Vesper Peak


Image:Night DelCampo.JPG|286px|right|thumb|Del Campo Peak from Vesper Lake
Vesper Peak is a peak along the Mountain Loop Highway region of the North Cascades of Washington state. It is about south of Darrington and east of Granite Falls, in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. Its gentle south and east slopes contrast with a sheer north face which offers "excellent technical routes".

Geology

Vesper Peak consists of biotite-quartz diorite that intrudes metamorphosed Mesozoic ribbon cherts. The ribbon chert underlies its south and southwest slopes. This Oligocene biotite-quartz diorite stock is an offshoot and extension of the Index batholith that outcrops south of this peak.

Historic Mining

Vesper Peak lies in the eastern part of the Sultan Mining District. Directly associated with Vesper Peak are the now-depleted Vesper Peak Garnet Deposit, also known as the 48-58 Prospect, which lies near it summit and the Sunrise Copper Prospect, which lies near its base. Grossular garnets and other gem quality minerals were mined from a lens of fine- to coarse-grained skarn composed of hedenbergite, grossular, quartz, and wollastonite. The pod formed from the hydrothermal alteration of limestone that was completely enclosed in chert near the chert-diorite contact. This lens was about long, wide, and at it thickest about thick. The Sunrise Copper Prospect lies less than a southeast of Vesper Peak at altitudes of about in rough and precipitous terrain. It consists of a large mass of quartz-cemented tectonic breccia which contains chalcopyrite and molybdenite as the primary ore minerals. In 1976, an unsuccessful proposal was made to develop the Sunrise Copper Prospect as a major molybdenum mine on Vesper Peak.
The maps of Broughton, Carithers, and others, show the presence of addiotional open cut pits and underground workings from historic mineral exploration in the immediate vicinity of Vesper Peak. For example, numerous copper prospects, including underground mine workings, can be found about north and northwest of Vesper Peak between Copper Lake and Marble Pass. In addition, about west and southwest of Vesper Peak, lie additional mineral prospects, e,g, Ala-Dickson and Mountain Cedar prospects, containing open cut pits, audits, and shafts. Other unmapped and unrecorded, mine works may exist in the area of Vesper Peak.

Climbing and recreation

The peak was ascended in 1918 during a Mountaineers outing, but "they were likely preceded by prospectors and a geological survey party led by Louis C. Fletcher". The steep north face was first climbed in 1968 by Bruce Garrett and Jim Langdon; several routes exist on the face, with difficulties in the 5.6 to 5.10 range.
The summit can be reached from the Sunrise Mine Road, off the Mountain Loop Highway. The hike is a round trip with an elevation gain of. The summit affords views of Glacier Peak, Sloan Peak, Mount Dickerman, Mount Pugh, Mount Rainier, Mount Stuart and a bit of the top of Mount Adams.

In popular culture

This Location is the first scene the player sees, and an optional destination in the "Postcards" section in the VR Demo The Lab.