Arizona Highways, January 1998

ARIZONA HIGHWAYS, JANUARY 1998 CONTENTS: 04 TRAILING HACKSAW TOM "There was something wild and unpredictable about a mystery man who could rob stagecoaches and elude capture- even definition- for so many years. He marked edge of civilization. So I resolved to retrace his steps in the Superstiti...

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Main Author: Arizona Highways Magazine
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Arizona Highway Department 1998
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Online Access:http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/ref/collection/aho/id/387
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spelling ftarizonamp:oai:azmemory.azlibrary.gov:aho/387 2023-05-15T18:49:23+02:00 Arizona Highways, January 1998 Arizona Highways Magazine 1990s (1990-1999) 1998-01 Periodical PDF (Portable Document Format); 24.6 MB http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/ref/collection/aho/id/387 unknown Arizona Highway Department Arizona Highways Arizona Highways Magazine, Vol. 74, No. 1 (January 1998) http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/ref/collection/aho/id/387 Except for quotations used in articles, reviews and listings, no part of these magazines may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from Arizona Highways. Arizona Arizona Highways Magazine Arizona Department of Transportation Leisure and travel Transportation Text; Image; 1998 ftarizonamp 2018-10-27T22:52:18Z ARIZONA HIGHWAYS, JANUARY 1998 CONTENTS: 04 TRAILING HACKSAW TOM "There was something wild and unpredictable about a mystery man who could rob stagecoaches and elude capture- even definition- for so many years. He marked edge of civilization. So I resolved to retrace his steps in the Superstition Wilderness" 12 THE FIRST MOVING PICTURE SHOW The flickering pictures were "a kind of magic, a wonder to behold. The year was 1897, and motion pictures had come to Arizona. The new technology was so real that at one showing the pictures caused a panic" 16 TORTUROUS TREKKING IN THE SIERRA ESTRELLAS High winds plus the treacherous folds and twists of every canyon make the Estrellas the most challenging mountain hiking in the state, says our author. "On some days, I had to bushwhack along the crest above some great canyon only to find at nightfall that the 10 miles hiked resulted in almost no forward progress” 20 THE GOLDEN EAGLE, MONARCH OF THE WEST A magnificent creature with a six-foot-plus wingspread, Aquila chrysaetos is not as flashy as the bald eagle, but it has had, over the ages, a special presence among Native American tribes. In medieval Europe, it was the pride of emperors and kings 22 ARIZONA’S OLD GROWTH FORESTS "The old growth forest ecosystem has flourished in diversity and flux since the retreat of the last ice unique forests scattered I its path," says author Peter Aleshire. Most of them are gone now; remnants exist only on mountain heights or in deep canyons 34 DEATH KNELL FOR A GREEN SHREDDER A "shredder" is a snowboarder. If you're cool, you know. Our author, a diminutive but athletic skier, a "two-planker" in the lingo, was bound to give snowboarding a try at the Sunrise ski area in the White Mountains. All did not go well, though, and she had to refrain from hurling her "stick" into a nearby garbage can 38 GHOST TOWN TRAIL The trail passes through the eroding memories of Gleeson, Courtland, and Pearce. The ruins crumble without ceremony or regret, says author Lawrence W Cheek. "Over another 100 years, they will go gently into the good night of ancient history” Other/Unknown Material Aquila chrysaetos golden eagle Arizona Memory Project (Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records) Gleeson ENVELOPE(66.093,66.093,-71.238,-71.238)
institution Open Polar
collection Arizona Memory Project (Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records)
op_collection_id ftarizonamp
language unknown
topic Arizona
Arizona Highways Magazine
Arizona Department of Transportation
Leisure and travel
Transportation
spellingShingle Arizona
Arizona Highways Magazine
Arizona Department of Transportation
Leisure and travel
Transportation
Arizona Highways Magazine
Arizona Highways, January 1998
topic_facet Arizona
Arizona Highways Magazine
Arizona Department of Transportation
Leisure and travel
Transportation
description ARIZONA HIGHWAYS, JANUARY 1998 CONTENTS: 04 TRAILING HACKSAW TOM "There was something wild and unpredictable about a mystery man who could rob stagecoaches and elude capture- even definition- for so many years. He marked edge of civilization. So I resolved to retrace his steps in the Superstition Wilderness" 12 THE FIRST MOVING PICTURE SHOW The flickering pictures were "a kind of magic, a wonder to behold. The year was 1897, and motion pictures had come to Arizona. The new technology was so real that at one showing the pictures caused a panic" 16 TORTUROUS TREKKING IN THE SIERRA ESTRELLAS High winds plus the treacherous folds and twists of every canyon make the Estrellas the most challenging mountain hiking in the state, says our author. "On some days, I had to bushwhack along the crest above some great canyon only to find at nightfall that the 10 miles hiked resulted in almost no forward progress” 20 THE GOLDEN EAGLE, MONARCH OF THE WEST A magnificent creature with a six-foot-plus wingspread, Aquila chrysaetos is not as flashy as the bald eagle, but it has had, over the ages, a special presence among Native American tribes. In medieval Europe, it was the pride of emperors and kings 22 ARIZONA’S OLD GROWTH FORESTS "The old growth forest ecosystem has flourished in diversity and flux since the retreat of the last ice unique forests scattered I its path," says author Peter Aleshire. Most of them are gone now; remnants exist only on mountain heights or in deep canyons 34 DEATH KNELL FOR A GREEN SHREDDER A "shredder" is a snowboarder. If you're cool, you know. Our author, a diminutive but athletic skier, a "two-planker" in the lingo, was bound to give snowboarding a try at the Sunrise ski area in the White Mountains. All did not go well, though, and she had to refrain from hurling her "stick" into a nearby garbage can 38 GHOST TOWN TRAIL The trail passes through the eroding memories of Gleeson, Courtland, and Pearce. The ruins crumble without ceremony or regret, says author Lawrence W Cheek. "Over another 100 years, they will go gently into the good night of ancient history”
format Other/Unknown Material
author Arizona Highways Magazine
author_facet Arizona Highways Magazine
author_sort Arizona Highways Magazine
title Arizona Highways, January 1998
title_short Arizona Highways, January 1998
title_full Arizona Highways, January 1998
title_fullStr Arizona Highways, January 1998
title_full_unstemmed Arizona Highways, January 1998
title_sort arizona highways, january 1998
publisher Arizona Highway Department
publishDate 1998
url http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/ref/collection/aho/id/387
op_coverage 1990s (1990-1999)
long_lat ENVELOPE(66.093,66.093,-71.238,-71.238)
geographic Gleeson
geographic_facet Gleeson
genre Aquila chrysaetos
golden eagle
genre_facet Aquila chrysaetos
golden eagle
op_relation Arizona Highways
Arizona Highways Magazine, Vol. 74, No. 1 (January 1998)
http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/ref/collection/aho/id/387
op_rights Except for quotations used in articles, reviews and listings, no part of these magazines may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from Arizona Highways.
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