'Mount Whitney' is the highest point in the
contiguous United States at elevation 14,505 feet (4,421 meters). It is located at the boundary between California's
Inyo and
Tulare counties. The western slope of the mountain lies within
Sequoia National Park. Mount Whitney is the southern terminus of the
John Muir Trail, which runs 211.9 miles (340.9 km) from Yosemite Valley.
Mount Whitney was named after
Josiah Whitney, the State Geologist of
California. It was first climbed in
1873 by Charles Begole, A. H. Johnson, and John Lucas (fishermen who lived in
Lone Pine, California.)
Mount Whitney is just 76 miles (123 km) west of the lowest point in North America, in
Death Valley (282 feet (86 m) below sea level).
Geography and geology
Mount Whitney lies along the
Sierra Crest: the range of highest peaks of the Sierra Nevada. Water to the west of the crest flows into the
Pacific Ocean, while water to the east flows into the
Great Basin.
[1] The eastern slope of Whitney is far steeper than its western slope: Whitney rises just over 2 miles (~3,300 m) in elevation above the floor of the
Owens Valley. The difference is slope arises because the entire Sierra Nevada is one
fault block that is analogous to a door: the door is hinged on the west, and is slowly rising on the east.
[2] The rise is caused by a
normal fault system that runs at the base of the Sierra, below Whitney. Thus, the
granite that forms Mount Whitney is the same as the granite that forms the
Alabama Hills, thousands of feet below.
[3]
The raising of Whitney (and the downdrop of the Owens Valley) is due to the same geological forces that cause the
Basin and Range Province: the crust of much of the intermountain west is slowly being stretched.
The granite that forms Mount Whitney is part of the
Sierra Nevada batholith: in
Cretaceous time, blobs of molten rock that originated from
subduction rose underneath what is now Whitney and froze underground to form large expanses of granite. In the last few million years, the Sierra started to rise, and glacial and river erosion stripped the upper layers of rock to reveal the resistant granite that makes up Whitney today.
Elevation measurements
The estimated elevation of the peak of Mount Whitney has changed over the years. This is not due to the peak growing (although it is): the elevation measurement has become more refined, and more importantly, the vertical coordinate system has changed. The peak is commonly thought to be 14,494 feet (4,418 m) high from a USGS brass benchmark. The older summit plaque (sheet metal with black lettering on white enamel paint) reads: elevation 14,496.811 feet. However, this is in the NVGD29
vertical datum from 1929. Since then, the exact shape of the
Earth (the
geoid) has become better estimated, with a new coordinate system NAVD88 established in 1988. In this new coordinate system, the benchmark GT1811 is estimated to be at 14,505 feet (4,421 m).
[1]. See
[2] for the elevation data of this benchmark, supplied by the
United States National Geodetic Survey, the agency that estimates the horizontal and vertical position of landmarks.

The Needles and Whitney's East Face seen from the Mountaineer's Route
Recreational opportunities
Hiking
Main articles: Mount Whitney trail
The most popular route to hike to the summit of Mt. Whitney is the main
Mount Whitney trail (MMWT) whose trailhead originates in Whitney Portal at 8,360' (2,548 m), 13 miles (21 km) west of the town of Lone Pine, CA. (Access from Tulare County, on the west side of the Sierra Crest, involves a much longer, multi-day excursion.) The hike is about 22 miles (35.4 km) round trip with an elevation gain of 6,100 ft (1,859 m). This trail is extremely popular and its access is restricted between May 1st and November 1st, permitting 60 backpackers and 100 day hikers daily for the MMWT.
Climbing
The steep eastern side of the mountain offers a variety of
climbing challenges. The "Mountaineer's Route", a
Class 3 gully to the north of the east face, was first climbed by
John Muir. The East Face route, first climbed in
1931, is a classic easy
climbing route of the Sierra; mostly
Class 3, with the hardest parts at only 5.4 (
YDS). Other routes range up to 5.10 in difficulty.
[4]
To the south of the main summit there are a series of minor summits that are completely inconspicuous from the west, but appear as a series of "needles" from the east. The routes on these include some of the finest
big-wall climbing in the high Sierra. Two of the needles were named after participants in an
1880 scientific expedition to the mountain: the
Keeler Needle and the
Day Needle; the latter has now been renamed
Crooks Peak after
Hulda Crooks, who hiked up Mount Whitney every year until well into her nineties.
References
1. The Great Basin
2. Sierra Nevada
3. A Natural History of California, , Allan A., Schoenherr, UC Press, 1995, ISBN 0-520-06922-6
4. The Climber's Guide to the High Sierra, Steve Roper, , , Sierra Club Books, 1976, ISBN 0-87156-147-6
★ Doug Thompson and Elisabeth Newbold, ''Mount Whitney: Mountain Lore From The Whitney Store'' (Westwind Publishing Company, September 1997)) ISBN 978-0965359603
See also
★
Mountain peaks of North America
★
Mountain peaks of the United States
★
List of California fourteeners
★
Hawthorne Nevada Airlines Flight 708: a plane that crashed into the side of Mount Whitney in 1969, killing all 35 on board.
★
Badwater Ultramarathon: a 135-mile (215 km) running race from the bottom of
Death Valley to
Whitney Portal.
External links
★
US Forest Service Information on Hiking Mount Whitney
★
Whitney Portal Store
★
Information on hiking Mt. Whitney on the OutdoorDB wiki
★
Mount Whitney on Summitpost.org