John Salinas

Footnotes:

  1. Both served as what later became known as the Assistant Chief of Interpretation.
  2. Chief of Interpretation and Resource Management, whose title was changed to Chief Ranger after 1978.
  3. Smith was the first Chief of Interpretation, roughly equivalent to what had been the Chief Park Naturalist before 1969.
  4. Rouse became Superintendent in August 1978.
  5. Crater Lake Lodge of the Freemasons, located in Klamath Falls.
  6. A picnic area since 1975.
  7. Also known by its original name, the Community House (building #116).
  8. Building #5.
  9. Warfield served as Chief of Interpretation from 1981 to 1986, and had been at Lassen prior to arriving at Crater Lake.
  10. The office assigned to the current project assistant in maintenance.
  11. Hank Tanski lived in house #28 from 1978 t o1988.
  12. Former ski patrol member, presently librarian at Rogue Community College.
  13. Both are signed with diamonds placed on trees. The hemlock is a loop, while the Raven roughly corresponds to a road built in 1905 from Park Headquarters to Rim Village.
  14. Doug Larson worked in the Portland office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
  15. Legislation primarily aimed at making a boundary revision (to allow for a timber sale that had been sold prior to 1980) containing a provision mandating a 10 year program of lake monitoring.
  16. See Michael W. Stohr-Gillmore, “Environmental Management Appraisal of Crater Lake, Oregon,” thesis, University of Oregon, June 1983.
  17. A monitoring program was one of the priorities in the park’s resource management Plan approved as part of the GMP in 1981.
  18. Starkey is a wildlife biologist based in Corvallis. Other CPSUs in the Pacific Northwest were at the University of Washington and University of Idaho.
  19. Waldo Lake is the second deepest lake in Oregon. Clarity findings there often exceed Those on the same date at Crater Lake.
  20. The leach field near Rim Village was located near the upper end of the Dutton Creek Trail. It was superseded by a sewer line that connected the cafeteria with lagoons in Munson Valley beginning in 1991.
  21. The Superintendent’s Residence. Researchers have stayed there on a periodic basis During the summer season.
  22. This research grant eventually resulted in “Whitehorse Pond Limnological and Vascular Plant Study,” by Salinas, Robert Truitt, and David J. Hartesveldt. The Study was completed in 1993.
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