Mount Dana
|
Template:Mtnbox start Template:Mtnbox coor dms Template:Mtnbox topo Template:Mtnbox geology Template:Mtnbox climb Template:Mtnbox finish
Mount Dana is a mountain on the eastern edge of Yosemite National Park and is the second highest peak within the park after Mount Lyell. The Dana Meadows lie at the foot of the mountain. They are named after James Dwight Dana, a professor of geology at Yale. Mount Dana is composed of reddish metamorphic rock.
Mount Dana is a class 1 climb (hike), 3 miles and 3100' elevation gain from the park entrance at Tioga Pass. Mt. Dana is typically climbed from its western face, and its northern face includes a small, receding glacier known as the Dana Glacier.
Missing image
Gull_feeding_on_flies_with_tufa_and_Sierra_Nevada_in_background-closeup-1000px.jpeg
Gull_feeding_on_flies_with_tufa_and_Sierra_Nevada_in_background-closeup-1000px.jpeg