Mount Winchell

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Mount Winchell
File:Mt Winchell.jpg
Mount Winchell's East Arête route, October 2007.
Highest point
Elevation Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). NAVD 88[1]
Prominence Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[1]
Parent peak Mount Agassiz[1]
Listing Sierra Peaks Section[2]
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[3]
Geography
Mount Winchell is located in California
Mount Winchell
Mount Winchell
Location in California
Location Fresno and Inyo counties, California, U.S.
Parent range Sierra Nevada
Topo map USGS North Palisade
Climbing
First ascent June 10, 1923 by Harvey C. Mansfield, John M. Newell, and Windsor B. Putnam[4]
Easiest route East Arête, class 3 scramble[5]

Mount Winchell, a thirteener, is among the thirty highest peaks of California. It is in the Palisades region of the Sierra Nevada, on the Sierra Crest between Mount Agassiz and Thunderbolt Peak.

Geography

The Inyo-Kern County line follows Winchell's northwest-southeast ridges. Hydrologically, this same boundary divides the Big Pine Creek drainage from Dusy Basin, part of the Kings River's headwaters. Its west slopes fall within Kings Canyon National Park, while its east slopes are in the John Muir Wilderness of the Inyo National Forest.[6]

History

File:Kings Canyon-Mt Winchell Aah09.jpg
"Mt. Winchell" by Ansel Adams, circa 1930s.

Two mountain peaks in the vicinity were christened Mount Winchell during the 1870s, but neither of them were present day Mount Winchell. The United States Geological Survey applied the name to the present peak. The name's original application was made by Elisha Winchell for his cousin, Alexander Witchell,[4] who was a founding member of the Geological Society of America.

The first recorded climb of Mount Winchell was by Harvey C. Mansfield, Sr., John M. Newell, and Windsor B. Putnam, in June 1923.[4] Their route, a class 3 scramble up the east arête, is the least technical route. The first known winter climb by Norman Clyde, Morgan Harris, and David Brower used this same route in January 1938.[5]

See also

References

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External links

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