Mount Augusta

Mount Augusta is located in Alaska
Mount Augusta
Mount Augusta
Location in Alaska, United States
(on the border with Yukon, Canada)
LocationYakutat City and Borough, Alaska, United States;
Yukon, CanadaParent rangeSaint Elias MountainsTopo mapUSGS Mount Saint Elias B-7 Quadrangle
NTS 115C8 Corwin CliffsClimbingFirst ascent1952 by Peter Schoening et al via Northeast RidgeEasiest routesnow/ice climb

Mount Augusta, also designated Boundary Peak 183,[2] is a high peak in the state of Alaska.

Mount Augusta lies about 25 km (16 mi) south of Mount Logan and 25 km east of Mount Saint Elias, respectively the first and second highest mountains in Canada. It forms the eastern end of the long ridge of which Mount Saint Elias is the center and highest point.

The Seward Glacier starts to the north of the peak, separating it from Mount Logan, and then flows around the east side of the peak, forming the gap between Augusta and the peaks surrounding Mount Cook. It then continues south to join the Malaspina Glacier.

Name origin

Mount Augusta was named in 1891 by I.C. Russell of the USGS, for his wife J. Augusta Olmsted Russell.[3]

Notable Features

In terms of pure elevation, Mount Augusta is not particularly notable, being one of the lowest fourteeners in the United States; it is therefore quite overshadowed by its huge neighbors Saint Elias and Logan. However, it is a huge peak in terms of local relief, since it lies so close to low terrain (and in fact close to tidewater). For example, it drops 10,000 feet (3,050m) to the Seward Glacier on the southeast side of the peak in approximately 3.5 miles (5.6 km).

Climbing

  • 1952 North Ridge (the eastern of two north ridges), FA of peak by Peter Schoening, Victor Josendal, Bill Niendorff, Richard E. McGowan, Bob Yeasting, Gibson Reynolds, Tom Morris, Verl Rogers, summiting on July 4.[4]
  • 1987 a party led by noted Canadian mountaineer Don Serl ascended a route on the North Rib and West Ridge.
  • 1990 South Ridge. Mark Bebie (U.S.) and Bill Pilling reached the summit after a climb of six days.[5]

See also

  • flagAlaska portal
  • flagCanada portal
  • iconMountains portal

Bibliography

Sources

  1. ^ a b c d "Mount Augusta, Alaska-Yukon". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
  2. ^ Orth p. 93
  3. ^ "Mount Augusta". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2009-11-06.
  4. ^ Selters pp. 164–165
  5. ^ Selters pp. 312–313

External links

Mount Augusta at Wikipedia's sister projects
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