Cascade Range or Cascades is a major mountain range of western North America, extending from southern British Columbia through Washington and Oregon to Northern California.
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Cascade Range or Cascades is a major mountain range of western North America, extending from southern British Columbia through Washington and Oregon to Northern California.
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The Cascade Range is a part of the American Cordillera, a nearly continuous chain of mountain ranges that form the western "backbone" of North, Central, and South America.
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Cascade Range named Mount Hood after Lord Samuel Hood, an admiral of the Royal Navy.
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The earliest attested use of the name "Cascade Range" is in the writings of botanist David Douglas in 1825.
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Cascade Range followed the lower Methow River into the mountains.
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Course of political history in the Pacific Northwest saw the spine of the Cascade Range being proposed as a boundary settlement during the Oregon Dispute of 1846.
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American settlement of the flanks of the Coast Cascade Range did not occur until the early 1840s, at first only marginally.
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Cascade Range is made up of a band of thousands of very small, short-lived volcanoes that have built a platform of lava and volcanic debris.
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Cascade Range volcanoes define the Pacific Northwest section of the Ring of Fire, an array of volcanoes that rim the Pacific Ocean.
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