Mount Moosilauke

Mount Moosilauke

Mt. Moosilauke as seen from Black Mountain
Highest point
Elevation 4,802 ft (1,464 m)[1]
Prominence 2,932 ft (894 m)[1]
Listing White Mountain 4000-Footers
#9 New England 50 Finest
Coordinates 44°01′28″N 71°49′51″W / 44.024511°N 71.8309173°W / 44.024511; -71.8309173Coordinates: 44°01′28″N 71°49′51″W / 44.024511°N 71.8309173°W / 44.024511; -71.8309173[2]
Geography
Location Grafton County, New Hampshire, U.S.
Parent range White Mountains
Topo map USGS Mount Moosilauke
The Gorge Brook Trail ascends Mount Moosilauke from the Dartmouth College Ravine Lodge.

Mount Moosilauke is a 4,802-foot-high (1,464 m) mountain at the southwestern end of the White Mountains in the town of Benton, New Hampshire, United States. It is the tenth highest and most southwesterly of the 4,000 foot summits in the White Mountains.[3]

Moosilauke is ranked 9th on the New England Fifty Finest peaks, a list of summits with the highest topographic prominence. The Appalachian Trail passes over the mountain. It is sometimes referred to as the "Gentle Giant".[4]

Its name is thought to be derived from a contraction of the Native American words moosi ("bald"), and auke ("place").

Geology

Mount Moosilauke is made up of metamorphic rock called the Littleton Formation which is Lower Devonian in age. The Littleton Formation is primarily a mica schist with zones containing garnet and staurolite-sillimanite. The unit also contains interbedded amphibolites. The mica schist started out as clay-rich mud in a marine basin that probably formed during the early Acadian Orogeny. The amphibolites may represent metamorphosed submarine basalt flows.

Pegmatite dikes cross-cut the Littleton Formation and can be seen from the Gorge Brook Trail as it nears treeline. These pegmatites are likely related to the geology to the east of the mountain which is dominated by the Kinsman quartz monzonite. This Acadian-aged igneous rock can be seen at the Kinsman Notch / Beaver Brook pond area.[5]

Topography

The summit of Moosilauke is treeless and offers panoramic views of the Kinsmans to the north, the Presidential Range and Franconia Ridge to the northeast, the heart of the White Mountains to the east, Lake Winnipesaukee and neighboring lakes to the southeast, and the Green Mountains and Adirondacks to the west, along with great views closer in to numerous glacially-carved ravines on Moosilauke's shoulders. The first[6] winter high country weather observatory was set up at the top of Mt. Moosilauke in the winter of 1869-1870.[7]

Moosilauke has numerous subsidiary peaks, including Mount Blue, elevation 4,529 feet (1,380 m), to the north of the summit, and the South Peak, elevation 4,523 feet (1,379 m), between the Carriage Road and Glencliff Trail, about one mile southwest of the main peak. The South Peak, reached by a 0.2-mile (0.32 km) spur trail, is particularly noted for its fine views of the main summit ridge, into the deep Tunnel Brook Ravine to neighboring Mt. Clough and westward into the Connecticut River valley and Vermont beyond.

Climbing routes

The most commonly climbed route to the summit is the Gorge Brook Trail from Ravine Lodge. One can make a loop by returning via the Carriage Road and Snapper Trail. Other trails to the summit include the Glencliff Trail from the southwest, the Benton Trail from the north, the Beaver Brook Trail ascending very steeply past numerous waterfalls from Kinsman Notch to the northeast, the Carriage Road from the south and the Asquam Ridge Trail from the southeast. The Appalachian Trail, from south to north, utilizes the Glencliff, Carriage Road, Benton and Beaver Brook trails.

Moosilauke Ravine Lodge

The Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, which offers food and accommodations to hikers, is situated in the valley on the southeast side of the mountain. The lodge is owned by Dartmouth College and is run by members of the Dartmouth Outing Club. Dartmouth College owns much of the southern and eastern portions of the mountain and has long had a close association with it, with the Outing Club maintaining its trails and the Appalachian Trail from Kinsman Notch southward to Hanover. Due to this long association, Moosilauke is often called "Dartmouth's Mountain".[8]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Mount Moosilauke, New Hampshire". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  2. "Mount Moosilauke". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  3. "The White Mountain Four Thousand Footers List". AMC Four Thousand Footer Club. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  4. "Mt Moosilauke - 4802'". Hike the Whites. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  5. Billings, Marland P., 1935, Geology of the Littleton and Moosilauke quadrangles, New Hampshire. State Planning and Development Commission, Concord, New Hampshire.
  6. Staff (November 8, 1919) "Prof. C. H. Hitchcock Dies" The New York Times
  7. Waterman, Laura and Waterman, Guy (April 1994). "Charles H. Hitchcock and the Geological Survey of New Hampshire (part 2)". The Granite State Geologist Number 8, page 1.
  8. Smith, Steven D. and Mike Dickerman, The 4000-Footers of the White Mountains, 2nd Edition (2008). Bondcliff Books, pp. 424-447.

External links

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