The Wilderness, which preserves a chunk of generally lower-elevation forest, is characterized by rough, steep breaks and slopes covered in dense forests of lodgepole pine.[1] Some old-growth lodgepole pine is present, as are groves of spruce and douglas-fir.[1] Wildlife includes elk, mountain lion, bobcat, pine marten, mink and weasel.[1]
The area has a rich human history as well, as gold was discovered in Welcome Creek in 1888.[1] One of the largest gold nuggets ever found in Montana, weighing in at 1.5 pounds, was found in Welcome Creek during this period.[1] When the mines were abandoned, the area became a hideout for fugitives like outlaw Frank Brady, who was killed in a 1904 shootout at a cabin in Welcome Creek.[1] Today, the crumbling remains of about a dozen miner's cabins dot the Wilderness, though only two are in fair condition, one of them at the mouth of Cinnabar Creek.[1]
References
^ abcdefgCunningham, Bill (1995). Wild Montana. Helena, MT: Falcon Publishing, Inc. pp. 93, 95. ISBN1-56044-393-6.
External links
"Welcome Creek Wilderness". The National Wilderness Preservation System. Wilderness.net. Retrieved 2006-08-15.