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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Vail_Pass
rdf:type
yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 geo:SpatialThing yago:Pass109386842 yago:WikicatMountainPasses yago:Object100002684 yago:YagoLegalActorGeo dbo:Place yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity yago:YagoGeoEntity yago:WikicatMountainPassesOfColorado dbo:Location schema:Place dbo:NaturalPlace wikidata:Q133056 owl:Thing dbo:MountainPass yago:Location100027167
rdfs:label
Vail Pass Vail Pass
rdfs:comment
Der Vail Pass ist ein Gebirgspass in den Rocky Mountains. Er liegt im Norden des US-Bundesstaats Colorado. Der Pass liegt auf der Grenze der Countys Eagle County und Summit County und verläuft zwischen Vail und Dillon. Vail Pass is a 10,662-foot-high (3,250 m) mountain pass in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado. The pass was named for Charles Vail, a highway engineer and director of the Colorado State Highway Department from 1930 to 1945. The pass has been featured on dangerousroads.org as one of the most difficult sections of road to navigate in Colorado: "Vail Pass, a difficult road in Colorado", due to its extreme grade, high elevation and frequent weather related hazardous driving conditions.
dbp:name
Vail Pass
geo:lat
39.53055572509766
geo:long
-106.2172241210938
foaf:depiction
n24:Vail_Pass_Bike_Path.jpg n24:DSCN2091_vailpassrestarea_e_600.jpg
dbo:location
dbr:Summit_County,_Colorado dbr:Colorado dbr:United_States dbr:Eagle_County,_Colorado
dcterms:subject
dbc:Transportation_in_Eagle_County,_Colorado dbc:Interstate_70 dbc:Landforms_of_Eagle_County,_Colorado dbc:Landforms_of_Summit_County,_Colorado dbc:Mountain_passes_of_Colorado dbc:Transportation_in_Summit_County,_Colorado
dbo:wikiPageID
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dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1076752064
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
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owl:sameAs
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dbo:thumbnail
n24:DSCN2091_vailpassrestarea_e_600.jpg?width=300
dbp:topo
USGS Vail Pass
dbp:elevationFt
10662
dbp:label
Vail Pass
dbp:location
Eagle / Summit counties, Colorado, United States
dbp:mapCaption
Location in Colorado
dbp:photo
DSCN2091 vailpassrestarea e 600.jpg
dbp:photoCaption
Rest area on Interstate 70 on the east side of Vail Pass. The ski runs at Copper Mountain are visible in the background.
dbp:range
Rocky Mountains
georss:point
39.53055555555556 -106.21722222222222
dbo:abstract
Vail Pass is a 10,662-foot-high (3,250 m) mountain pass in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado. The pass was named for Charles Vail, a highway engineer and director of the Colorado State Highway Department from 1930 to 1945. Vail Pass lies on the boundary between Eagle and Summit counties, between Vail on the west and Copper Mountain on the east. It provides the route of Interstate 70 (and earlier U.S. Highway 6) between the upper basins of the Eagle River and the Blue River, both tributaries of the Colorado River. Black Gore Creek, a tributary of Gore Creek, in the watershed of the Eagle, descends from the north side of the pass towards the town of Vail. West Tenmile Creek, in the watershed of the Blue, descends from the south side. The pass is significantly steep on either side (7% max.), and two runaway truck ramps are available on the west bound side for trucks. The pass has been featured on dangerousroads.org as one of the most difficult sections of road to navigate in Colorado: "Vail Pass, a difficult road in Colorado", due to its extreme grade, high elevation and frequent weather related hazardous driving conditions. The pass was not a traditional historical route of the Rockies. Prior to 1940, the most common route westward was over nearby Shrine Pass, just to the south, which leads to the town of the Red Cliff in the upper Eagle Valley. In 1940, the construction of U.S. Highway 6 bypassed Shrine Pass in favor of the current route to the valley of Gore Creek. Der Vail Pass ist ein Gebirgspass in den Rocky Mountains. Er liegt im Norden des US-Bundesstaats Colorado. Der Pass liegt auf der Grenze der Countys Eagle County und Summit County und verläuft zwischen Vail und Dillon.
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5848
dbo:name
Vail Pass
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geo:geometry
POINT(-106.21722412109 39.530555725098)