Monashee Mountains
Monashee Mountains | |
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Monashee Mountains are indicated. In the left of the image lies Vancouver Island. The boundary here includes the Okanagan Highland and portions of the Shuswap Highland. | |
Highest point | |
Peak | Mount Monashee |
Elevation | 3,274 m (10,741 ft) |
Coordinates | 52°23′07″N 118°56′24″W / 52.38528°N 118.94000°WCoordinates: 52°23′07″N 118°56′24″W / 52.38528°N 118.94000°W |
Dimensions | |
Length | 530 km (330 mi) N-S |
Width | 150 km (93 mi) W-E |
Geography | |
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Countries | Canada and United States |
Provinces/States | British Columbia and Washington |
Parent range | Columbia Mountains |
The Monashee Mountains are a mountain range lying mostly in British Columbia, Canada, extending into the U.S. state of Washington. They stretch 530 km (329 mi) from north to south and 150 km (93 mi) from east to west. They are a sub-range of the Columbia Mountains. They are limited on the eastern side by the Columbia River and Arrow Lakes, beyond which lie the Selkirk Mountains, and by the upper North Thompson River and the Interior Plateau on the west. The northern end of the range is at the southern end of the Robson Valley just south of the town of Valemount. The southern extremity of the range is in Washington State, where the Kettle River Range reaches just down to the confluence of the Kettle River and the Columbia, and also farther west to the southern extremity of the Okanagan Highland (spelled Okanogan Highland in the US) just northeast of the confluence of the Okanogan and Columbia rivers at Brewster and Bridgeport.
The Okanagan Highland and parts of the Shuswap Highland, to the west of the main range, are technically classified as part of the Monashees, but may also be considered part of the Interior Plateau. The Okanagan Highland lies between the Kettle River and Okanagan Lake, south of the Shuswap River. Within this area is the small Sawtooth Range, which lies between the uppermost Shuswap River to the east and Mabel Lake to the west. The portion of the Shuswap Highland south of the North Thompson River, the boundary of which extends south to the Okanagan Highland, may also be included.
Peaks include Hallam Peak (3,205 m (10,515 ft)) and Cranberry Mountain (2,872 m (9,423 ft)). Between Revelstoke and Shuswap Lake the range is crossed by Highway 1 - the Trans-Canada Highway - and by the mainline of the Canadian Pacific Railway, which both run through Eagle Pass. The Crowsnest Highway to the south takes the Bonanza Pass. The southern end of the Monashees within Canada is an historically important mining and former industrial area known as the Boundary Country, which is focused around the basin of the lower Kettle River and extends north toward the Midway Range.[1]
Subranges
- Anstey Range
- Christina Range
- Gold Range
- Jordan Range
- Kettle River Range
- Malton Range
- Midway Range
- Okanagan Highland
- Sawtooth Range
- Ratchford Range
- Rossland Range
- Scrip Range
- Shuswap Highland
- Whatshan Range
Mountains
- Mount Monashee 3,274 m (10,741 ft)
- Hallam Peak 3,205 m (10,515 ft)
- Thor Mountain 3,146 m (10,322 ft)
- Mount Odin 2,971 m (9,747 ft)
- Cranberry Mountain 2,872 m (9,423 ft)
- The Pinnacles 2,607 m (8,553 ft)
- Mount Copeland
Sources
- ↑ Fifth Annual Report of the Minister of Mines for the Year Ending 31st December, 1917 . Being an Account of Mining Operations for Gold, Coal, Etc., in the Province of British Columbia. The Government of the Province of British Columbia. 1917.
- "Monashee Mountains". BC Geographical Names.
- Peakbagger.com mountains info
- Bivouac.com Hiking info and images
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monashee Mountains. |
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