Bartlett Creek is a 6.5 miles (10.5 km) long tributary of North Fork Cache Creek.
Its mouth is at an elevation of 1,631 feet (497 m).[1]
A bridge crosses the creek about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) above its mouth.
At this point the creek undergoes a transition from a trout stream to a cyprinid and sucker stream.[2]
The creek drains the Bartlett Management Area of the Mendocino National Forest.
The terrain is moderately steep and rugged, with elevations from 1,400 to 4,800 feet (430 to 1,460 m).[3]
The Köppen climate classification is Csb : Warm-summer Mediterranean climate.[4]
Vegetation is mainly chamise and chaparral on the south slopes, and stands of timber on the ridgetops and north slopes.[3]
^Waring (1915) says the Allen Springs are in the Allen Creek canyon rather than the Bartlett Creek canyon, but otherwise describes a location that agrees with Hamilton (1915) and mindat.[6][7]
Hamilton, Fletcher (July 1915), "Report of State Mineralogist, 1913-1914", Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the forty-second session of the Legislature of the State of California, vol. VII, retrieved 2021-04-28
Waring, Gerald Ashley (1915). Springs of California. U.S. Geological Survey Water Supply Paper. Vol. 338. U.S. Government Printing Office. doi:10.3133/wsp338.