Skiing the Pacific Ring of Fire and Beyond
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ALASKA &
NW CANADA MAP

  Kiska Volcano
  Mount Gareloi
  Tanaga Volcano
  Kanaga Volcano
  Mount Moffett
  Great Sitkin
  Korovin Volcano
  Carlisle Volcano
  Mount Cleveland
  Mount Vsevidof
  Mount Recheshnoi
  Makushin Volcano
  Shishaldin Volcano
  Isanotski Peaks
  Pavlof & Pavlof Sister
  Mount Veniaminof
  Mount Chiginagak
  Mount Peulik
  Mount Mageik
  Mount Griggs
  Mount Katmai
  Mount Douglas
  Augustine Volcano
  Iliamna Volcano
  Redoubt Volcano
  Mount Spurr
  Denali (Mt McKinley)
  Mount Drum
  Mount Sanford
  Mount Wrangell
  Mount Blackburn
  Mount Bona
  Mount Churchill
  Mount Saint Elias
  Mount Logan
  Mount Fairweather
  Mount Edgecumbe
  Hoodoo Mountain
  Mount Edziza

WESTERN U.S.
& CANADA MAP


MEXICO &
C. AMERICA MAP





| Denali from the north, reflected in Wonder Lake
(National Park Service photo)

Denali   (Mount McKinley)
    20320 ft (6194 m)     Highest point in North America .
Major Peaks:
South Peak:     20320 ft (6194 m)
North Peak:     19470 ft (5935 m)
Location: Alaska Range, central Alaska,
130 mile (210 km) NNW of Anchorage
Lat / Long: 63.1° N, 151.0° W
Volcanic Type: Non-volcanic
First Ascent: North Peak:   William Taylor and Pete Anderson, 1910
South Peak:   Hudson Stuck, Walter Harper,
South Peak:   Harry Karstens, and Robert Tatum, 1913
First Ski Descent: South Peak:   Tsuyoshi Ueki, 1970
Skiable Vertical: over 14000 ft (4300 m);
perhaps over 18000 ft (5500 m) is possible
Administration:   Denali National Park



Denali (still officially known as Mount McKinley) is the highest mountain in North America, and it has the highest base-to-summit rise of any mountain on land on Earth. Although certainly non-volcanic in origin, it has been formed by the same collision between the Pacific and North American Plates which has produced the vast multitude of volcanoes in Alaska. The Alaska Range is a great crescent of older plutonic and metamorphic rock thrust up by this collision, stretching for almost 500 miles (800 km) from the northern end of the Aleutian range all the way around to eastern Alaska near Tok. The massif of Denali is located near the center of the range and also includes 17400 ft (5304 m) Mount Foraker (Sultana) and 14573 ft (4442 m) Mount Hunter (Begguya). Ski and snowboard descents of numerous routes on Denali have been done over the past few decades, including the 14000+ vertical ft (4300+ m) descent of the Wickersham Wall on the northwest side (visible below the north summit in the photo above).

Some useful links:  

    Denali National Park (see
        in-depth home page and park map)
   
   
Topographic map of Denali (Mount McKinley) (1:250,000 scale)
    from USGS Mount McKinley and Talkeetna
    <click to enlarge>



      More photos and info about routes, access, etc. may be added in the future ...


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Amar Andalkar   Seattle, WA, USA   <About the Author / Contact Me>
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