PACIFIC COAST RANGES

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The 'Pacific Coast Ranges' are the series of mountain ranges that stretch along the west coast of North America from Alaska to northern and central Mexico. They are also known as the 'Pacific Cordillera', especially in Canada, where this term also includes the Rockies and Columbia Mountains and others.[1]
The character of the ranges varies considerably, from the record-setting tidewater glaciers in the ranges of Alaska, to the low but rugged and scrub-covered hills of southern California, but the entire coast is consistent in dropping steeply into the sea, often resulting in photogenic views. Along the British Columbia and Alaska coast, the mountains intermix with the sea in a complex maze of fjords, with thousands of islands.
There are a handful of small coastal plains at the mouths of rivers that have punched through the mountains, most notably at the Copper River in Alaska, the Fraser River in British Columbia, the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon, and the Sacramento River in California, the last creating San Francisco Bay.
From the vicinity of San Francisco Bay north, it is common in winter for cool unstable air masses from the Gulf of Alaska to make landfall in one of the Coast Ranges, resulting in heavy precipitation, both as rain and snow, especially on their western slopes.

Contents
Major ranges
Major icefields
References
External links

Major ranges


These are the members of the Pacific Coast Ranges, from north to south:

Kenai Mountains, southern Alaska

Chugach Mountains, southern Alaska

Talkeetna Mountains, southern Alaska

Wrangell Mountains, southern Alaska

Saint Elias Mountains, southern Alaska, southwestern Yukon Territory, far northwestern British Columbia


Alsek Ranges



Fairweather Range



Takshanuk Mountains, Haines, Alaska-area. Between Chilkat and Chilkoot watersheds

Coast Mountains


Boundary Ranges, southeastern Alaska, northwestern British Columbia



Cheja Range (southeast of Taku/Whiting Rivers)



Chechidla Range



Chutine Icefield



Adam Mountains



Ashington Range



Burniston Range



Dezadeash Range



Florence Range



Halleck Range



Juneau Icefield



Kahpo Mountains



Kakuhan Range



Lincoln Mountains



Longview Range



Peabody Mountains



Rousseau Range



Seward Mountains



Snowslide Range



Spectrum Range



Stikine Icecap


Kitimat Ranges BC North Coast


Pacific Ranges BC South Coast



Rainbow Range northwest Chilcotin, also classifiable as part of the Interior Plateau



Pantheon Range Homathko area



Niut Range Homathko area



Waddington Range Homathko area



Whitemantle Range Homathko area



Bendor Range



Garibaldi Ranges



Clendinning Range



Tantalus Range



Chilcotin Ranges




Dickson Range




Shulaps Range




Camelsfoot Range



Lillooet Ranges, Fraser Canyon west bank




Cantilever Range




Cayoosh Range



Douglas Ranges



★ Front Ranges (North Shore Mountains)

Vancouver Island Ranges, British Columbia

Olympic Mountains, Washington

Cascade Range, British Colmbia, Washington, Oregon and California

Oregon Coast Range, Oregon


Northern Oregon Coast Range


Central Oregon Coast Range


Southern Oregon Coast Range

Calapooya Mountains, Oregon

Klamath-Siskiyou


Klamath Mountains, Oregon, northern California


Siskiyou Mountains, Oregon, northern California


Trinity Alps and Salmon Mountains, California


Yolla Bolly Mountains, Northern California

Northern Coast Ranges, California


King Range, northern California


Mendocino Range, northern California


Mayacamas Mountains, California


Marin Hills, California, including Mount Tamalpais

Southern Coast Ranges, central California


Diablo Range, California


Santa Cruz Mountains, California


Santa Lucia Range, California


Temblor Range, California


Caliente Range, California

Transverse Ranges, California


Sierra Madre Mountains


Sierra Pelona Mountains


San Emigdio Mountains


San Rafael Mountains


Santa Ynez Mountains


Santa Susana Mountains


Topatopa Mountains


Simi Hills


Santa Monica Mountains


Tehachapi Mountains


San Gabriel Mountains


San Bernardino Mountains

Peninsular Ranges


Santa Ana Mountains, California


San Jacinto Mountains, California


Palomar Mountain Range, California


Sierra Juarez, Baja California


Sierra San Pedro Martir, Baja California


Sierra de la Laguna, Baja California Sur

Sierra Madre Occidental, Mexico

Major icefields


These are not named as ranges, but amount to the same thing. The Pacific Coast Ranges are home to the largest temperate-latitude icefields in the world.

Harding Icefield

Sargent Icefield

Bagley Icefield

Kluane Icefields

Juneau Icefield

Stikine Icecap

Ha-Iltzuk Icefield (Silverthrone Glacier)

Monarch Icefield

Waddington Icefield

Homathko Icefield

Lillooet Icecap (Lillooet Crown)

Pemberton Icecap
''Only the largest icefields are listed above; smaller icefields may be listed on the various range pages. Formally unnamed icefields are not listed''

References


1.

External links



Canadian Mountain Encyclopedia entry on the Pacific Cordillera

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