National Wildlife Refuge Cape Meares and the Three Arch Rocks.jpg
View of Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge and Three Arch Rocks National Wildlife Refuge

Many coastal peninsulas of Oregon are properly headlands, often called capes.

Contents

Major navigation and geographic landmarks

1866 United States survey from the Oregon Historical Society digital collections Oregon Historical Society digital collections 1866 United States survey 02.jpg
1866 United States survey from the Oregon Historical Society digital collections

Unless otherwise specified the source of the list is the Oregon maps of the Smithsonian's 1899 Indian Land Cessions of the United States. [1] Ordered north to south:

  1. Point Adams (see Point Adams Light)
  2. Tillamook Head (see Tillamook Rock Lighthouse)
  3. Cape Falcon (formerly known as False Tillamook, see Oswald West State Park and Cape Falcon Marine Reserve)
  4. Cape Meares (see Cape Meares Lighthouse)
  5. Cape Lookout
  6. Cape Foulweather
  7. Yaquina Head (see Yaquina Bay Lighthouse and Yaquina Head Lighthouse)
  8. Cape Perpetua
  9. Coos Head and Coos Bay Peninsula on Coos Bay
  10. Cape Arago (see Cape Arago State Park and Cape Arago Lighthouse)
  11. Cape Blanco (see Cape Blanco Lighthouse)
  12. Crook Point and Mack Arch (also known as Arch Rock)

Other headlands, promontories, rocks and stacks

Ordered alphabetically:

The coast of Oregon also has a number of significant sea stacks. [2]

See also

Related Research Articles

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The Oregon Coast is a coastal region of the U.S. state of Oregon. It is bordered by the Pacific Ocean to its west and the Oregon Coast Range to the east, and stretches approximately 362 miles (583 km) from the California state border in the south to the Columbia River in the north. The region is not a specific geological, environmental, or political entity, and includes the Columbia River Estuary.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cape Blanco (Oregon)</span>

Cape Blanco is a prominent headland on the Pacific Ocean coast of southwestern Oregon in the United States, forming the westernmost point in the state. Cape Blanco extends farther west than any point of land in the contiguous United States except portions of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, including Cape Alava, the true westernmost point. The cape is part of Cape Blanco State Park and is the location of the Cape Blanco Light, first lit in 1870.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cape Lookout (Oregon)</span>

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The Cape Meares Light is an inactive lighthouse on the coast of Oregon. It is located on Cape Meares just south of Tillamook Bay. It is open to the public.

Cape Meares is a small headland on the Pacific coast in Tillamook County, Oregon, United States. The cape forms a high steep bluff on the south end of Tillamook Bay, approximately five miles (8 km) northwest of the city of Tillamook. Much of the cape is part of the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department-administered Cape Meares State Scenic Viewpoint with three miles of hiking trails, which includes Cape Meares Light and the Octopus Tree. The cape is named after John Meares, a British explorer.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heceta Head</span> Coastal headland in Oregon, United States

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The Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex consists of six National Wildlife Refuges along the Oregon Coast. It provides wilderness protection to thousands of small islands, rocks, reefs, headlands, marshes, and bays totaling 371 acres spanning 320 miles (515 km) of Oregon's coastline. The areas are all managed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge</span>

Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge of the Oregon Coast. It is one of six National Wildlife Refuges in the Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex. Located on Cape Meares, the refuge was established in 1938 to protect a remnant of coastal old-growth forest and the surrounding habitat used by breeding seabirds. The area provides a home for a threatened bird species, the marbled murrelets. Peregrine falcons, once at the brink of extinction, have nested here since 1987. The refuge, with the exception of the Oregon Coast Trail, was designated a Research Natural Area in 1987.

Point Adams Light was a lighthouse near the mouth of the Columbia River on the Oregon Coast of the United States. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Point Adams's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro, California, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Mare Island Light, in Carquinez Strait, California, Point Hueneme Light in California, and Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, all in essentially the same style. It operated from February 15, 1875 until 1899, when it became obsolete by the extension of the south jetty and the establishment of the Lightship Columbia in 1892. The lighthouse was considered a fire hazard and demolished in 1912.

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United States Coast Guard Station Cape Disappointment, situated near Cape Disappointment, Washington, at the mouth of the Columbia River, is the largest United States Coast Guard search and rescue station on the Northwest Coast, with 50 crewmembers assigned. Cape Disappointment Station is also the site of the oldest search and rescue station within the Thirteenth Coast Guard District. The station's Area of Responsibility reaches from Ocean Park on the Washington Coast south to Tillamook Head on the Oregon Coast.

References

  1. "Oregon 1". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
  2. Oregonian/OregonLive, Jamie Hale | The (2020-01-12). "The 20 best sea stacks on the Oregon coast". oregonlive. Retrieved 2023-04-15.