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File:Cape blanco us.png
Cape Blanco from space, October 1994

Cape Blanco is a prominent headland on the Pacific Ocean coast of southwestern Oregon in the United States, forming the westernmost point in the state.<ref name="Bannan">Template:Cite book</ref> Cape Blanco extends farther west than any point of land in the contiguous United States (lower 48 states) except portions of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, including Cape Alava, the true westernmost point.<ref name=OE>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The cape is part of Cape Blanco State Park and is the location of the Cape Blanco Light, first lit in 1870.<ref name="Bannan"/>

The cape may have been named by explorer Martín de Aguilar in 1603 for its appearance, as blanco means "white" in Spanish.<ref name=OE/><ref name=OGN>Template:Cite ogn</ref> In 1775, Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra named the point Cabo Diligensias.<ref name=OE/> It was later renamed Cape Orford by Captain George Vancouver in 1792, but this name fell into disuse and Cape Blanco became the common usage.<ref name=OE/>

GeologyEdit

The cape, a relatively level landform with cliffs facing the sea, is about Template:Convert higher than the ocean. It consists of layers of uplifted marine sediments, ranging in age from 80 million years at the bottom to less than 500,000 years at the top.<ref name=OE/> The uplift is continuing; Cape Blanco is rising by several millimeters each year.<ref name="Hiking Geology">Template:Cite book</ref> Generally, landforms on the north and south end of the Oregon Coast are rising as the ocean floor slides under the continent, while the central part of the coast "seems to be folding down."<ref name="Hiking Geology"/>

Landforms near the cape include beaches, bluffs, and reefs. Visible to the south are Needle Rock, Blanco Reef, and Humbug Mountain. To the north are Gull Rock, Castle Rock, and Blacklock Point.<ref name="Bannan"/> Blanco Reef is a group of irregular rocks and ledges that are from Template:Convert offshore and are up to Template:Convert high.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Geography and climateEdit

Cape Blanco is in northern Curry County, about Template:Convert north of Port Orford, along a mountainous and isolated stretch of the coast bounded to the east by the Coast Range.<ref name="Benchmark Atlas">Template:Cite book</ref> It lies about Template:Convert west of U.S. Route 101.<ref name="Bannan"/>

The Sixes River empties into the Pacific Ocean along the north side of the cape.<ref name="Benchmark Atlas"/> A Template:Convert walk along the Oregon Coast Trail leads south from the park to the mouth of the Elk River.<ref name="Bannan"/>

Cape Blanco has very mild temperatures year round, with an all-time record high of only Template:Convert. Annual precipitation is high, but there is a distinct drying trend in summer, which gives Cape Blanco a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Csb) according to the Köppen climate classification system. During winter storms, wind speeds can reach Template:Convert at the cape.<ref name="Palmer">Template:Cite book</ref> Extreme winds at the cape and over the Blanco Reef make this part of the coast especially dangerous for ships.<ref name="Bannan"/>

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RecreationEdit

Activities at the park include hiking, horseback riding, fishing, camping, picnicking, and beachcombing, among others, and visiting the lighthouse, a pioneer cemetery, or the Hughes House, on the National Register of Historic Places.<ref name="Bannan"/>

The property belonged originally to Patrick Hughes, who came to the cape in 1860 in search of gold and who eventually established a Template:Convert dairy ranch along the lower Sixes River. Restored by the Friends of Cape Blanco, the two-story, eleven-room ranch house was completed in 1898.<ref name="Bannan"/>

LiteratureEdit

In Jules Verne's early science fiction book The Begum's Millions, a utopian community named Ville-France is established in 1872 on the South Oregon beach. Verne gives the location of this fictitious community as "eighty kilometers north of Cape Blanco". Cape Blanco is also noted on a map of Brobdingnag in Gulliver's Travels, as well as mentioned in Chapter 3 of Moby-Dick: "And that harpoon-so like a corkscrew now-was flung in Javan seas, and run away with by a whale, years afterwards slain off the Cape of Blanco."

GalleryEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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