From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Mount Hood
Stratovolcano in Oregon, United States
Stratovolcano in Oregon, United States
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Mount Hood |
| photo | Oregon Mount Hood from Trillium Lake 2024.jpg |
| photo_caption | Mount Hood reflected in Trillium Lake, 2024 |
| elevation_ft | 11249 |
| elevation_ref | |
| prominence_ft | 7706 |
| prominence_ref | |
| listing | {{bulleted list |
| location | Clackamas / Hood River counties, Oregon, U.S. |
| range | Cascade Range |
| map_image | Oregon volcanoes map.gif |
| map_caption | Location relative to other Oregon volcanoes |
| label_position | right |
| coordinates | |
| coordinates_ref | |
| topo | USGS Mount Hood South |
| formed_by | Subduction zone volcanism |
| type | Stratovolcano |
| age | More than 500,000 years |
| volcanic_arc | Cascade Volcanic Arc |
| last_eruption | 21 September 1865 to January 1866 |
| first_ascent | July 11, 1857, by Henry Pittock, W. Lymen Chittenden, Wilbur Cornell, and the Rev. T. A. Wood |
| easiest_route | Rock and glacier climb |
the highest mountain in Oregon
|North America prominent peak 49th |US most prominent peaks 28th |US state high point 13th |Oregon county high points }}
Mount Hood, also known as Wy'east, is an active stratovolcano in the Cascade Range and is a member of the Cascade Volcanic Arc. It was formed by a subduction zone on the Pacific Coast and rests in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is located about 50 mi east-east-southeast of Portland, on the border between Clackamas and Hood River counties, and forms part of the Mount Hood National Forest. Much of the mountain outside the ski areas is part of the Mount Hood Wilderness. With a summit elevation of 11,249 ft, it is the highest mountain in the U.S. state of Oregon and is the fourth highest in the Cascade Range. Ski areas on the mountain include Timberline Lodge ski area which offers the only year-round lift-served skiing in North America, Mount Hood Meadows, Mount Hood Skibowl, Summit Ski Area, and Cooper Spur ski area. Mt. Hood attracts an estimated 10,000 climbers a year.
The peak is home to 12 named glaciers and snowfields. Mount Hood is considered the Oregon volcano most likely to erupt. The odds of an eruption in the next 30 years are estimated at between 3 and 7%, so the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) characterizes it as "potentially active", but the mountain is informally considered dormant.
Establishments

Timberline Lodge is a National Historic Landmark located on the southern flank of Mount Hood just below Palmer Glacier, with an elevation of about 6000 ft.
The mountain has four ski areas: Timberline, Mount Hood Meadows, Ski Bowl, and Cooper Spur. They total over 4600 acre of skiable terrain; Timberline, with one lift having a base at nearly 6940 ft, offers the only year-round lift-served skiing in North America.
There are a few remaining shelters on Mount Hood still in use today. Those include the Coopers Spur, Cairn Basin, and McNeil Point shelters as well as the Tilly Jane A-frame cabin. The summit was home to a fire lookout in the early 1900s; however, the lookout did not withstand the weather and no longer remains today.
Mount Hood is within the Mount Hood National Forest, which comprises 1067043 acre of land, including four designated wilderness areas that total 314078 acre, and more than 1200 mi of hiking trails.
The most northwestern pass around the mountain is called Lolo Pass. Native Americans crossed the pass while traveling between the Willamette Valley and Celilo Falls.
Naming
Indigenous names
It has been difficult to establish place names for Mount Hood that are of indigenous etymology, or to reconstruct names that may have been used prior to European contact.[[File:Mount Hood 2619s.jpg|thumb|left|View of Mount Hood from the west]]
Wy'east
The name Wy'east has been associated with Mount Hood for more than a century, but no evidence suggests that it is a genuine name for the mountain in any indigenous language. The name was possibly inspired by an 1890 work of author Frederic Balch, although Balch does not use it himself. The name may have been popularized by his story being combined with a play around 1911 at Pacific College. It is also possible it was 'invented' by scholars in the 20th century or even a minister hearing it second-hand around the same time the play was happening.
In one version of Balch's story, the two sons of the Great Spirit Sahale fell in love with the beautiful maiden Loowit, who could not decide which to choose. The two braves, Wy'east and Pahto (unnamed in his novel, but appearing in a later adaptation), burned forests and villages in their battle over her. Sahale became enraged and smote the three lovers. Seeing what he had done, he erected three mountain peaks to mark where each fell. He made beautiful Mount St. Helens for Loowit, proud and erect Mount Hood for Wy'east, and the somber Mount Adams for the mourning Pahto.
There are other versions of the legend. In another telling, Wy'east (Hood) battles Pahto (Adams) for the fair La-wa-la-clough (St. Helens). Or again Wy'east, the chief of the Multnomah tribe, competed with the chief of the Klickitat tribe. Their great anger led to their transformation into volcanoes. Their battle is said to have destroyed the Bridge of the Gods and thus created the great Cascades Rapids of the Columbia River.
Other names
The mountain sits partly inside the reservation of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, which comprises multiple languages including Sahaptin, Upper Chinook/Kiksht (Wasco) and Numu (Paiute). However, it has been difficult to determine names originating from these or other indigenous languages specifically referring to Mount Hood. Eugene Hunn suggests that the mountain may have lacked a specific name:Learning a landscape is not simply a matter of naming all the rivers and mountains... The Native American perspective emphasizes by contrast places as focal points of activity, places where significant human-landscape interactions occur. Thus, while a few prominent peaks may be given Indian names, such as taxùma [təqʷuʔməʔ] for Mt. Rainier (in the Puget Salish language) or lawilayt-łà [lawílatɬa], literally "the smoker," for Mt. St. Helens (in Sahaptin), other prominent peaks, e.g. Mts. Adams and Hood, are known simply as pàtu, a general term for snow-capped summit.
Current name

The mountain was given its present name on October 29, 1792, by Lt. William Broughton, a member of Captain George Vancouver's exploration expedition. Lt. Broughton observed its peak while at Belle Vue Point of what is now called Sauvie Island during his travels up the Columbia River, writing, "A very high, snowy mountain now appeared rising beautifully conspicuous in the midst of an extensive tract of low or moderately elevated land location of today's [Vancouver, Washington] lying S 67 E., and seemed to announce a termination to the river." Lt. Broughton named the mountain after Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood, a British admiral.

Lewis and Clark spotted the mountain on October 18, 1805. A few days later at what would become The Dalles, Clark wrote, "The pinnacle of the round topped mountain, which we saw a short distance below the banks of the river, is South 43-degrees West of us and about 37 mi. It is at this time topped with snow. We called this the Falls Mountain, or Timm Mountain." Timm was the native name for Celilo Falls. Clark later noted that it was also Vancouver's Mount Hood.
Two French explorers from the Hudson's Bay Company may have traveled into the Dog River area east of Mount Hood in 1818. They reported climbing to a glacier on "Montagne de Neige" (Mountain of Snow), probably Eliot Glacier.
Namesakes
,_crop.jpg)
There have been two United States Navy ammunition ships named for Mount Hood. USS Mount Hood (AE-11) was commissioned in July 1944 and was destroyed in November 1944 while at anchor in Manus Naval Base, Admiralty Islands. Her explosive cargo ignited, resulting in 45 confirmed dead, 327 missing and 371 injured. A second ammunition ship, AE-29, was commissioned in May 1971 and decommissioned in August 1999.
Volcanic activity

The glacially eroded summit area consists of several andesitic or dacitic lava domes; Pleistocene collapses produced avalanches and lahars (rapidly moving mudflows) that traveled across the Columbia River to the north. The eroded volcano has had at least four major eruptive periods during the past 15,000 years.
The last three eruptions at Mount Hood occurred within the past 1,800 years from vents high on the southwest flank and produced deposits that were distributed primarily to the south and west along the Sandy and Zigzag rivers. The volcano has had a VEI of 2 at least three times before. The last eruptive period took place around 220 to 170 years ago, when dacitic lava domes, pyroclastic flows and mudflows were produced without major explosive eruptions. The prominent Crater Rock just below the summit is hypothesized to be the remains of one of these now-eroded domes. This period includes the last major eruption of 1781 to 1782 with a slightly more recent episode ending shortly before the arrival of the explorers Lewis and Clark in 1805. The latest minor eruptive event was thought to have occurred in August 1907, but has been discredited as "an observation of non-eruptive fumarolic activity."
The glaciers on the mountain's upper slopes may be a source of potentially dangerous lahars when the mountain next erupts. There are vents near the summit that are known for emitting gases such as carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide. Prior to the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, the only known fatality related to volcanic activity in the Cascades occurred in 1934, when a climber suffocated in oxygen-poor air while exploring ice caves melted by fumaroles in Coalman Glacier on Mount Hood.
Since 1950, there have been several earthquake swarms each year at Mount Hood, most notably in July 1980 and June 2002. Seismic activity is monitored by the USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Washington, which issues weekly updates (and daily updates if significant eruptive activity is occurring at a Cascades volcano).
The most recent evidence of volcanic activity at Mount Hood consists of fumaroles near Crater Rock and hot springs on the flanks of the volcano.
Monitoring controversy



A conflict exists between protecting public safety and protecting the environment. In 2014, a USGS employee, Dr. Seth Moran, proposed installing new instruments on Mount Hood to warn of volcanic activity. The instruments were installed at four different locations on the mountain, including:
- three seismometers to measure earthquakes
- three Global Positioning System (GPS) instruments to measure ground movement
- one instrument to measure gas emissions The proposed locations were in a protected wilderness area, tightly controlled by the United States Forest Service. The project was opposed by Wilderness Watch, a conservation group.
Three monitoring stations were eventually installed on Mount Hood in 2020.
Elevation
Mount Hood was first seen by European explorers in 1792 and is believed to have maintained a consistent summit elevation, varying by no more than a few feet due to mild seismic activity. Elevation changes since the 1950s are predominantly due to improved survey methods and model refinements of the shape of the Earth (see vertical reference datum). Despite the physical consistency, the estimated elevation of Mount Hood has varied substantially over the years, as seen in the following table:
| Date | Stated Elevation | Source | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1854 | 18361 ft | title=Mount Hood: A Complete History | author=Grauer, Jack | publisher=self-published | date=July 1975 | pages=199, 291–292 | oclc=1849244}} |
| 1854 | 19400 ft | Belden | |||||
| 1857 | 14000 ft | Mitchell's School Atlas | |||||
| 1866 | 17600 ft | Rev. Atkinson | |||||
| 1867 | 11225 ft | Col. Williamson | |||||
| 1916 | 11253 ft | Adm. Colbert | |||||
| 1939 | 11245 ft | Adm. Colbert | |||||
| 1980 | 11239 ft | USGS using NGVD 29 | |||||
| 1991 | 11249 ft | U.S. National Geodetic Survey, 1986 measurement adjusted using NAVD 88 | |||||
| 1993 | 11240 ft | 11239 | ft | 0}} of slightly older origin | |||
| 2008? | 11235 ft | Encyclopedia Britannica |
Early explorers on the Columbia River estimated the elevation to be 10000 to. Two people in Thomas J. Dryer's 1854 expedition calculated the elevation to be 18361 ft and the tree line to be at 11250 ft. Two months later, a Mr. Belden claimed to have climbed the mountain during a hunting trip and determined it to be 19400 ft upon which "pores oozed blood, eyes bled, and blood rushed from their ears." Sometime by 1866, Reverend G. H. Atkinson determined it to be 17600 ft. A Portland engineer used surveying methods from a Portland baseline and calculated a height of between 18000 and. Many maps distributed in the late 19th century cited 18361 ft, though Mitchell's School Atlas gave 14000 ft as the correct value. For some time, many references assumed Mount Hood to be the highest point in North America.
Modern height surveys also vary, but not by the huge margins seen in the past. A 1993 survey by a scientific party that arrived at the peak's summit with 16 lb of electronic equipment reported a height of 11240 ft, claimed to be accurate to within 1.25 in. Many modern sources likewise list 11240 ft as the height. However, numerous others place the peak's height one foot lower, at 11239 ft. Finally, a height of 11249 ft has also been reported.
Glaciers

The glaciers and permanent snow fields have an area of 3331 acre and contain a volume of about 282000 acre.ft. Eliot Glacier is the largest glacier by volume at 73000 acre.ft, and has the thickest depth measured by ice radar at 361 ft. The largest glacier by surface area is the Coe-Ladd Glacier system at 531 acres.
Glaciers and snowfields cover about 80 percent of the mountain above the 6900 ft level. The glaciers declined by an average of 34 percent from 1907 to 2004. Glaciers on Mount Hood retreated through the first half of the 20th century, advanced or at least slowed their retreat in the 1960s and 1970s, and have since returned to a pattern of retreat. The neo-glacial maximum extents formed in the early 18th century.
During the last major glacial event between 29,000 and 10,000 years ago, glaciers reached down to the 2600 to level, a distance of 9.3 mi from the summit. The retreat released considerable outwash, some of which filled and flattened the upper Hood River Valley near Parkdale and formed Dee Flat.
Older glaciation produced moraines near Brightwood and distinctive cuts on the southeast side; they may date to 140,000 years ago.
| Glacier name | Area | Volume | Notes | Coordinates | (acres) | (km2) | (acre-feet) | (km3) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| url=https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1365/report.pdf | title=Ice Volumes on Cascade Volcanoes: Mount Rainier, Mount Hood, Three Sisters and Mount Shasta | publisher=USGS | work=Geological Survey Professional Paper 1365 | last1=Driedger | first2=Paul M. | last2=Kennard | year=1986 | access-date=2007-02-26 | url = https://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:2:531331087257812::NO::P1_CLASS,P1_COUNTY,P1_STATE:Glacier,Hood%20River,Oregon | title = Glaciers in Hood River County |
| Palmer | 32 acres | 1600 acre.ft | headwaters of the Salmon River | |||||||
| Coalman | 20 acres | 900 acre.ft | located between Crater Rock and the summit | |||||||
| White River | 133 acres | 7000 acre.ft | feeds the White River | |||||||
| Newton Clark | 491 acres | 32000 acre.ft | source of the East Fork Hood River | |||||||
| Eliot | 415 acres | 73000 acre.ft | source of Tilly Jane Creek and Eliot Branch, tributaries of Middle Fork Hood River | |||||||
| Langille | 99 acres | 7000 acre.ft | in Hood River watershed | |||||||
| Coe | 308 acres | 44000 acre.ft | source of Coe Branch, a tributary of Middle Fork Hood River | |||||||
| Ladd | 223 acres | 20000 acre.ft | source of McGee Creek, a tributary of West Fork Hood River | |||||||
| Glisan | ||||||||||
| Sandy | 294 acres | 2000 acre.ft | feeds Muddy Fork, a tributary of the Sandy River | |||||||
| Reid | 195 acres | 10000 acre.ft | feeds the Sandy River | |||||||
| Zigzag | 190 acres | 10000 acre.ft | feeds the Zigzag River | |||||||
| Total, including snow patches | 3331 acres | 282000 acre.ft |
Hiking

Mt. Hood National Forest is home to approximately 1,000 mi of trails. Cooper Spur Trail leads to 8,510 ft in elevation, the highest reachable point one can gain on the mountain without requiring mountaineering gear.
The Timberline Trail, which circumnavigates the entire mountain and rises as high as 7,300 ft, was built in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps. Typically, the 40.7 mi hike is snow-free from late July until the autumn snows begin. The trail includes over 10,000 ft of elevation gain and loss and can vary in distance year to year depending on river crossings. There are many access points, the shortest being a small walk from the Timberline Lodge. A portion of the Pacific Crest Trail is coincident with the Timberline Trail on the west side of Mount Hood.
The predecessor of the Pacific Crest Trail was the Oregon Skyline Trail, established in 1920, which connected Mount Hood to Crater Lake.
Climbing
Mount Hood is Oregon's highest point and a prominent landmark visible up to 100 mi away. About 10,000 people attempt to climb Mount Hood each year. It has convenient access, though it presents some technical climbing challenges. There are no trails to the summit, with even the "easier" southside climbing route constituting a technical climb with crevasses, falling rocks, and often inclement weather. Ropes, ice axes, crampons and other technical mountaineering gear are necessary. Peak climbing season is generally from April to mid-June.

There are six main routes to approach the mountain, with about 30 total variations for summiting. The climbs range in difficulty from class 2 to class 5.9+ (for Arachnophobia). The most popular route, dubbed the south route, begins at Timberline Lodge and proceeds up Palmer Glacier to Crater Rock, the large prominence at the head of the glacier. The route goes east around Crater Rock and crosses the Coalman Glacier on the Hogsback, a ridge spanning from Crater Rock to the approach to the summit. The Hogsback terminates at a bergschrund where the Coalman Glacier separates from the summit rock headwall. The route continues to the Pearly Gates, a gap in the summit rock formation, then right onto the summit plateau and the summit proper.
Technical ice axes, fall protection, and experience are now recommended in order to attempt the left chute variation or Pearly Gates ice chute. The Forest Service recommends several other route options due to these changes in conditions (e.g. "Old Chute," West Crater Rim, etc.).
Climbing accidents
Main article: Mount Hood climbing accidents
As of May 2002, more than 130 people had died in climbing-related accidents since records have been kept on Mount Hood, the first in 1896. Incidents in May 1986, December 2006, and December 2009 attracted intense national and international media interest. Though avalanches are a common hazard on other glaciated mountains, most Mount Hood climbing deaths are the result of falls and hypothermia. Around 50 people require rescue per year. 3.4 percent of search and rescue missions in 2006 were for mountain climbers.
Climate
The summit of Mount Hood has a typical dry-summer alpine climate (Köppen: ETs), with temperatures below 32 F eight months of the year and no month with an average temperature above 50 F. Even in the hottest months, nightly average temperatures often dip below 32 F, and frost occurs almost every day, even in summer or the hottest time of year. Otherwise, all months have a dew point below 32 F. |Jan dew point F = 12.8 |Feb dew point F = 9.6 |Mar dew point F = 8.6 |Apr dew point F = 10.5 |May dew point F = 16.0 |Jun dew point F = 21.0 |Jul dew point F = 26.5 |Aug dew point F = 25.4 |Sep dew point F = 21.4 |Oct dew point F = 18.4 |Nov dew point F = 15.1 |Dec dew point F = 12.7 |year dew point F =
|access-date= September 28, 2023
References
References
- {{cite peakbagger
- (2005-06-13). "Mount Hood–History and Hazards of Oregon's Most Recently Active Volcano". U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Forest Service.
- {{cite gvp
- McNeil, Fred H.. (1937). "Glaciers of Oregon". Glaciers of the American West.
- {{cite ngs
- Swanson, D.A.. (1989). "Mount Hood, Oregon". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "Climbing Mt. Hood". United States Forest Service.
- James S. Aber. "Volcanism of the Cascade Mountains". Emporia State University.
- (1997). "Volcano Hazards in the Mount Hood Region, Oregon". U.S. Geological Survey, Cascades Volcano Observatory.
- (1977-12-22). "National Historic Landmarks Program—Timberline Lodge". National Park Service.
- Guido, Marc. (2006-07-17). "Beat the Heat: Summer Skiing on Oregon's Mount Hood". FastTracks Online Ski Magazine.
- (July 30, 2020). "July 2020".
- "About the Forest". U.S. Forest Service.
- "Trail Stewardship". U.S. Forest Service.
- Mussulman, Joseph. (September 2011). "Lolo in Trade Jargon". The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation.
- Matarrese, Andy. (June 11, 2017). "Anthropologist dispelling myths with plankhouse talk". The Columbian.
- Lewis, David G.. (13 May 2018). "Native Place Names". Quartux.
- (1890). "The Bridge of the Gods". A.C.McClurg and Company.
- (May 13, 2018). "Native Place Names – The Quartux Journal".
- Topinka, Lyn. (2008-05-21). "Naming the Cascade Range Volcanoes: Mount Adams, Washington". Cascades Volcano Observatory (CVO).
- Clark, Ella E.. (1953). "Indian Legends of the Pacific Northwest". University of California Press.
- Hunn, Eugene. (1988). "Plateau Indian Place Names". Phillips Fund for Native American Research Collection.
- Grauer, p. 9
- Topinka, Lyn. (2004-06-29). "The Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark – October 1805 to June 1806: Introduction". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "USS Mount Hood (AE-11), 1944–1944". Department of the Navy – Naval Historical Center.
- ["Mount Hood (AE 29)"]({{Naval Vessel Register URL). U.S. Navy.
- (2008-06-02). "Volcano Information: Mount Hood". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "Global Volcanism Program | Hood".
- Crandell, Dwight R.. (1980). "Recent Eruptive History of Mount Hood, Oregon, and Potential Hazards from Future Eruptions". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "Mount Hood: Eruptive History". Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History Global Volcanism Program.
- "The Danger of Collapsing Lava Domes: Lessons for Mount Hood, Oregon". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "Hood: Latest Activity Reports".
- (2002-06-29). "Cascade Range Current Update for June 29, 2002". U.S. Geological Survey.
- "Current Alerts for U.S. Volcanoes: Cascade Range Volcanoes". U.S. Geological Survey.
- (2003-12-24). "Oregon Volcanoes: Mt. Hood Volcano". U.S. Forest Service.
- Shannon Hall. (September 9, 2019). "We're Barely Listening to the U.S.'s Most Dangerous Volcanoes—A thicket of red tape and regulations have made it difficult for volcanologists to build monitoring stations along Mount Hood and other active volcanoes.". [[The New York Times]].
- (November 13, 2020). "Three new monitoring stations installed at Mount Hood".
- Grauer, Jack. (July 1975). "Mount Hood: A Complete History". self-published.
- Mitchell, Samuel Augustus. (1857). "Mitchell's School atlas: comprising the maps and tables designed to accompany Mitchell's School and family geography". H. Cowperthwait & Company.
- "Mount Hood National Forest".
- (1993-09-14). "How High is Hood". The Register-Guard.
- Morris, Mark. (2007). "Moon Oregon". Avalon Travel.
- (2003). "Being Extreme: Thrills and Dangers in the World of High-risk Sports". Citadel Press.
- Palmerlee, Danny. (2009). "Pacific Northwest Trips". Lonely Planet.
- Helman, Adam. (2005). "The Finest Peaks: Prominence and Other Mountain Measures". Trafford Publishing.
- (2005). "Mount Hood: The Heart of Oregon". Graphic Arts Center Publishing.
- DeBenedetti, Christian. (March 2005). "Cliff Hanger". Hearst Magazines.
- Bernstein, Art. (2003). "Oregon Byways: 75 Scenic Drives in the Cascades and Siskiyous, Canyons and Coast". Wilderness Press.
- (2009). "Roadtripping USA: The Complete Coast-to-Coast Guide to America". St. Martin's Press.
- Pluth, Tanya. (2009). "Climbers Stranded on Mount Hood". climbing.com (Skram Media).
- "Glaciers of Oregon: Glaciated Regions". Portland State University.
- "USGS Mount Hood North (OR) Topo". [[TopoQuest]].
- Ostertag, George. (2007). "Our Oregon". Voyageur Press.
- (1986). "Ice Volumes on Cascade Volcanoes: Mount Rainier, Mount Hood, Three Sisters and Mount Shasta". U.S. Geological Survey.
- (2007). "Spatial and morphologic change on Eliot Glacier, Mount Hood, Oregon, USA". Annals of Glaciology.
- "Mt Hood National Forest".
- "Timberline National Historic Trail #600". U.S. Forest Service.
- Cook, Greg. "Weekend Backpacker: Portland". GORP.
- USDA Forest Service. (1921). "Oregon Skyline Trail". The Oregon Tourist and Information Bureau.
- (2007-02-19). "Everything goes right in Mount Hood search". [[The Oregonian]].
- (16 January 2019). ""Mount Hood Pearly Gates" GetHighOnAltitude.com". Get High on Altitude.
- "Mount Hood Summit". USDA Forest Service.
- (2010-06-09). "Mount Hood". SummitPost.
- (2008-05-12). "Portland, OR: Mount Hood via the South Side Route". Trimble Outdoors.
- "Climbing Mount Hood: Southside Climbing Conditions – June 9, 2007". [[United States Forest Service]].
- Holguin, Jaime. (2002-05-30). "Last Body Recovered From Mount Hood". [[CBS News]].
- Jaquiss, Nigel. (1999-10-13). "Without A Trace". Willamette Week.
- Keck, Kristi. (2007-02-20). "Weighing the risks of climbing on Mount Hood". CNN.
- "PRISM Climate Group, Oregon State University".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Mount Hood — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report