Chiwawa Mountain | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 8,459 ft (2,578 m)[1] |
Prominence | 1,219 ft (372 m)[1] |
Parent peak | Fortress Mountain (8,760 ft)[1] |
Isolation | 1.22 mi (1.96 km)[2] |
Coordinates | 48°09′48″N 120°54′27″W / 48.163424°N 120.907616°W[1] |
Geography | |
Country | United States of America |
State | Washington |
County | Chelan / Snohomish |
Protected area | Glacier Peak Wilderness |
Parent range | North Cascades Cascade Range |
Topo map | USGS Suiattle Pass |
Geology | |
Rock age | Cretaceous |
Rock type | Biotite gneiss[3] |
Climbing | |
First ascent | 1921 party of The Mountaineers led by Lorenz A. Nelson[3] |
Easiest route | Scrambling[3] |
Chiwawa Mountain is an 8,459-foot (2,578-metre) mountain summit located in the Glacier Peak Wilderness of the North Cascades in Washington state.[4] The mountain is situated on the crest of the Cascade Range, on the shared border of Snohomish County and Chelan County, also straddling the boundary between the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest and the Wenatchee National Forest. Its nearest higher peak is Fortress Mountain, 1.12 mi (1.80 km) to the west. Chiwawa Mountain is a triple divide peak, so precipitation runoff from it drains northeast to Lake Chelan via Railroad Creek; northwest into Miners Creek which is a tributary of the Suiattle River; and south into the Chiwawa River headwaters. The mountain's name is taken from the river's name, which was applied by Albert Hale Sylvester (1871-1944), a pioneer surveyor, explorer, topographer, and forest supervisor in the Cascades.[3] Chiwawa comes from the Columbia-Moses language and means a kind of creek ("wawa" creek).[5]
Beckey, Fred W 2008
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).