Mount John Laurie facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Mount John Laurie |
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Mount Yamnuska | |
Yamnuska
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Highest point | |
Elevation | 2,240 m (7,350 ft) |
Listing | Mountains of Alberta |
Geography | |
Parent range | Canadian Rockies |
Topo map | NTS 82O/03 |
Geology | |
Age of rock | Paleozoic |
Mountain type | Limestone and shale |
Climbing | |
First ascent | Unknown |
Easiest route | Scramble |
Mount John Laurie is a mountain in the Canadian Rockies, located in the province of Alberta.
Various names
Officially named Mount John Laurie in 1961, it is also known as Mount Laurie, or by the Nakoda name Mount Yamnuska, or simply Yamnuska. Yamnuska translates to "wall of stone" and is derived from the Stoney Nakoda word Iyamnathka that describes steep cliffs or "the flat faced mountain."
John Lee Laurie, 1899–1959, was a founder of the Indian Association of Alberta. The mountain's 1961 renaming came at the request of the Stoney Nakoda First Nation. Laurie, an educator and political activist, served as secretary of the Indian Association of Alberta from 1944 to 1956, promoting the causes of Alberta native peoples.
Peak and climbing
Standing at approximately 2,240 m (7,350 ft) above sea level, Mount John Laurie is the last mountain on the north side of the Bow River valley (Bow Valley) as it exits the mountains for the foothills and prairie of Alberta. Located close to Calgary, it is a popular "great scramble". It is also a popular rock climbing destination, with over 100 routes of all difficulty levels spread out across its face.
Geology
Mount John Laurie is the result of the McConnell Thrust Fault, which put the resistive, cliff forming Cambrian carbonate rock of the Eldon Formation on top of the much younger and weaker Cretaceous aged, clastic Belly River Formation The fault, which sits at the base of the cliff face, represents an age difference of around 450 million years.
Spirituality
In 1987 the Mount John Laurie was listed into a global network of natural spiritual places, which also included Mount Fuji in Japan, Stonehenge, Mount Shasta, Machu Picchu in Peru, Australia’s Ularu, and the pyramids of the Yucatan.
Access
At the Highway 1X and Highway 1A (Bow Valley Trail) intersection, travel east for two kilometres (1.2 mi). Turn into the signed parking lot that says "Yamnuska."