Difference between revisions of "Mount Bigelow"

From Birocapedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
(New page: <div style="float: right;"> {| class="wikitable" width="305" |- | <googlemap version="0.9" lat="45.168968" lon="-70.292587" type="terrain" zoom="11" height="300" scale="yes"> </googlemap> ...)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
<div style="float: right;">
+
{{thumbnail box
{| class="wikitable" width="305"
+
|width=300
|-
+
|content=<googlemap version="0.9" lat="45.168968" lon="-70.292587" type="terrain" zoom="11" height="300" scale="yes">
|
 
<googlemap version="0.9" lat="45.168968" lon="-70.292587" type="terrain" zoom="11" height="300" scale="yes">
 
 
</googlemap>
 
</googlemap>
|-
+
|caption=Mount Bigelow and Flagstaff Lake. Zoom in with the button in the top left to see individual peaks.}}
|Mount Bigelow and Flagstaff Lake. Zoom in with the button in the top left to see individual peaks.
+
 
|}
 
</div>
 
 
[[Image:Mt_Bigelow_West_Peak_Maine.JPG|left|thumb|West Peak]]
 
[[Image:Mt_Bigelow_West_Peak_Maine.JPG|left|thumb|West Peak]]
Mount Bigelow (also called the Bigelow Range and Bigelow Mountain) is a long mountain ridge with several summits. It is located in Franklin County and Somerset County, Maine, 69 miles away from [[Birch Rock]]. It is Maine's second highest summit. The mountain is named after Major Timothy Bigelow who climbed the rugged summit in late October 1775. Major Bigelow was one of Colonel Benedict Arnold's four division commanders during the 1775 Invasion of Canada. Major Bigelow's expeditionary force into Canada passed along the Dead River on the northern edge of the Bigelow Range, now dammed into [[Flagstaff Lake]].
+
 
 +
Mount Bigelow (also called the Bigelow Range and Bigelow Mountain) is a long mountain ridge with several summits. It is located in Franklin County and Somerset County, Maine, sixty-nine miles away from [[Birch Rock]]. It is Maine's second highest summit. The mountain is named after Major Timothy Bigelow who climbed the rugged summit in late October 1775. Major Bigelow was one of Colonel Benedict Arnold's four division commanders during the 1775 Invasion of Canada. Major Bigelow's expeditionary force into Canada passed along the Dead River on the northern edge of the Bigelow Range, now dammed into [[Flagstaff Lake]].
  
 
The highest summit of Bigelow Mountain is West Peak, at 4,145 feet. Subpeaks include Avery Peak at 4,088 feet, The Horns at 3,805 feet, Cranberry Peak at 3,194 feet, and Little Bigelow Mountain at about 3,070 feet.
 
The highest summit of Bigelow Mountain is West Peak, at 4,145 feet. Subpeaks include Avery Peak at 4,088 feet, The Horns at 3,805 feet, Cranberry Peak at 3,194 feet, and Little Bigelow Mountain at about 3,070 feet.
Line 19: Line 16:
  
 
The Appalachian Mountain Club considers both the West Peak and Avery Peak of Bigelow to be "four-thousand footers" because Avery Peak rises more than 200 feet above the col that adjoins it to the higher West Peak. By this same criteria, the South Horn of Bigelow, while under 4,000 feet, qualifies for the New England Hundred Highest list.
 
The Appalachian Mountain Club considers both the West Peak and Avery Peak of Bigelow to be "four-thousand footers" because Avery Peak rises more than 200 feet above the col that adjoins it to the higher West Peak. By this same criteria, the South Horn of Bigelow, while under 4,000 feet, qualifies for the New England Hundred Highest list.
==Pictures==
+
 
 +
== Pictures ==
 +
 
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
 
Image:Bigelow_Avery_Peak_Maine.JPG|Avery Peak, Mount Bigelow's second highest peak
 
Image:Bigelow_Avery_Peak_Maine.JPG|Avery Peak, Mount Bigelow's second highest peak
Line 26: Line 25:
 
Image:Flagstaffview.jpg|[[Flagstaff Lake]] viewed from Mount Bigelow
 
Image:Flagstaffview.jpg|[[Flagstaff Lake]] viewed from Mount Bigelow
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
==Links==
+
 
*[http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:6969035825011858797::NO::P3_FID:562253 Mount Bigelow on USGS GNIS]
+
== Links ==
*[http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=6850 Mount Bigelow on Peakbagger.com]
+
 
*[http://www.summitpost.org/mountain/rock/154452/bigelow-mountain.html Mount Bigelow on SummitPost]
+
* [http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:6969035825011858797::NO::P3_FID:562253 Mount Bigelow on USGS GNIS]
 +
* [http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=6850 Mount Bigelow on Peakbagger.com]
 +
* [http://www.summitpost.org/mountain/rock/154452/bigelow-mountain.html Mount Bigelow on SummitPost]

Revision as of 17:49, 3 April 2009

{{#ifeq: right | right | | }} {{#ifeq: right | right | | }}
<googlemap version="0.9" lat="45.168968" lon="-70.292587" type="terrain" zoom="11" height="300" scale="yes"> </googlemap>
{{#if: Mount Bigelow and Flagstaff Lake. Zoom in with the button in the top left to see individual peaks. |
Mount Bigelow and Flagstaff Lake. Zoom in with the button in the top left to see individual peaks.
| }}
West Peak

Mount Bigelow (also called the Bigelow Range and Bigelow Mountain) is a long mountain ridge with several summits. It is located in Franklin County and Somerset County, Maine, sixty-nine miles away from Birch Rock. It is Maine's second highest summit. The mountain is named after Major Timothy Bigelow who climbed the rugged summit in late October 1775. Major Bigelow was one of Colonel Benedict Arnold's four division commanders during the 1775 Invasion of Canada. Major Bigelow's expeditionary force into Canada passed along the Dead River on the northern edge of the Bigelow Range, now dammed into Flagstaff Lake.

The highest summit of Bigelow Mountain is West Peak, at 4,145 feet. Subpeaks include Avery Peak at 4,088 feet, The Horns at 3,805 feet, Cranberry Peak at 3,194 feet, and Little Bigelow Mountain at about 3,070 feet.

Bigelow Mountain is part of the Rangeley-Stratton mountain range, which also includes Sugarloaf Mountain, Crocker Mountain, Saddleback Mountain, Mount Abraham, Mount Redington, and other mountains.

The Appalachian Trail traverses Bigelow Mountain. Much of the mountain and surrounding area is part of the 10,540 acre Bigelow Preserve created in 1976.

The Appalachian Mountain Club considers both the West Peak and Avery Peak of Bigelow to be "four-thousand footers" because Avery Peak rises more than 200 feet above the col that adjoins it to the higher West Peak. By this same criteria, the South Horn of Bigelow, while under 4,000 feet, qualifies for the New England Hundred Highest list.

Pictures

Links