King Peak

E101530

King Peak is the tallest mountain in California’s remote King Range along the Lost Coast, known for its rugged terrain and dramatic rise from the Pacific Ocean.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
King Peak canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf mountain
accessRoad King Peak Road
Shelter Cove Road (nearby access)
climate coastal Mediterranean with heavy winter rains
country United States of America
surface form: United States
county Humboldt County
distanceFromCoast about 3 mi from Pacific Ocean
about 4.8 km from Pacific Ocean
elevation 1247 m
4091 ft
hasTerrain rugged
steep
hasViewOf Lost Coast region
surface form: Lost Coast shoreline
hikingAccess via King Peak Trail
via Lightning Trail
via Saddle Mountain Trail
isHighestPointOf King Range
King Range National Conservation Area
isPopularFor backpacking
day hiking
wilderness recreation
locatedIn California, United States
surface form: California

Humboldt County
surface form: Humboldt County, California

King Range
United States of America
surface form: United States
managingAgency U.S. Bureau of Land Management
surface form: Bureau of Land Management
mountainRange King Range
nearestCommunity Honeydew, California
Shelter Cove, California
notableFeature dramatic rise from near sea level to over 4000 feet
overlooks Pacific Ocean
partOf King Range National Conservation Area
Lost Coast region
surface form: Lost Coast
prominence 2629 ft
802 m
protectedAreaDesignation National Conservation Area
region North Coast of California
relativeLocation near the northern end of California’s Lost Coast
state California, United States
surface form: California
topographicIsolation 12.4 mi
20.0 km
vegetationZone coastal scrub
mixed conifer and hardwood forest

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

King Range highestPoint King Peak
Lost Coast region highestPoint King Peak
subject surface form: Lost Coast