Mount Salisbury

Mount Salisbury
Mount Salisbury centered in the distance beyond Margerie Glacier, with Mount Tlingit to right.
Highest point
Elevation12,170 ft (3,709 m)
Prominence3,970 ft (1,210 m)
Parent peakMount Tlingit
Isolation3.04 mi (4.89 km)
ListingHighest US summits (#176)
Coordinates58°51′03″N 137°22′22″W / 58.850818°N 137.372745°W / 58.850818; -137.372745
Naming
EtymologyRollin D. Salisbury
Geography
Mount Salisbury
CountryUnited States
StateAlaska
Census AreaHoonah–Angoon
Protected areaGlacier Bay National Park and Preserve
Parent rangeFairweather Range
Topo mapUSGS Mount Fairweather D-5
Climbing
First ascent1977 by J Nelson, S Swenson, J Eberharter, G Thompson
Easiest routeglacier/snow/ice climb

Mount Salisbury is a 12,170-foot (3,709 m) peak in the Fairweather Range of Alaska, six miles (10 km) southeast of Mount Fairweather. Its east slopes feed one of the northern branches of the Johns Hopkins Glacier, which flows into Glacier Bay. On its western side is a large cirque, shared with Mount Fairweather, Mount Quincy Adams, and Lituya Mountain, which heads the Fairweather Glacier; this flows almost to the Pacific coast at Cape Fairweather.

Though not exceptional in terms of absolute elevation, Mount Salisbury does possess great vertical relief over local terrain: for example, the southwest side of the mountain drops over 10,000 feet (3,048 m) to the Johns Hopkins Glacier in only five miles.

Mount Salisbury is not often climbed, partly due to its proximity to the higher and better-known Mount Fairweather, and partly due to difficult access and the typically bad weather that this range possesses.