
Coronado National Forest: Douglas Ranger District (USDA)
Dragoons, Chiricahuas, Cochise, Tombstone...names that hark back to the Old West. All are associated with the lands that now make up the Coronado National Forest. The Coronado totals almost 2 milliion acres in 12 units, mountain ranges that rise like islands from a sea of desert sand. This map presents three of those units, the Dragoon, Chiricahua, and Peloncillo ranges which lie in the southeastern corner of Arizona and southwestern corner of New Mexico. National forest maps detail surface management, roads, and trails. Included are the Dragoon Mountains, Little Dragoon Mountains, San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, Willcox Dry Lake Bombing Range, St. David, Tombstone, Gleeson, Pearce, Sunsites, Chiricahua Mountains, Chiricahua Wilderness, Chiricahua National Monument, Fort Bowie National Historic Site, Pedregosa Mountains, Peloncillo Mountains, Animas Mountains, San Simon Valley, San Bernardino Valley, Sulphur Springs Valley, Animas Valley, Portal, and Rodeo.
Coronado National Forest: Douglas Ranger District provides information on the Leave No Trace program, fire safety, forest road safety, route markers, road closures, OHV safety, bears, travel precautions, the Chiricahua Mountains, Chiricahua National Monument, and Fort Bowie National Historic Site. Also included are a table of Forest Service Recreation Sites and an Index to Topographic Maps (7.5' series). The map also displays color photographs of points of interest and activities.
The map shows national forest, international, state, county, special area, wilderness, and land grant boundaries; primary highway, secondary highway, paved improved roads, gravel improved roads, native dirt surface dirt roads, unimproved roads for 4WD and not maintained for passenger cars, trails, and unmaintained trails; railroads; power transmission lines; township and second lines; fire reporting stations, ranger district offices, permanent lookout stations, and other forest service facilities; horizontal control facilities; US mineral or location monuments, located or landmark objects, and boundary monuments; gaging stations; mining activity, gravel pits, and borrow pits; houses, cabins, or other buildings; schools; churches; cemeteries or corrals; tanks; windmills; locked gates; wells, springs, stock tanks, live streams, and intermittent streams; national forest campgrounds, non-national forest campgrounds, trailheads, picnic and day use areas, visitor centers, and points of interest; and surface management for open Coronado National Forest land, closed Chiricahua Wilderness land, State land, BLM land, and other federal land.
The map covers the ranger districts of the Coronado National Forest which are closest to the Arizona-New Mexico border, and the scale is generally ½ inch per mile (1:126,720).
Two-sided, self-cover, waterproof paper map.
Scale: 1:126,720
Size:
4” x 9” folded35.5” x 27” unfolded
Price: $14.95
Ships Immediately.
Part # 40392