Mount Logan
| Mount Logan | |
|---|---|
| Elevation: | 5,959 metres (19,550 feet) |
| Latitude: | 60° 34′ 02″ N |
| Longitude: | 140° 24′ 10″ W |
| Location: | Yukon, Canada |
| Topo map: | NTS 115B |
| Range: | Saint Elias Mountains |
| First ascent: | 1925 by A.H. MacCarthy et. al. |
| Easiest route: | glacier/snow/ice climb |
Mount Logan is Canada's highest mountain and the second-highest peak in North America (Denali is the highest). The mountain was named after Sir William Edmond Logan, a Canadian geologist and founder of the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC). Mt. Logan is located within Kluane National Park and Reserve in southwestern Yukon and is the source of the Hubbard Glacier.
Due to active tectonic uplifting, Mt. Logan is actually still rising in elevation. Before 1992, the exact height of Mt. Logan was unknown and measurements ranged from 5950m to 6050m. In May 1992, a GSC expedition climbed Mt. Logan and fixed the current height of Mt. Logan using GPS.
The Mt. Logan massif contains eleven major peaks:
| Peak | metres | feet | Latitude (N) | Longitude (W) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main | 5,959 | 19,550 | 60°34′02″ | 140°24′10″ |
| West | 5,925 | 19,439 | 60°34′45″ | 140°25′56″ |
| East | 5,900 | 19,357 | 60°34′32″ | 140°21′55″ |
| Huston's Peak | 5,720 | 18,766 | 60°35′06″ | 140°27′13″ |
| Prospector Peak | 5,644 | 18,517 | ||
| AINA Peak | 5,630 | 18,471 | ||
| Russel Peak | 5,570 | 18,274 | 60°35′35″ | 140°28′02″ |
| North | 5,559 | 18,238 | 60°36′59″ | 140°25′56″ |
| Northeast | 5,490 | 18,012 | 60°36′59″ | 140°29′28″ |
| Queen Peak | 5,380 | 17,651 | ||
| Northwest | 5,280 | 17,323 |
Mt. Logan was first climbed on June 23, 1925 by A.H. MacCarthy, H.F. Lambart, A. Carpe, W.W. Foster, N. Read and A. Taylor.
Following the death of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, the Jean Chrétien government considered renaming the mountain Mount Trudeau; however, this faced opposition from Yukoners, mountaineers, and Western Canadians, and the plan was dropped.