Alaska Range
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The Alaska Range is a relatively narrow, 650-km-long (400 mi) mountain range in the southcentral region of the U.S. state of Alaska, from Lake Clark at its southwest end[1] to White River in Canada in the southeast. The highest mountain in North America, Mount McKinley (Denali), is in the Alaska Range.
The range forms a generally east-west arc with its northernmost part in the center, and from there trending southwest towards the Alaska Peninsula and the Aleutians, and trending southeast into the Pacific Coast Ranges. The mountains act as a high barrier to the flow of moist air from the Gulf of Alaska northwards, and thus has some of the harshest weather in the world. The heavy snowfall also contributes to a number of large glaciers, including the Canwell, Castner, Black Rapids, Susitna, Yanert, Muldrow, Eldridge, Ruth, Tokositna, and Kahiltna Glaciers. Four major rivers cross the Range, including the Delta River, and Nenana River in the center of the range and the Nabesna and Chisana Rivers to the east.
The range is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, and the Denali fault that runs along the southern edge of the range is responsible for a number of earthquakes. However, there are no volcanoes in the range but several large granite plutons.
Parts of the range are protected within Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, Denali National Park and Preserve, and Lake Clark National Park and Preserve. The George Parks Highway from Anchorage to Fairbanks, the Richardson Highway from Valdez to Fairbanks, and the Tok Cut-Off from Gulkana Junction to Tok, Alaska pass through low parts of the range. The Alaska Pipeline parallels the Richardson Highway.
The name "Alaskan Range" appears to have been first applied to these mountains in 1869 by naturalist W. H. Dall. The name eventually became "Alaska Range" through local use. In 1849 Constantin Grewingk applied the name "T schigmit" to this mountain range. A map made by the General Land Office in 1869 calls the southwestern part of the Alaska Range the "Chigmit Mountains" and the northeastern part the "Beaver Mountains".[2] However the Chigmit Mountains are now considered part of the Aleutian Range.
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[edit] Major peaks
- Mount McKinley (6,194 m/20,320 ft)
- Mount Foraker (5,304 m/17,400 ft)
- Mount Hunter (4,442 m/14,573 ft)
- Mount Hayes (4,216 m/13,832 ft)
- Mount Silverthrone (4,029 m/13,218 ft)
- Mount Deborah (3,761 m/12,339 ft)
- Mount Huntington (3,730 m/12,240 ft)
- Mount Russell (3,557 m/11,670 ft)
[edit] Subranges (from west to east)
- Neacola Mountains[1]
- Revelation Mountains
- Teocalli Mountains
- Kichatna Mountains
- Central Alaska Range/Denali Massif
- Eastern Alaska Range/Hayes Range
- Delta Mountains
- Mentasta Mountains
- Nutzotin Mountains
[edit] Documented Wilderness Traverses of the Alaska Range
- Mentasta Lake to Kitchatna Mountains (1981): Scott Woolums, George Beilstein, Steve Eck, and Larry Coxen by skis: first traverse. 375 miles in 45 days.[3]
- Canada to Lake Clark (1996): Roman Dial, Carl Tobin, and Paul Adkins by mountain bike and packraft: first full length traverse. 775 miles in 42 days.[4]
- Tok to Lake Clark (1996): Kevin Armstrong, Doug Woody, and Jeff Ottmers by snowshoe, foot, and packaft: first foot traverse. 620 miles in 90 days.[5]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Sources differ as to the exact delineation of the Alaska Range. The Board on Geographic Names entry is inconsistent; part of it designates Iliamna Lake as the southwestern end, and part of the entry has the range ending at the Telaquana and Neacola Rivers. Other sources identify Lake Clark, in between those two, as the endpoint. This also means that the status of the Neacola Mountains is unclear: it is usually identified as the northernmost subrange of the Aleutian Range, but it could also be considered the southernmost part of the Alaska Range.
- ^ Name history from the Board on Geographic Names entry for the Alaska Range.
- ^ American Alpine Journal (1982), Vol. 24. Pages 137-138
- ^ "A Wild Ride," National Geographic Magazine (1997), Vol. 191. Pages 118-131
- ^ American Alpine Journal (1997), Vol. 39. Pages 169-170