Dragontail Peak
Dragontail Peak, also known as Dragon Tail,[1] is a mountain in the Stuart Range, in Chelan County, Washington. While climbing an adjacent peak, Lex Maxwell, Bob McCall, and Bill Prater remarked that the needles on the crest, southwest of the summit, resembled a "dragon tail".[2] The name was officially accepted in 1955.[1] On the mountain's northeast flank lies Colchuck Lake which drains into Mountaineer Creek, and Colchuck Glacier lies below the western slopes of the peak. On its south side the mountain drops steeply (50% slope) to Ingalls Creek, which flows about Vorlage:Convert below the summit.[3]
The mountain, which lies in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, bordered by Mount Stuart, Little Annapurna, and Cannon Mountain,[3] is composed of a granite formation that creates the Stuart Range. Dragontail is the second highest mountain in the range, second only to Mount Stuart which lies Vorlage:Convert to the west and reaches Vorlage:Convert.
The two needles, on ridge southwest of the summit which gave rise to its name, serve as formidable alpine climbing objectives that demand more than 20 pitches of sustained climbing. The area around Dragontail Peak is dominated by wilderness and is protected from development.
The Enchantments, to northeast of Dragontail, is an area of towering peaks, year-round snow, and alpine lakes. It forms the heart of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness.
References
- ↑ a b Referenzfehler: Ungültiges
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-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen gnis. - ↑ Vorlage:Cite summitpost
- ↑ a b Topographic map of the area around Dragontail Peak. ACME Mapper, abgerufen am 29. Dezember 2010.