The Bob Marshall Wilderness Map produced by the US Forest Service contains the most up-to-date information on access roads, trails, campsites, terrain, and points of interest within the Bob Marshall, Great Bear and Scapegoat Wilderness areas. All wilderness maps contain contour lines, a topographic quad index and contact phone numbers, and the vast majority contain planning tips and descriptions of the terrain.
The Bob Marshall Wilderness is one of the most completely preserved mountain ecosystems in the world: rugged peaks, alpine lakes, cascading waterfalls, grassy meadows embellished with shimmering streams, a towering coniferous forest, and big river valleys.
The Wilderness runs for 60 miles along the Continental Divide, with elevations ranging from 4,000 feet to more than 9,000 feet. A huge escarpment called the Chinese Wall, a part of the Divide, highlights the Bob's vast untrammeled beauty, with an average height of more than 1,000 feet and a length of 22 miles. The Chinese Wall extends into Scapegoat Wilderness to the south.
Wilderness information courtesy of Wilderness.net
| 9 in. by 8 in. shipped | 4 ounces | for just $10.95 |
| 40 in. by 45 in. open | 1:100,000 (1 in. = 1.6 mi.) | |
| has contours | Printed in 1990 |
High in Montana's northern Rocky Mountains lie the vast and striking expanses of the Bob Marshall, Great Bear, and Scapegoat Wilderness Areas, and the Jewel Basin hiking area - the last remnants of primeval North America. Hiking Montana's Bob Marshall Wilderness offers hikers of all ages, interests, and abilities the opportunity to experience the glory and grandeur of the over 1.5-million-acre continuous tract of land that is considered the crown jewel of the American wilderness system.
The diverse and dramatic Bob Marshall, Great Bear, and Scapegoat Wilderness Areas were established to provide travelers the chance to wander this alpine wonderland for weeks without retracing their steps. Veteran guidebook author Erik Mol… read more