Alberta-BC boundary. Mountain
E of Mount Robson
53.1264 N 119.0481 W — Map 083E03 — Google — GeoHack — Bivouac
Earliest known reference to this name is 1908 (Coleman)
Name officially adopted in 1923
Official in BC – Canada
Elevation: 3190 m
E of Mount Robson
53.1264 N 119.0481 W — Map 083E03 — Google — GeoHack — Bivouac
Earliest known reference to this name is 1908 (Coleman)
Name officially adopted in 1923
Official in BC – Canada
Elevation: 3190 m
This mountain appears on:
Coleman’s map of Mount Robson 1910
Collie’s map Yellowhead Pass 1912
Wheeler’s map Mount Robson 1912
Boundary Commission Sheet 32 (surveyed in 1922 &1924)
Coleman’s map of Mount Robson 1910
Collie’s map Yellowhead Pass 1912
Wheeler’s map Mount Robson 1912
Boundary Commission Sheet 32 (surveyed in 1922 &1924)
“My brother [Lucius] one day explored the main glacier for two or three miles,” wrote Arthur Philomen Coleman [1852–1939] of his visit to Mount Robson in 1908, “making the curious find of the bones of a lynx among some moraine debris on the ice. Why had the animal chosen that out-of-the-way desert of ice as a burial place? We named the nearest mountain to the west Lynx Mountain, in his honour.”
References:
- Coleman, Arthur Philomen [1852–1939]. The Canadian Rockies: New and Old Trails. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1911, p. 319. Internet Archive