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  1. Oregon. Hrabstwo: Curry. Kod statystyczny FIPS: 41-59250 GNIS ID: 1147902 ... Port Orford – miasto w Stanach Zjednoczonych, w stanie Oregon, w hrabstwie Curry.

  2. It continues to the present under its original name, although Shane retired from performing in 2004. When the Trio disbanded, Reynolds moved to Port Orford, Oregon where he spent twenty years ranching and raising four children. When the group disbanded, Reynolds returned to motor racing, which he had first tried as a novice in the early 1950s.

  3. The Port Orford Formation is a geologic formation in Oregon. It preserves fossils. [citation needed] It consists of beds lying unconformably between the Empire Formation and overlying terrace deposits. [1] The formation is composed of a basal bed of buff (yellow-brown) sand, overlain by a layer of conglomerate, and layer of rusty sand grading ...

  4. Member of the Oregon House of Representatives from the 1st district; In office January 9, 2017 – January 11, 2023: Preceded by: Wayne Krieger: Succeeded by: Court Boice: Personal details; Political party: Republican: Residence: Port Orford, Oregon: Signature

  5. On June 10, 1851, Battle Rock—a basalt promontory at Port Orford on the southern Oregon coast—was the site of a deadly confrontation between a landing party from Portland and the Quatomah, an Athapaskan people who lived in the area. Heavily propagandized by early writers, the story of Battle Rock was often framed as a heroic foundational ...

  6. The Elk River is in southwestern Oregon in the United States. About 29 miles (47 km) long, the river drains a remote 92-square-mile (240 km 2) area of the Coast Range into the Pacific Ocean . Rising in the mountains in northern Curry County, in the Siskiyou National Forest at confluence of its north and south forks, the river initially flows ...

  7. 30 de ago. de 2022 · Port-Orford-cedar ( Chamaecyparis lawsoniana )—also known as white or Oregon-cedar, ginger-pine, or Lawson cypress—is widely known and recognized for its horticultural uses and the quality of its wood. Its species name, lawsoniana, honors Charles Lawson (1794-1873), the Edinburgh nurseryman who first introduced the species to horticulture.