The 'Hanford Reach National Monument' is a
national monument in the U.S. State of
Washington. It was created in 2000 from what used to be the security buffer surrounding the
Hanford Nuclear Reservation. The area has been untouched by development or agriculture since 1943.
The monument is named after the
Hanford Reach, the last free flowing section of the
Columbia River, and is one of only two ''National Monuments'' administered by the
U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. President
Bill Clinton established the monument by presidential decree.
Geographically, the area is part of the
Columbia River Plateau, formed by
basalt lava flows and water erosion. The
shrub-steppe landscape is harsh and dry, receiving between 5 and 10 inches of rain per year. The sagebrush-bitterbrush-bunchgrass lands are home to a wide variety of plants and animals, and the Hanford Reach provides one of the Northwest's best salmon spawning grounds. Forty-eight rare, threatened, or endangered animal species have found refuge on the monument, as well as several insect species found nowhere else in the world.
Usage
The monument is open two hours before sunrise to two hours after sunset; some areas are open to the public and others are not:
★ 'Fitzner-Eberhardt Arid Lands Ecology Reserve' - access permitted for ecological research, closed to the public.
★ 'Columbia River Corridor' - shore and open water is generally open to the public.
★ 'McGee Ranch and Riverlands' - public day use.
★ 'Saddle Mountain National Wildlife Refuge' - access permitted for ecological research, closed to the public.
★ 'Vernita Bridge' - open to the public.
★ 'Wahluke Slope' - open to the public.
References
★
White House Press Release
★
Washington State precipitation map
★
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory resource cards
External links
★
Official website
★
Landsat image overlayed with map