Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 6695
Land area (2000): 10.865559 sq. miles (28.141668 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.136399 sq. miles (0.353272 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 11.001958 sq. miles (28.494940 sq. km)
FIPS code: 17162
Located within: California (CA), FIPS 06
Location: 34.242456 N, 117.289899 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Crestline
Housing Units (2000): 2251
Land area (2000): 2.887930 sq. miles (7.479705 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2.887930 sq. miles (7.479705 sq. km)
FIPS code: 19330
Located within: Ohio (OH), FIPS 39
Location: 40.784657 N, 82.740192 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 44827
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Crestline
Wikipedia
Crestline is the name of several places in the United States of America:
- Crestline, California
- Crestline, Ohio
- Crestline, Kansas
- Crestline, a village in Mountain Brook, Alabama
Crestline in other uses:
- Crestline Coach is a manufacturer of special and emergency vehicles based in Saskatchewan
- Crestline is also the code name of the Intel Mobile 965 Express chipset, part of Intel's Santa Rosa platform
- Ford Crestline
Usage examples of "crestline".
He got into his car again and started down the long smooth grade from Crestline to San Bernardino, a broad paved boulevard skirting the edge of a sheer drop into the deep valley.
For a minute or two they were able to look over the crestline of the west ridge at the Highlands stretching away like a sea of rose-tinted icebergs with glimpses of the sun-burnished waters of Loch Ness in between.
There at the top he saw the crestline silhouetted against the pale glow that might have been a dawning sun.
The tops of the valley walls were not geometrically smooth circles, but rose and fell irregularly like the crestline of a natural mountain ridge.
His mind's eye could paint the picture, the 2nd going over the crestline at a full gallop, the ranks of crimson-uniformed Colonists rising as one.
A strip of material emerging along the crestline of a ridge at a time when the Earth’s field was in the same direction as it is today would be magnetized in the “right” direction.