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Definition of Mount Logan
1. Noun. A mountain peak in the St. Elias Range in the southwestern Yukon Territory in Canada (19,850 feet high).
Group relationships: Yukon, Yukon Territory, St. Elias Mountains, St. Elias Range
Generic synonyms: Mountain Peak
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mount Logan
Literary usage of Mount Logan
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Glaciers of North America: A Reading Lesson for Students of Geography and by Israel Cook Russell (1897)
"The culminating peak, so far as at present known, is Mount Logan, 19500 feet high.
Second in rank stands Mount St. Elias, 18023 feet in elevation. ..."
2. Glaciers of North America: A Reading Lesson for Students of Geography and by Israel Cook Russell (1897)
"The culminating peak, so far as at present known, is Mount Logan, 19500 feet high.
Second in rank stands Mount St. Elias, 18023 feet in elevation. ..."
3. The World Book: Organized Knowledge in Story and Picture edited by Michael Vincent O'Shea, Ellsworth D. Foster, George Herbert Locke (1917)
"Descending from the southern slopes of Mount Logan, and extending into Alaska,
is the great Seward Glacier, fifty miles long and more than three miles wide ..."
4. The Poets and Poetry of the West: With Biographical and Critical Notices by William Turner Coggeshall (1864)
"LINES WRITTEN ON Mount Logan.* YE who love only Nature's wildest form : The
desolate rock, the desolating storm ; The toppling, crackling avalanche of snow, ..."
5. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1895)
"Alaska—The Position of Mount Logan.—In the note entitled " Geographical Work on the
... 172), Mount Logan is stated to be situated " about 17 miles ..."
6. Glaciers of North America: A Reading Lesson for Students of Geography and by Israel Cook Russell (1897)
"The culminating peak, so far as at present known, is Mount Logan, 19500 feet high.
Second in rank stands Mount St. Elias, 18023 feet in elevation. ..."
7. Glaciers of North America: A Reading Lesson for Students of Geography and by Israel Cook Russell (1897)
"The culminating peak, so far as at present known, is Mount Logan, 19500 feet high.
Second in rank stands Mount St. Elias, 18023 feet in elevation. ..."
8. The World Book: Organized Knowledge in Story and Picture edited by Michael Vincent O'Shea, Ellsworth D. Foster, George Herbert Locke (1917)
"Descending from the southern slopes of Mount Logan, and extending into Alaska,
is the great Seward Glacier, fifty miles long and more than three miles wide ..."
9. The Poets and Poetry of the West: With Biographical and Critical Notices by William Turner Coggeshall (1864)
"LINES WRITTEN ON Mount Logan.* YE who love only Nature's wildest form : The
desolate rock, the desolating storm ; The toppling, crackling avalanche of snow, ..."
10. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1895)
"Alaska—The Position of Mount Logan.—In the note entitled " Geographical Work on the
... 172), Mount Logan is stated to be situated " about 17 miles ..."