Crowsnest Mountain Explained

Crowsnest Mountain
Elevation M:2785
Elevation Ref:[1]
Prominence M:925
Prominence Ref:[2]
Parent Peak:Mount Erris
Listing:Mountains of Alberta
Location:Alberta, Canada
Range:Crowsnest Range
Map:Canada Alberta
Map Size:225
Label Position:top
Coordinates:49.7036°N -114.5739°W
Coordinates Ref:[3]
Type:Limestone
Age:Paleozoic (upper), Mesozoic (lower)
First Ascent:July 28, 1904 by Tom Wilson, Christian Hasler sr., Friedrich Michel
Easiest Route:moderate scramble

Crowsnest Mountain is a mountain in the southern Canadian Rockies of southwestern Alberta, Canada. It can be seen from Alberta Highway 3 west of the town of Coleman in the Crowsnest Pass. The mountain was originally named by the Ktunaxa First Nations due to ravens nesting in the area.[1] The scrambling route on the north side was first ascended in 1915.[1]

Geology

The grey rocks exposed in the cliffs on the upper part of Crowsnest Mountain are limestones and shales of Late Devonian to Early Mississippian age (the Palliser at the base, overlain by the Exshaw and Banff, with the Livingstone Formation at the summit). They were moved up from the west along the Lewis thrust fault and emplaced over younger rocks (the Late Cretaceous Belly River Formation) that underlie the wooded lower slopes of the mountain. During that movement they were formed into a broad syncline by fault-bend folding.[4] [5]

The Devonian to Mississippian rocks are part of the Lewis thrust sheet which was originally continuous from the High Rock Range immediately to the west. The thrust sheet has since been cut through by erosion along Allison Creek, however, leaving Crowsnest Mountain and its northerly neighbour, Seven Sisters Mountain, standing together as an isolated klippe.

Notes and References

  1. 339. Crowsnest Mountain. 2005-07-22.
  2. 749. Crowsnest Mountain. 2008-12-31.
  3. IAOFK . Crowsnest Mountain. 2010-07-31.
  4. R.A.Price, 1961. Geological Survey of Canada, Paper 61-24 and Map 35-1961.
  5. R.A. Price, 1962. Geologic structure of the central part of the Rocky Mountains in the vicinity of Crowsnest Pass. Journal of the Alberta Society of Petroleum Geologists, vol. 10, no. 7, p. 341-351.