Mount Walkinshaw

Mount Walkinshaw is a 7,378 feet (2,249 m) mountain summit located in the Olympic Mountains, in Jefferson County of Washington state. It is situated within Olympic National Park, and is the northernmost peak in The Needles range, which is a subset of the Olympic range. Its nearest higher peak is Mount Clark, 0.9 mi (1.4 km) to the south, and Gray Wolf Ridge arcs to the northeast.[2] Mount Walkinshaw is set in the eastern portion of the Olympic Mountains within the drainage basin of the Dungeness River. This position puts it in the rain shadow of the Olympic Range, resulting in less precipitation than Mount Olympus and the western Olympics receive.  

Mount Walkinshaw
The Citadel [1]
Mount Walkinshaw centered
(Gray Wolf Ridge's South Peak to left)
Highest point
Elevation7,378 ft (2,249 m)[2]
Prominence378 ft (115 m)[2]
Parent peakMount Clark
Coordinates47°50′55″N 123°14′14″W[2]
Geography
Mount Walkinshaw
Location of Mount Walkinshaw in Washington
Mount Walkinshaw
Mount Walkinshaw (the United States)
LocationJefferson County, Washington, United States
Parent rangeOlympic Mountains
Topo mapUSGS Mount Deception
Geology
Age of rockEocene
Type of rockshale, pillow basalt
Climbing
First ascent1961 by Joe Munson, Jim Parolini
Easiest routeScramble class 3 via West Side or Gray Wolf Ridge[3]

History

Originally known as The Citadel, the Mount Walkinshaw name was officially adopted in 1965 to commemorate Robert B. Walkinshaw (1884-1963), author and lawyer whose conservation efforts contributed to the establishment of Olympic National Park.[4][5][6] The mountain's name was submitted for consideration by Walter Walkinshaw, the son of Robert, with the location chosen to be next to Mount Clark, named for Irving M. Clark who was also a Seattle conservationist, and an old acquaintance of Robert Walkinshaw.[5]

The first ascent of he peak was made in 1961 by Joe Munson and Jim Parolini.[3]

Climate

Mount Walkinshaw is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean, and travel northeast toward the Olympic Mountains. As fronts approach, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Olympic Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall (Orographic lift). As a result, the Olympics experience high precipitation, especially during the winter months in the form of snowfall. During winter months, weather is usually cloudy, but, due to high pressure systems over the Pacific Ocean that intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer. Because of maritime influence, snow tends to be wet and heavy, resulting in avalanche danger. The months July through September offer the most favorable weather for climbing Mount Walkinshaw.[3]

Geology

Walter Walkinshaw on the summit of Mount Walkinshaw

The Olympic Mountains are composed of obducted clastic wedge material and oceanic crust, primarily Eocene sandstone, turbidite, and basaltic oceanic crust.[7] The mountains were sculpted during the Pleistocene era by erosion and glaciers advancing and retreating multiple times. Mt. Walkinshaw has a small rocky summit about 10 feet in diameter.[5]

gollark: GPUs use SIMD, where several thousand small cores operate on a little bit of the input data, which is very good for their high performance computing needs.
gollark: There are multiple appropriate ones for various scenarios.
gollark: They're bad at it and it would not be easier if you could just spin off new threads at random. There would also probably be issues with synchronization overhead.
gollark: No, that would cause horrible race conditions constantly.
gollark: Anyway, threads and the various synchronization primitives in C (or, well, commonly used with C?) are not a particularly good model for concurrency given the many, many bugs created through use of such things, as opposed to actor models and whatever.

See also

References

  1. Olympic Mountains: A Climbing Guide, Olympic Mountain Rescue, Fourth Edition, 2006, The Mountaineers Books, page 146
  2. "Mount Walkinshaw". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  3. Mount Walkinshaw climbersguideolympics.com
  4. Parratt, Smitty (1984). Gods and Goblins: A Field Guide to Place Names of Olympic National Park (1st ed.).
  5. "Mount Walkinshaw". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  6. Olympic Mountains: A Climbing Guide, Olympic Mountain Rescue, Fourth Edition, 2006, The Mountaineers Books, page 146
  7. Alt, D.D.; Hyndman, D.W. (1984). Roadside Geology of Washington. pp. 249–259. ISBN 0-87842-160-2.
The Needles on the skyline with Mount Walkinshaw the leftmost, as seen from Elk Mountain
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