Footnotes:
- Both served as what later became known as the Assistant Chief of Interpretation.
- Chief of Interpretation and Resource Management, whose title was changed to Chief Ranger after 1978.
- Smith was the first Chief of Interpretation, roughly equivalent to what had been the Chief Park Naturalist before 1969.
- Rouse became Superintendent in August 1978.
- Crater Lake Lodge of the Freemasons, located in Klamath Falls.
- A picnic area since 1975.
- Also known by its original name, the Community House (building #116).
- Building #5.
- Warfield served as Chief of Interpretation from 1981 to 1986, and had been at Lassen prior to arriving at Crater Lake.
- The office assigned to the current project assistant in maintenance.
- Hank Tanski lived in house #28 from 1978 t o1988.
- Former ski patrol member, presently librarian at Rogue Community College.
- Both are signed with diamonds placed on trees. The hemlock is a loop, while the Raven roughly corresponds to a road built in 1905 from Park Headquarters to Rim Village.
- Doug Larson worked in the Portland office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
- Legislation primarily aimed at making a boundary revision (to allow for a timber sale that had been sold prior to 1980) containing a provision mandating a 10 year program of lake monitoring.
- See Michael W. Stohr-Gillmore, “Environmental Management Appraisal of Crater Lake, Oregon,” thesis, University of Oregon, June 1983.
- A monitoring program was one of the priorities in the park’s resource management Plan approved as part of the GMP in 1981.
- Starkey is a wildlife biologist based in Corvallis. Other CPSUs in the Pacific Northwest were at the University of Washington and University of Idaho.
- Waldo Lake is the second deepest lake in Oregon. Clarity findings there often exceed Those on the same date at Crater Lake.
- The leach field near Rim Village was located near the upper end of the Dutton Creek Trail. It was superseded by a sewer line that connected the cafeteria with lagoons in Munson Valley beginning in 1991.
- The Superintendent’s Residence. Researchers have stayed there on a periodic basis During the summer season.
- This research grant eventually resulted in “Whitehorse Pond Limnological and Vascular Plant Study,” by Salinas, Robert Truitt, and David J. Hartesveldt. The Study was completed in 1993.