• Source: Hills in the Puget Lowland
  • Hills in the Puget Lowland, between the Cascades and the Olympic Mountains, including the entire Seattle metropolitan area, are generally between 350–450 feet (110–140 m) and rarely more than 500 feet (150 m) above sea level. Hills are often notable geologically and for social reasons, such as the seven hills of Seattle.


    Formation


    The Puget Lowland lies between the Cascades and Olympic Mountains and once contained a plateau of glacial till not usually more than 350–450 feet (110–140 m) above sea level. The plateau, "the most prominent single landform of the entire region", was dissected by glacial outwash, forming present-day landforms: rivers, creeks and streams; glacial lakes such as Lake Washington; and numerous kettle lakes, and Puget Sound itself. High points on the plateau remain, most of which are a drumlin (rocky glacial debris), or a bedrock intrusion that predated glaciation. Hills above 500 feet are considered exceptional.


    Notable lowlands hills


    Hills are glacial deposits unless otherwise noted. King, Pierce and Snohomish Counties run up to the crest of the Cascades where their high points reside; therefore, the Cascades and attached foothills are excluded. Likewise for Thurston County in the Mount Rainier area, and Mason County's Olympic Mountains foothills.


    = North Sound

    =
    Landforms north of the Tacoma Narrows (Island, King, Kitsap, Pierce and Snohomish counties)


    Island County


    Whidbey Island and Camano Island are islands in Puget Sound and form the bulk of Island County.

    Whidbey Island high point, 520–540 feet (160–160 m) unnamed peak 500 meters from Naval Air Station Whidbey Island
    Camano Island high point, 580 feet (180 m) unnamed peak, the lowest high point of any Washington county


    King County


    Finn Hill, 440 feet (130 m) altitude
    Rose Hill; Forbes Creek origin, 535 feet (163 m), Kirkland's high point (also see Bridle Trails State Park)
    Novelty Hill, Redmond's high point at c. 585 feet (178 m)
    Seattle
    High Point, West Seattle, the highest point in the city at 520 feet (160 m)
    Seven hills of Seattle
    First Hill, nicknamed "Pill Hill" because of the many hospitals and clinics located there
    Yesler Hill
    Renton Hill
    Denny Hill – regraded, now called the Denny Regrade
    Capitol Hill
    Queen Anne Hill
    Beacon Hill


    Kitsap County



    The Blue Hills of the Kitsap Peninsula are unusual in that they are composed of basalt bedrock, not glacial till.

    Gold Mountain, 1,761 feet (537 m) (Kitsap County h.p. & city of Bremerton watershed on mountain contains city h.p.)
    Green Mountain, 1,639 feet (500 m)
    Bainbridge Island is an island in Puget Sound.

    Toe Jam Hill, Bainbridge Island's high point, 425 feet (130 m)


    Pierce County


    South Hill above Puyallup, 541 feet (165 m)
    Argonne Forest hills at Fort Lewis, formed of multiple layers of till deposited during Vashon glaciation; some hills may overlie drumlins from an earlier glacial phase. Hills are designated critical habitat for the Northern Spotted Owl, an endangered species whose forest habitat in the Puget Lowland has been largely destroyed.
    Black Hill 502 ft.
    Heaton Hill 423 ft.
    Kelly Hill 458 ft.
    Starr Hill 463–467 ft.


    Snohomish County


    Bald Hill, 737 feet (225 m)
    Lake Serene Hill, Lynnwood 649 feet (198 m)
    Clearview Hill, 600 feet (180 m) altitude


    = South Puget Sound

    =
    Landforms in South Puget Sound (Thurston and Mason counties)

    Black Hills, southwest of Olympia, basalt bedrock, high point 2,664 feet (812 m). Bedrock comes to shore of Puget Sound at Mud Bay.
    Kamilche Hill 370 meters (1,210 ft), Mason County above Little Skookum Inlet


    Low mountains


    The Issaquah Alps Bellevue, Issaquah and Newcastle on the Eastside are considered part of the Cascades foothills by many authors. They are basalt intrusions possibly related to the Blue Hills of the Kitsap Peninsula. Highest point Tiger Mountain summit, 3,004 feet (916 m).
    The Anacortes Community Forest Lands contain several peaks over 1,000 feet (300 m) high, including the Fidalgo Island high point, 1,273-foot (388 m) Mount Erie.
    Mason County's Olympic Mountains foothills are called the Satsop Hills.


    See also


    List of highest points in Washington by county
    List of mountain peaks of Washington (state)


    Footnotes




    References




    = Sources

    =
    Booth, Derek (August 1994), "Glaciofluvial infilling and scour of the Puget Lowland, Washington, during ice-sheet glaciation", Geology, 22 (8), The Geological Society of America: 695–698, Bibcode:1994Geo....22..695B, doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1994)022<0695:GIASOT>2.3.CO;2 (PDF from UW)
    Burns, Robert (1985), The Shape & Form of Puget Sound, University of Washington Press, ISBN 0295961848
    Washington Atlas and Gazetteer (sixth ed.), DeLorme, 2002, ISBN 0-89933-329-X
    B.W. Drost; G.L. Turney; N.P. Dion; M.A. Jones (1998), Hydrology and Quality of Ground Water in Northern Thurston County, Washington (PDF), United States Geological Survey, p. 10, report 92-4109
    Figge, John (2008), "The modern landscape of the Puget Sound basin" (PDF), The Glacial Origins of the Puget Basin, The Northwest Geological Institute, pp. 27–29, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04, retrieved 2017-05-19
    Lapham, Macy H. (September 1952), Soil survey of King County, Washington, Soil survey, United States Department of Agriculture, series 1938 number 31
    Martin, Andy (1994). County high points: For all western and northeastern states. Old Adit Press. ISBN 0962876216. List maintained at Peakbagger.com
    Haeussler, P. J.; Clark, K. M. (2000), "Geologic map of the Wildcat Lake 7.5' quadrangle, Kitsap and Mason Counties, Washington" (PDF), U. S. Geological Survey, Open File Report 00-356, 1 sheet, scale 1:24,000, archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-19
    Raisz, Erwin (1989), "Washington State landforms map", in Scott, James William (ed.), Washington, a Centennial Atlas, Bellingham, Washington: Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Washington University, p. 4, ISBN 0929008243 – 1941 original hand-penned map, 1965 third revision
    Williams, David B. (2000). The Seattle Street-Smart Naturalist: Field Notes from the City. Westwinds Press. ISBN 9781558688599.
    Forestry Program, Environmental and Natural Resources Division, U.S. Army, Installation Management Agency Fort Lewis Military Reservation (May 2005), A forest management strategy for the Fort Lewis military reservation, Washington (PDF){{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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