Neha Patil (Editor)

Mount Lucania

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Isolation
  
43 kilometres (27 mi)

Parent range
  
Saint Elias Mountains

Elevation
  
5,260 m

Prominence
  
3,040 m

Easiest route
  
Ice climbing

Location
  
Yukon, Canada

Topo map
  
NTS 115F/01

First ascent
  
1937

Mountain range
  
Saint Elias Mountains

Mount Lucania peakwarecomimgphpsrc647ampl1

Listing
  
World most prominent peaks 86th North America highest peaks 7th North America prominent peaks 15th Canada highest major peaks 3rd

First ascenders
  
Bradford Washburn, Robert Bates

Similar
  
Mount Steele, Mount Slaggard, King Peak, Mount Wood, Mount Vancouver

Mount Lucania is the third highest mountain located entirely in Canada. A long ridge connects Mount Lucania with Mount Steele (5,073m), the fifth highest in Canada. Lucania was named by the Duke of Abruzzi, as he stood on the summit of Mount Saint Elias on July 31, 1897, having just completed the first ascent. Seeing Lucania in the far distance, beyond Mount Logan, he immediately named it "after the ship on which the expedition had sailed from Liverpool to New York," the RMS Lucania.

Contents

Map of Mount Lucania, Yukon, Unorganized, Yukon, Canada

The first ascent of Mount Lucania was made in 1937 by Bradford Washburn and Robert Hicks Bates. They used an airplane to reach Walsh Glacier, 2,670 m (8,760 ft) above sea level; the use of air support for mountaineering was novel at the time. Washburn called upon Bob Reeve, a famous Alaskan bush pilot, who later replied by cable to Washburn, "Anywhere you'll ride, I'll fly". The ski-equipped Fairchild F-51 made several trips to the landing site on the glacier without event in May, but on landing with Washburn and Bates in June, the plane sank into unseasonal slush. Washburn, Bates and Reeve pressed hard for five days to get the airplane out and Reeve was eventually able to get the airplane airborne with all excess weight removed and with the assistance of a smooth icefall with a steep drop. Washburn and Bates continued on foot to make the first ascent of Lucania, and in an epic descent and journey to civilization, they hiked over 150 miles (240 km) through the wilderness to safety in the small town of Burwash Landing in the Yukon.

The second ascent of Lucania was made in 1967 by Jerry Halpern, Mike Humphreys, Gary Lukis, and Gerry Roach.

LiteratureEdit

David Roberts, Escape from Lucania: An Epic Story of Survival (2002), Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-7432-2432-9.

References

Mount Lucania Wikipedia