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Mount Adams

Aerial photo of Mount Adams, showing a recent debris flow
Elevation:12,281 ft (3,743 m)
Latitude:46° 12′ 8.68″ N
Longitude:121° 29′ 27.22″ W
Location: Washington State, USA
Topo map: USGS Mount Adams East
Range: Cascades
Type: Stratovolcano
Age of rock:< 275 Kyr
First ascent: 1854 by A.G. Aiken and party
Easiest route:snowfield hike


This article is about Mount Adams in Washington. For others, see Mount Adams (disambiguation)Adams may refer to: Mount Adams in Washington state Mount Adams (New Hampshire) in the White Mountains of New Hampshire..

Mount Adams is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Range and the second highest mountainThis article is about the landform. For other meanings, see Mountain (disambiguation). Mount Cook, a mountain in New Zealand A mountain is a landform that extends above the surrounding terrain in a limited area. A mountain is generally much higher and ste in the Pacific Northwest of the United StatesThe United States of America also referred to as the United States U. America ¹ or the States is a federal republic in central North America, stretching from the Atlantic in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. It shares land borders with Canada in ( Mount RainierMount Rainier is a stratovolcano (and national park) located 54 miles (87 km) southeast of Seattle, Washington in Pierce County. One of the monarchs of the Cascade Range, it was originally known as Tahoma or Tacoma from the Puyallup word tacobet or "mothe is the tallest). Adams is located in a remote wilderness approximately 35 miles (56 km) east of Mount St. HelensMount St. Helens is an active volcano in Skamania County, Washington, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is located 96 miles south of Seattle and 53 miles northeast of Portland, Oregon. The mountain is part of the Cascade Range and w. The Mount Adams Wilderness only comprises the upper part of the volcano's cone. Adams' asymmetrical and broad body raises a mile and a half (2.4 km) above the Cascade crest and its nearly flat summit looks as if the volcanoThis article is about volcanoes geology. For the action movie see: Volcano (movie). A volcano (plural, volcanoes) is a geological landform (usually a mountain) where magma (rock of the earth's interior made molten or liquid by high pressure and temperatur was decapitated (which in fact it has not).

1 History

Native Americans in the area have created a detailed legend concerning the three smoking mountains that guard the Columbia RiverColumbia River Gorge, Washington or North side The Columbia River is the largest river in volume flowing into the Pacific Ocean from North America. Its headwaters are located in the Canadian Rockies of British Columbia, and it flows through the east-centr. According to their Bridge of the Gods tale, Wyeast ( Mount Hood) and Pahto (Mount Adams; also called Paddo or Klickitat by natives) were the sons of Great Spirit . The brothers both competed for the love of the beautiful La-wa-la-clough (Mount St. Helens). When La-wa-la-clough chose Pahto, Wyeast struck his brother so hard that Pahto's head was flattened and Wyeast took La-wa-la-clough from him (thus attempting to explain Adams' squat appearance). However other versions of the story state that losing La-wa-la-clough caused Pahto such grief that he dropped his head in shame.

In 1805 the Lewis and Clark Expedition recorded seeing the mountain but they misidentified it as previously discovered and named Mt. St. Helens. This is the earliest recorded sighting of the volcano by European explorers.

Between 1830 to 1834 a man named Hall J. Kelley led a campaign to rename the Cascade Range to the President's Range and also to rename each major Cascade mountain after a former President of the United States. Mount Adams was not known to Kelley and was thus not in his plan. Mount Hood, in fact, was designated by Kelley to be renamed after President John Adams but a mistake by a mapmaker placed the Mount Adams name north of Mt. Hood and about 40 miles (60 km) east of Mt. St. Helens. By sheer coincidence there was in fact a large mountain there to receive the name. Since the mountain had no official name at the time the name stuck in spite of the fact that Kelley's renaming plan failed.

In 1901 local settler and mountaineer C. E. Rusk led noted glaciologist Harry Reid to Adams' remote location. Reid conducted the first systematic study of the volcano and also named its largest glaciers. Eighty years later the first official study of Adams by the USGS was carried out by survey geologists Wes Hildreth and Judy Fierstein . They concentrated their work on the volcanology of the mountain and the potential of the area to support geothermal power. Much of our knowledge of Adams comes from their survey work.

In 1929 and 1931 a man named Wade Dean filed mining claims to the sulfur on Adams' 210 acre (0.8 km²) summit plateau. After building a horse and mule trail they moved a diamond-tipped drilling machine to the summit area and proceeded to drill test pits. Although they did find sulfur sludge, the amount and quality of the ore was never good enough to make the venture profitable and the project was abandoned in 1959. Adams is the only High Cascade volcano to have its summit exploited by commercial miners.



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