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Gold Mountain (Washington)

Coordinates: 47°32′56″N 122°47′13″W / 47.54889°N 122.78694°W / 47.54889; -122.78694
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gold Mountain
Gold Mountain behind the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton
Highest point
Elevation1,761 feet (537 m)
Coordinates47°32′56″N 122°47′13″W / 47.54889°N 122.78694°W / 47.54889; -122.78694
Geography
Map
LocationKitsap County, Washington,
United States
Parent rangeBlue Hills
Topo mapUSGS Bremerton West

Gold Mountain is a 1,761-foot (537 m) summit in the Blue Hills on the Kitsap Peninsula of Washington state, in the United States' Pacific Northwest. It is the highest point on the Kitsap Peninsula and the highest point in Kitsap County, Washington,[1] and nearby 1,639-foot (500 m) Green Mountain is the second-highest point.[2]

The mountain lies partly on private land, partly in the City of Bremerton watershed inaccessible to the general public, and partly in the adjacent 6,000-acre (2,400 ha) Green Mountain State Forest which is open to hikers, horses, and on- and off-road vehicles.[2]

Most of the eastern half of Gold Mountain is in the city watershed, with the Union River reservoir at the foot. The summit itself is in a quarter quarter section exclave of the state forest, connected at a corner.[3] The summit is about 660 feet (200 m) outside the city limits, six miles (9.7 km) west of downtown Bremerton.[4]

Radio and television transmitters

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The mountain summit has an antenna farm including transmitters for Kitsap Peninsula area emergency services,[5] as well as Seattle television and radio stations KCPQ (Fox 13),[6] KTBW and KYFQ. Since 1981, the Western Washington Repeater Association has operated an amateur radio repeater, call sign WW7RA, on the site,[7] with coverage throughout the Puget Sound region from Centralia to Bellingham.[8][9]

A Continuously Operating Reference Station used for GPS-based geodesy is located at the KTBW site on the summit.[10]

References

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  1. ^ "Kitsap county". Lakes of Washington, Volume 1: Water Supply Bulletin 14 (PDF). Washington State Department of Ecology. 1973. p. 203.
  2. ^ a b Andrew Weber; Bryce Stevens (2010), 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Seattle: Including Bellevue, Everett, and Tacoma, Menasha Ridge Press, p. 176, ISBN 978-0-89732-812-8
  3. ^ Green Mountain State Forest trail system map (PDF), Washington Department of Natural Resources, 2009, retrieved February 17, 2012
  4. ^ Bremerton city limits map, City of Bremerton Public Records & Information Center, archived from the original on October 11, 2014, retrieved September 28, 2014
  5. ^ "Outage Hits Kitsap County", The Seattle Times, June 30, 1995
  6. ^ About us, Fox13 (KCPQ), retrieved February 17, 2013
  7. ^ WWRA history (PDF), Western Washington Repeater Association, February 6, 2008, retrieved February 17, 2012
  8. ^ WW7RA propagation map, K5EHX amateur (ham) radio repeater database, retrieved February 17, 2013
  9. ^ Peter Policani, K7PP, THE NEW K7PP REPEATER NETWORK, archived from the original on April 24, 2013, retrieved February 18, 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array—Gold Hill (sic) Kitsap, Central Washington University geology department, retrieved February 17, 2013
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