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Most mountain peaks of Canada lie in the west, specifically in British Columbia, Alberta, and the Yukon. Mountains can be found all over British Columbia while those in Alberta are mainly situated on the eastern side of the Canadian Rockies. The Saint Elias Mountains in the Yukon hold some of country's highest mountains, including the highest, Mount Logan at 5,959 metres (19,551 ft).
Media related to Mountains of Alberta at Wikimedia Commons
Mountain/Peak | metres | feet | Mountain range | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mount Columbia | 3,747 | 12,293 | Winston Churchill Range | Second highest in Canadian Rockies |
Twin Peaks massif | 3,684 | 12,087 | Winston Churchill Range | Can be skied to the summit |
Mount Alberta | 3,619 | 11,873 | Winston Churchill Range | Ice axe used in first ascent (1925) on exhibit at Jasper Yellowhead Museum |
Mount Assiniboine | 3,616 | 11,864 | Canadian Rockies | Matterhorn of the Rockies |
Mount Forbes | 3,612 | 11,850 | Canadian Rockies | Highest in Banff National Park |
Mount Temple | 3,543 | 11,624 | Bow Range | First 11,000' mountain to be climbed in the Canadian Rockies (1894) |
Mount Brazeau | 3,525 | 11,565 | Brazeau Range | South of Maligne Lake |
Mount Kitchener | 3,505 | 11,499 | Winston Churchill Range | Originally named Mount Douglas |
Mount Lyell | 3,504 | 11,496 | Lyell Group | Five distinct peaks |
Snow Dome | 3,456 | 11,339 | Winston Churchill Range | A hydrological apex of North America |
Media related to Mountains of British Columbia at Wikimedia Commons
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