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travel / adventure / guides / summer 2004

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| PHOTO: MIKE BEEDELL |
The land that never melts shows its boldest face
BY BROCK MAY
Viewed from afar, a mountain's profile captures our imagination, pulling us ever upward,
inspiring our highest ideals.
The essence of mountain wilderness is found within its open spaces, in the silence and
diversity of its pristine landscape and in the
ominous risks it represents to the uninitiated or unwary.
As unlikely as it may seem, the world's longest uninterrupted cliff face is not found on
some storied mountain in the high
Himalayas, nor is it among the icy granitic spires of Patagonia in southern Chile. Rather,
Thor Peak, a magnificent but little-known
mountain, lies deep within the periglacial world of Nunavut's Auyuittuq National Park,
"the land that never melts."
Named for the Norse god of thunder, Thor Peak is seen by only a handful of adventurous
hikers and determined climbers each year.
It is a tooth-shaped massif of unusual proportions. It soars steeply up from the valley
floor into a featureless face that stretches
skyward for more than 1,000 metres. Thor Peak, principally made up of Precambrian
garnet-bearing gneisses and granitic intrusions such
as coarse-grained charnockite, guards the east side of the Weasel River Valley, 18
kilometres south of the top of Akshayuk Pass.
As do most of the world's great mountains, Thor Peak, once seen and experienced,
speaks silently to the human soul. And its
renowned west face remains an irresistible prize for many of the world's elite big-wall
specialists.
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