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Rattlesnake Hills

Coordinates: 46°26′51″N 119°50′24″W / 46.4476327°N 119.8400381°W / 46.4476327; -119.8400381
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rattlesnake Hills
Rattlesnake Hills behind a vineyard.
Highest point
PeakLookout Summit
Elevation3,629 ft (1,106 m)[1]
Prominence1,829 ft (557 m)[1]
Coordinates46°26′51″N 119°50′24″W / 46.4476327°N 119.8400381°W / 46.4476327; -119.8400381[2]
Geography
Map
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountiesYakima and Benton
Range coordinates46°27′N 119°50′W / 46.450°N 119.833°W / 46.450; -119.833

The Rattlesnake Hills, also known as Rattlesnake Ridge,[3] is a 16-mile (26 km) long anticline mountain ridge in Yakima County and Benton County in the U.S. state of Washington. It should not be confused with the much smaller Rattlesnake Ridge located near the west end of Ahtanum Ridge just south of Yakima, Washington and west of Union Gap, Washington.[4] The highest point in the hills (as well as Benton County) is the 3,629 feet (1,106 m) Lookout Summit, which surpasses the more well-known Rattlesnake Mountain by approximately 100 ft (30 m).[1] The Rattlesnake Hills are part of the Yakima Fold Belt of east-tending long ridges formed by the folding of Miocene Columbia River basalt flows.[5]

The Rattlesnake Hills form the northern edge of the Yakima Valley, running from the vicinity of Benton City to just south of the city of Yakima, where the Yakima River cuts through the mountain ridge via Union Gap. To the west of the Yakima River the mountain ridge is known as Ahtanum Ridge.

North of the Rattlesnake Hills is Moxee Valley and the Black Rock Valley. The hills extend into the Hanford Site. A spur on the north side of the ridge nearly connects with the west end of Yakima Ridge.

Roza Canal, used for agricultural irrigation, passes under the Rattlesnake Hills through a tunnel.

Named high points of the Rattlesnake Hills, according to the USGS, include Elephant Mountain, Zillah Peak, Eagle Peak, High Top, Lookout, and Rattlesnake Mountain.

Shaded-relief map showing ridges of the Yakima Fold Belt of south-central Washington. The box on right is the Tri-Cities, Washington, and the ridge north of the Yakima River (directly west of the Tri-Cities) is what is often called the "Rattlesnake Hills".

Rattlesnake Hills AVA

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Pinot Noir grapes in May in the Rattlesnake Hills AVA. The Rattlesnake Hills lie in the background.

The Rattlesnake Hills AVA is an American Viticultural Area located in Yakima County and Benton County, Washington in Washington state. United States Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) awarded Rattlesnake Hills its appellation status on March 20, 2006, making Rattlesnake Hills Washington's ninth federally recognized American Viticultural Area. The Rattlesnake Hills AVA is entirely contained within the Yakima Valley AVA, which is in turn is entirely contained within the larger Columbia Valley AVA. The hills form the northern boundary of Yakima Valley, and the AVA includes land between the north bank of the Sunnyside Canal and the entirety of the southern slopes of the Rattlesnake Hills between Outlook and the Wapato Dam. The AVA is centered on the city of Zillah. With elevations ranging from 850 feet (259 m) to 3,085 feet (940 m), this AVA contains the highest point in the Yakima Valley AVA.[6]

Yakima Fold Belt

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The Rattlesnake Ridge is one of the larger "folds" in the Yakima Fold Belt. The Yakima Fold Belt is an area of topographical folds (or wrinkles) raised by tectonic compression. It is a 14,000 km2 (5,400 sq mi) structural-tectonic sub province of the western Columbia Plateau Province resulting from complex and poorly understood regional tectonics. The folds are associated with geological faults whose seismic risk is of particular concern to the nuclear facilities at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation (immediately north of the Rattlesnake Hills) and major dams on the Columbia and Snake Rivers.

2016 wildfire

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The Range 12 fire was started on July 31, 2016, in eastern Washington, at the Yakima Training Center northeast of Yakima, Washington.[7][8] The city it started closest to was Moxee, Washington on July 30, 2016 local time.[9] It quickly grew to over 176,000 acres (71,000 ha) to cover parts of Yakima County and Benton County.[10] The fire was the third in recent years to affect the area surrounding the Hanford Reach National Monument and the Arid Lands Ecology Reserve near Rattlesnake Ridge.[11] The fire was eventually contained through the use of controlled burns on Rattlesnake Mountain in Benton County due to concerns that the fire was getting too close to the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, which had recently been compared to the Fukushima nuclear disaster by Newsweek magazine.[12][13]

2018 Rattlesnake Ridge landslide

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Vegetation on the north side of Rattlesnake Ridge, in a picture taken inside the Hanford Reach National Monument in Benton County, Washington

As of January 21, 2018, a large but slow landslide is occurring in the Rattlesnake Hills, about 3 miles south of Yakima in Washington, USA. The event first drew news coverage in late 2017, after a long fissure was discovered high on Rattlesnake Ridge: this fissure was reported to be 250 feet deep in one place.[14] The first road closure for public safety was reported on December 17, 2017. The Washington State Department of Natural Resources has a web-page providing information on the event, which reports that the moving mass of basalt is about 4 million tons, covering about 20 acres, and it is slipping roughly south at a rate of about 1.5 feet per week.[15]

On the weekend of January 20–21, 2018 there was flurry of new reporting, which highlighted a developing consensus that the landslide will at some time collapse suddenly, and that is likely to occur within months if not weeks.[16][17][18][19][20]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Rattlesnake Hills Lookout, Washington". Peakbagger.com.
  2. ^ "Lookout". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  3. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Rattlesnake Hills
  4. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Rattlesnake Ridge
  5. ^ Complete Report for Saddle Mountains structures Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine, USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
  6. ^ "About the AVA". Rattlesnake Hills Wine Trail. Yakima Valley. January 7, 2014. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
  7. ^ Cary, Annette (July 31, 2016). "Fires burn across Eastern Washington, some Prosser-area residents evacuated". Tri-City Herald.
  8. ^ Worthington, Sarah (August 2, 2016). "Range 12 Fire: 90 percent contained,176,000 acres burned in Yakima, Benton Counties". KIMA-TV. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  9. ^ "Photos: Up close at the Yakima Training Center fire". Yakima Herald-Republic. July 30, 2016. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  10. ^ Cary, Annette (August 3, 2016). "Range 12 fire 90% contained, 176,600 acres of Yakima, Benton counties scorched". Yakima Herald-Republic. Retrieved August 23, 2016. Residents were told to evacuate their homes west of Prosser in the area of Ward Gap and Richards Roads early Sunday evening.
  11. ^ Cary, Annette (August 6, 2016). "Time needed for ravaged Hanford monument ecosystem to recover from third fire". Tri-City Herald. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  12. ^ "To Prevent a Nuclear Disaster, Washington Firefighters Burned a Whole Mountain". Vice. Retrieved 2022-04-21. The raging inferno, called the Range 12 Fire, threatened to summit Washington's Rattlesnake Mountain, and creep down the other side toward the Hanford Nuclear Site, an aging nuclear production complex that sits along the Columbia River.
  13. ^ "Nuclear Waste Leaking at 'American Fukushima' in Northwest". Newsweek. 2016-05-03. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  14. ^ Bain, Kaitlin (December 22, 2017). "250-foot-deep crack in earth prompts landslide warnings at Rattlesnake Ridge near Union Gap". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2023-02-19.
  15. ^ "Rattlesnake Hills Landslide". www.dnr.wa.gov. Washington State Department of Natural Resources. February 15, 2019. Retrieved 2023-02-19.
  16. ^ Doughton, Sandi (January 21, 2018). "Landslide watch: Can experts predict collapse at Washington's Rattlesnake Ridge?". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2023-02-19.
  17. ^ Bressan, David (January 18, 2018). "The Rattlesnake Ridge - A Landslide In The Making". forbes.com. Retrieved 2023-02-19.
  18. ^ EndPlay (January 20, 2018). "New images show intimidating landslide moving down Rattlesnake Ridge".
  19. ^ "Giant crack on Washington's Rattlesnake Ridge prompts evacuations". ABC News. January 5, 2018.
  20. ^ Oliver, Miles Jay (January 13, 2018). "Rep. Newhouse receives briefing on Rattlesnake Ridge". Yakima Herald-Republic. Retrieved 2023-02-19.