Mount Moffit | |
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Elevation | 13,020 ft (3,968 m) |
Prominence | 3,970 ft (1,210 m) |
Location | |
Location | Southeast Fairbanks Census Area, Alaska, USA |
Range | Alaska Range |
Climbing | |
First ascent | August 12, 1942 by William Shand Jr., Benjamin Ferris Jr., and Sterling Hendricks |
Mount Moffit is a peak in the Alaska Range in central Alaska, United States, about 10 miles (16 km) east-southeast of Mount Hayes. It is notable for its steep faces and large relief above local terrain. For example, the north face drops 7,400 feet in approximately 1.2 miles (2 km) horizontal distance.
William Shand Jr., Benjamin Ferris Jr., and Sterling Hendricks made the first ascent of Mount Moffit on August 12, 1942. All three had been part of the first ascent team for Mount Hayes the year before. Unfortunately, Shand died shortly after the climb in an unrelated car accident. It was proposed that his name be attached to this peak; however the name was mistakenly attached to a slightly lower peak to the south of Mount Moffit.
Mount Moffit is not often climbed due to difficult access. The second ascent of the peak was 33 years after the first, in 1975, by M. Sallee and D. Buchanan. The standard route is the Northwest Ridge (or "Western North Ridge"); this is a serious route (Alaska Grade 4) with typical Alaskan features such as highly corniced ridgelines.
Michael Wood and Colby Coombs, Alaska: a climbing guide, The Mountaineers, 2001.