Cirque of the Unclimbables | |
Map: | Canada#Canada Northwest Territories |
Relief: | 1 |
Location: | Inside the Nahanni National Park Reserve, Northwest Territories, Canada |
Nearest City: | Fort Simpson Fort Liard Nahanni Butte |
Designation: | Mountain |
Coordinates: | 62.1017°N -127.6708°W |
Cirque of the Unclimbables, located inside[1] the Nahanni National Park Reserve, in the Northwest Territories, Canada, approximately 500km (300miles) west of Yellowknife, is a cluster of peaks and walls in the Mackenzie Mountains Natural Region.
According to the tourism promotion authority of the government of Northwest Territories:
In 1955, the mountaineer Arnold Wexler came across this series of remote cliffs in the Logan Mountains, now part of Nahanni National Park Reserve. Frustrated by their sheer granite walls, he named the jagged monsters the Cirque of the Unclimbables.
Access to the Cirque and the Ragged Range is by charter aircraft.
The Cirque's most famous peak is the Lotus Flower Tower[2] featured in Fifty Classic Climbs of North America. The most notable view of the Cirque is visible from its 610m (2,000feet) southeast buttress. Other climbs include Mount Proboscis, Club International, and Middle Huey Spire.