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Mount Adams (New Zealand)

Mountain in West Coast Region, New Zealand

Mount Adams (New Zealand)

Summary

Mountain in West Coast Region, New Zealand

FieldValue
nameMount Adams
photoMt Adams from SE.jpg
photo_captionMount Adams from the south-east, Escape Glacier at left, Siege Glacier (partially covered in rock debris) at centre. Late summer conditions.
mapNew Zealand
locationSouth Island, New Zealand
coordinates
elevation_m2208
prominence_m754
rangeSouthern Alps
topoTopo50 BW17 – Harihari
NZMS 260: I35 Whataroa
easiest_routeNew Zealand Alpine Grade 1

NZMS 260: I35 Whataroa

Mount Adams is a mountain in the West Coast region of New Zealand's South Island. The summit is roughly 19 km south of Harihari and reaches 2208 m in height.

Mount Adams lies to the west of the main divide of the Southern Alps and drains into the Whataroa and Poerua catchments. Both of these rivers flow westwards to the Tasman Sea. There are two small glaciers on the south-eastern slopes that drain the summit ice cap; the Escape Glacier (about 2.1 km in length) and the Siege Glacier (about 3.6 km).

Climate

This area, like much of the West Coast region, is subject to high precipitation by world standards. There are no rainfall gauges on Mount Adams, but a gauge in Whataroa valley at the bridge 10 km south-west of the summit at 60 metres above sea level, records a mean annual rainfall of 5690 mm and daily falls of up to 320 mm. It is likely that the precipitation at higher elevations on Mount Adams will be significantly greater than this, and a rain gauge in the Cropp River 42 km north-east of Mount Adams at 860 metres above sea level, records a mean annual rainfall of 10,690 mm and daily falls of up to 695 mm.

Geology

The Alpine Fault runs across the lower North-western slopes of the mountain near the edge of the coastal outwash plain, and is the boundary between the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates. Mount Adams itself is composed primarily of schist of Permian–Triassic (depositional) age, which is increasingly metamorphosed closer to the Alpine Fault.

On 6 October 1999, a large rock landslide originating near the northern summit of Mount Adams deposited c.10–15 million cubic metres of rock in the Poerua River 1790 m below. This created a 120 m high landslide dam, which formed a lake that extended 1.2 kilometres upstream. The dam failed six days later during heavy rain. Fears of major damage did not turn into reality when the dam was breached, though significant quantities of coarse gravel were deposited downstream and the river's path was changed in places.

Summit of Mt Adams (at right) from point 2194 m. Siege Glacier at centre and left. Late summer conditions.

Access

Mount Adams is unique in that it is one of the only glaciated peaks situated on or to the west of the main divide that is accessible as a weekend trip from a west coast road end. The standard route to the summit starts from a hidden layby off SH6 and heads up Dry Creek/Little Man River to a steep spur where a marked route starts. The marked route ends at the bushline and the remainder of the climb is on tussock, rock, and eventually the summit ice cap glacier.

Although this route is technically not difficult, it involves multiple river crossings, off track travel up Dry Creek/Little Man River and above the bushline, and glacial travel requiring an ice axe and crampons. The overall elevation gain, from highway to summit, is approximately 2100 m. Most parties take two days to summit and return to SH6, though it is possible in a long summer day.

References

References

  1. {{LINZ. 11656. Mount Adams. 2009-04-08
  2. Pat Barrett, 17 August 1999, [http://www.patbarrettimages.co.nz/words/topfromthetop170899.shtml "Top From the Top"], ''Christchurch Press'', pg. 36.
  3. [http://www.wcrc.govt.nz/river_level_rainfall/7_days/whataroa.htm West Coast Regional Council, retrieved 1 January 2010]
  4. [http://www.wcrc.govt.nz/river_level_rainfall/24_hour/cropp.htm West Coast Regional Council, retrieved 1 January 2010]
  5. [http://www.otago.ac.nz/geology/research/structural_geology/alpinefault/06.html Department of Geology, University of Otago, retrieved 2 January 2010]
  6. [http://www.otago.ac.nz/geology/research/structural_geology/alpinefault/index.html Department of Geology, University of Otago, retrieved 2 January 2010] {{webarchive. link. (24 February 2009)
  7. Graham T. Hancox, Mauri J. McSaveney, and Vernon R. Manville, 2005, [http://www.rsnz.org/publish/nzjgg/2005/049.php "The October 1999 Mount Adams rock avalanche and subsequent landslide dam-break flood and effects in Poerua River, Westland, New Zealand"] {{Webarchive. link. (6 September 2008 , ''New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics'' 48, pp. 683–705.)
  8. "Report on the 6 October 1999 landslide and its effects".
  9. FederatedMountain Clubs of New Zealand, FMC Bulletin July 2008, Number 176, [http://fmc.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/2009-06-Bulletin-176.pdf]
  10. Pat Barrett, 17 August 1999, [http://www.patbarrettimages.co.nz/words/topfromthetop170899.shtml "Top From the Top"], ''Christchurch Press'', pg. 36.
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