Mount Brown (British Columbia)
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Mount Brown | |
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Elevation | 2,791 metres (9,157 ft) |
Location | British Columbia, Canada |
Range | Canadian Rockies |
Coordinates |
Mount Brown is a massif in the Canadian Rockies, located to the west of the Athabasca Pass. It was first ascended in 1827 by the naturalist David Douglas, who then wrote that its "height does not seem to be less than 16,000 or 17,000 feet above the level of the sea". This over-estimation of the altitude was widely accepted at the time leading to the false notion that it was the highest peak in the Rocky Mountains. Douglas named the peak for Robert Brown, the first keeper at the British Museum's botanical gardens.
The southern branch of the Fraser River originates near this mountain.
[edit] External links
- Brown, Mount. Place Names in the Canadian Rockies. Retrieved on November 4, 2005.