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PACIFIC RANGES


The 'Pacific Ranges' are the southernmost subdivision of the Coast Mountains portion of the Pacific Cordillera. Located entirely within British Columbia, Canada, they run northwest from the lower stretches of the Fraser River to Bella Coola, north of which are the Kitimat Ranges.
The Pacific Ranges include four of the five major coastal icecaps in the southern Coast Mountains. These are the largest temperate-latitude icecaps in the world and fuel a number of very major rivers (by volume, not length). One of these contains Mount Waddington, the highest summit entirely within British Columbia. Also within this region is Hunlen Falls, among the highest in Canada, located in Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park.
Other than logging and a large ski resort at Whistler most of the land in the range is completely undeveloped. Historically, in the southern part of the range, mining was important at various times in the Lillooet, Bridge River and Squamish areas, and large pulp and paper mills at Powell River, Port Mellon and Woodfibre. The largest hydroelectric development in the Pacific Ranges is the Bridge River Power Project, though smaller hydro plants are on the Stave River-Alouette Lake system in Mission and Maple Ridge, the Daisy Lake-Squamish River division of the Cheakamus Powerhouse, and another power dam and power plant at Clowhom. Although the range was extensively surveyed for possible rail routes, only that of the Pacific Great Eastern (now part of CN) was eventually built; the Homathko River-Bute Inlet route, however, was one of the two main choices in the deliberations of the CPR's routing.

Contents
Geography
Major Named Subranges:
Major Icefields:
Major Peaks
Provincial Parks
Major Rivers
External link

Geography


Area of the Cascadia subduction zone, including the Cascade Volcanic Arc (red triangles)

The Garibaldi Volcanic Belt is within the Pacific Ranges, which is a volcanic belt formed by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate (a remnant of the much larger Farallon Plate) under the North American Plate along the Cascadia subduction zone. The belt is the northern extension of the Cascade Volcanic Arc in the United States (which includes the volcanoes Mount St. Helens and Mount Baker) and contains the most explosive young volcanoes in Canada. The eruption styles in the belt range from effusive to explosive, with compositions from basalt to rhyolite. Morphologically, centers include calderas, cinder cones, stratovolcanoes and small isolated lava masses. Due to repeated continental and alpine glaciations, many of the volcanic deposits in the belt reflect complex interactions between magma composition, topography, and changing ice configurations. The most recent major catastrophic eruption in the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt was from Mount Meager 2,350 BP, which is Canada's most recent major catastrophic eruption.
The Garibaldi Volcanic Belt contains 2 extra volcanic fields, the Franklin Glacier Volcano and Mount Silverthrone, which lie 140 and 190 km northwest of the main volcanic belt.
The Cascadia subduction zone is a 680 mi (1,094 km) long fault, running 50 mi (80 km) off the west-coast of the Pacific Northwest from northern California to Vancouver Island. The plates move at a relative rate of over 0.4 inches (10 mm) per year at a somewhat oblique angle to the subduction zone.
Unlike most subduction zones worldwide, there is no oceanic trench present along the continental margin in Cascadia. Instead, terranes and the accretionary wedge have been uplifted to form a series of coast ranges and exotic mountains. A high rate of sedimentation from the outflow of the three major rivers (Fraser River, Columbia River, and Klamath River) which cross the Cascade Range contributes to further obscuring the presence of a trench. However, in common with most other subduction zones, the outer margin is slowly being compressed, similar to a giant spring. When the stored energy is suddenly released by slippage across the fault at irregular intervals, the Cascadia subduction zone can create very large earthquakes such as the magnitude 9 Cascadia earthquake of 1700.

Major Named Subranges:



Rainbow Range

Niut Range

Pantheon Range

Waddington Range

Whitemantle Range

Chilcotin Ranges


Shulaps Range


Dickson Range


Camelsfoot Range

Bendor Range

Lillooet Ranges


Cayoosh Range


Cantilever Range

Douglas Ranges

Garibaldi Ranges

North Shore Mountains (Front Ranges)

Tantalus Range

Clendinning Range


★ the Camelsfoot Range running north along the west bank of the Fraser from Lillooet is sometimes considered to be part of the Chilcotin Ranges, but in other definitions is part of the Interior Plateau
''Many smaller ranges and subranges are not listed at present.''

Major Icefields:


''(Other than the Waddington Range these are also considered to be "ranges" but are listed separately here because of their unique character).''

Monarch Icefield

Ha-Iltzuk Icefield (Silverthrone Glacier)

Waddington Range

Homathko Icefield

Lillooet Icecap (Lillooet Crown)

Pemberton Icecap

Major Peaks



Mount Waddington

Monarch Mountain

Mount Tiedemann

Mount Munday

Mount Queen Bess

Mount Good Hope

Mount Raleigh

Monmouth Mountain

Mount Tatlow

Taseko Mountain

Mount Silverthrone

Mount Meager

Mount Cayley

Mount Garibaldi

Wedge Mountain

Provincial Parks



Garibaldi Provincial Park

Golden Ears Provincial Park

Cypress Provincial Park

Mount Seymour Provincial Park

Sasquatch Provincial Park

Stein Valley Nlaka'pamux Heritage Park

Birkenhead Lake Provincial Park

Big Creek Provincial Park

Spruce Lake Protected Area

Ts'il?os Provincial Park

Tweedsmuir North Provincial Park and Protected Area

Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park
''List is incomplete''
''Some Protected areas, recreation areas and other non-park preservation areas are not listed.''

Major Rivers



Fraser River

Chilcotin River

Bridge River

Lillooet River

Squamish River

Homathko River

Klinaklini River

Bella Coola River
''Many relatively unknown rivers of considerable size along the coastal flank of the range are not listed, partly because they are largely unknown and also very difficult to access.''

External link



Canadian Mountain Encyclopedia article on the Pacific Ranges

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.