230 PKIMARY TRIANGULATION AND PRIMARY TRAVERSE. 
south of station. Peak is timbered on the Lake Creek side and 
smooth and grassy on the Bridger Creek side. Water in both creeks. 
Signal : A rock cairn 8 feet high, built around small pine. 
Station mark : A bronze triangulation tablet set in stone which was 
placed in ground under center of signal. 
[Latitude 43° 34' 03.42" (43° 34' 05.67"a) . Longitude 107°a 44' 05.57" (107° 44' 03.23"") .] 
To station- 
Copper 
Cottonwood Pass. 
Canyon a 
Kirby a 
Honey com ba 
Mahoganya 
Azimuth. 
42 
311 
72 
112 
199 
254 
07. 23 
39. 47 
05. 85 
33.71 
15. 59 
08.07 
Back azimuth. 
222 04 57.40 
131 46 49. 18 
251 47 08.90 
292 44 11.96 
19 29 28.37 
74 29 11.35 
Log. 
distance. 
Meters/ 
4. 2549762 
4. 2737525 
4.5911836 
4.3811117 
4.3956133 
4.4843181 
a From Ranchester base. 
MAHOGANY, BIGHORN COUNTY. 
On highest point of Mahogany Butte, a prominent spur from the 
main mountain, forming a perpendicular bluff on the side of No Wood 
Creek, about 5 miles down the creek from No Wood post-office. Road 
from No Wood to Redbank and Big Trails passes directly under station. 
Take this road from No Wood post-office to a point where it crosses a. 
creek on a bridge, then take trail to right. 
Station mark: A bronze triangulation tablet cemented in solid 
rock, over which a cairn 8 feet high is centered. 
[Latitude 43° 38' 29.83" (43° 38' 32.10" «). Longitude 107° 22' 16.20" (107° 22' 13.57" «).] 
To station— 
Azimuth. 
Back azimuth. 
Log. 
distance. 
De ranch 
O t II 
74 29 03.28 
74 29 11.345 
36 39 15.13 
125 58 26.19 
O / II 
254 14 00.31 
254 14 08.074 
216 31 23.01 
305 47 36. 38 
Meters. 
4. 484234S 
Deranch a 
4. 4843181 
Cottonwood Pass 
4. 4117437 
Honeycomba 
4. 4145173 
a From Ranchester base. 
COPPER, FREMONT COUNTY. 
On a high grassy hill of the Bridger Mountains between the forks ol 
Little or Dry Bridge Creek and West Bridge Creek on the north and the 
drainage of Dry Creek on the south, 5 miles west of Deranch and 2 miles 
west of Deranch Pass. Station is on rim of Wind River Basin and 
visible for a great distance. Easily reached from north. A big lone 
pine near station distinguishes the hill. 
Station mark: A bronze triangulation tablet cemented into a large 
stone buried flush with ground and centered under a small rock 
monument and tripod signal. 
