olympic (mountain) marmot
1Olympic National Forest — IUCN Category VI (Managed Resource Protected Area) …
2Marmot Pass — Marmot Pass, at 6,000 feet (1,800 m) high, provides a trail corridor through the Buckhorn Wilderness in the Olympic Mountains of Washington state. The pass is situated near Buckhorn Mountain (6,870 feet) and Iron Mountain (6,804 feet). From… …
3Marmot Basin — Location Jasper National Park Nearest city Jasper …
4Olympic National Park — IUCN Category II (National Park) …
5Olympic National Forest — IUCN Kategorie VI …
6Marmot — For other uses, see Marmot (disambiguation). Marmot Temporal range: Late Miocene–Recent Yellow bellied Marmot in Yosemite National Park Scientific c …
7marmot — /mahr meuht/, n. 1. any bushy tailed, stocky rodent of the genus Marmota, as the woodchuck. 2. any of certain related animals, as the prairie dogs. [1600 10; < F marmotte, OF, appar. n. deriv. of marmotter to mutter, murmur (referring to the… …
8Olympic Mountains — a mountain system in NW Washington, part of the Coast Range. Highest peak, Mt. Olympus, 7954 ft. (2424 m). * * * Segment of the Pacific Coast Ranges, northwestern Washington, U.S. The mountains extend across the Olympic Peninsula south of the… …
9Hoary marmot — Conservation status Least Concern ( …
10List of Olympic mascots — See also: List of Paralympic mascots The Olympic mascot(s) is(are) a character, usually an animal native to the area or occasionally human figures, who represents the cultural heritage of the place where the Olympic and Paralympic Games are… …