Box Springs Mountains

The Box Springs Mountains are a mountain range in northwest Riverside County, California, United States.[1] The highest peak of the range is Box Springs Mountain, which stands just over 3,080 ft (940 m) tall.

Box Springs Mountains
Box Springs Mountains with Riverside in foreground.
Highest point
PeakBox Springs Mountain
Elevation939 m (3,081 ft)
Geography
Location of the Box Springs Mountains in California [1]
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionInland Empire
DistrictRiverside County
Range coordinates33°57′42″N 117°16′50″W
Topo mapUSGS Riverside East

Named Peaks

Peak Elevation Coordinates
Box Springs Mountain 3,080 feet (940 m) 33.96167°N 117.28056°W / 33.96167; -117.28056
Table Mountain 2,359 feet (719 m) 33.99056°N 117.29249°W / 33.99056; -117.29249
Sugarloaf Mountain 1,944 feet (593 m) 33.99371°N 117.32240°W / 33.99371; -117.32240
Jessie 1,781 feet (543 m) 33.94876°N 117.28339°W / 33.94876; -117.28339
Pigeon 1,423 feet (434 m) 33.99295°N 117.32944°W / 33.99295; -117.32944
Versity 1,386 feet (422 m) 33.96773°N 117.32430°W / 33.96773; -117.32430
gollark: Someone here made something which meddles with the peripheral API to make it emulate actual modem peripherals, but by default the API is quite different.
gollark: (I found out later that this had in fact been done rather a lot of times before, but mine is unique in having a CC client at least)
gollark: It's entirely centralized because distributed systems are quite hard to do, and basically just works as a websocket pub/sub server.
gollark: It runs over websockets and permits arbitrary CBOR data in message bodies, as well as arbitrary strings/numbers as channel IDs.
gollark: <@!490057841202298900> Hi! I found your thing here (https://forge.touhey.org/cc/thox.git/tree/docs/explain/modem.rst) describing Skynet and thought you might want more information!

References

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