La Cloche Mountains

La Cloche Mountains
La Cloche Range
Highest point
Elevation543 m (1,781 ft) 
Geography
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
Range coordinates46°7.5′N 81°45′W / 46.1250°N 81.750°W / 46.1250; -81.750

The La Cloche Mountains, also called the La Cloche Range, are a range of mountains in Northern Ontario, Canada, along the northern shore of Lake Huron near Manitoulin Island. The mountains are located in the Canadian Shield, and are composed primarily of white quartzite.[1]

They extend roughly from La Cloche Provincial Park, south of Massey, to Killarney Provincial Park, southwest of Sudbury. The communities of West River, Willisville and Whitefish Falls are located directly within the range; the town of Espanola and the municipality of Killarney are located nearby, however they can be seen (from some vantage points) as far away as Manitoulin Island.

Ontario Highway 6 is the principal transportation route through the range.

Killarney Provincial Park is located in the range and is very popular among tourists. Another feature includes the "Heaven's Gate Trail" which traverses the length of the range from Willisville in the east to Massey in the west. Thought to be an old aboriginal trade route, it traverses the plateau of the range with the North Channel of Lake Huron visible to the south. The trail is particularly grueling and is rarely traversed mostly due to its length and remoteness from major cities.

Geology

With an estimated age of 1.88 billion years, the La Cloche Mountains consist of metamorphosed quartz sandstone, which accumulated and was deposited in the Georgian Bay region of Ontario 2.5 billion years ago.[2] The mountains themselves were formed during the Penokean Orogeny, a mountain-building stage in the Canadian Shield's geological history.[3] During this time, the sandstone that had accumulated was compressed and heated to form the white Quartzite which dominates the landscape today. The hills comprising the La Cloche Mountains are believed to have once been higher than today's Rocky Mountains, and were eroded down to their current altitude of 539 meters[4] at its peak. They remain among the highest altitudes in Ontario.

A southern extension of the La Cloche Mountains, the South La Cloche Mountains, extends to the south and juts into Georgian Bay along Badgeley Point, north of Killarney and Secondary Highway 637.

History

According to legend, the hills were warning bells, or tocsins, used by local First Nations for signaling. These "Bell Rocks" could be heard for a considerable distance when struck, and accordingly when voyageurs explored the area they named it with the French word for "bell" — La Cloche.

Camps

Images

References

  1. ^ Turner, Bob; Quat, Marianne; Debicki, Ruth; Thurston, Phil (2022-08-27). "Killarney" (PDF). Ontario.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  2. ^ "UBC Press | Journey to the Ice Age - Discovering an Ancient World By Peter L. Storck". UBC Press. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
  3. ^ Schulz, Klaus J.; Cannon, William F. (2007-08-01). "The Penokean orogeny in the Lake Superior region". Precambrian Research. 157 (1–4): 4–25. doi:10.1016/j.precamres.2007.02.022. ISSN 0301-9268.
  4. ^ "Silver Peak". ontariohighpoints.com. Retrieved 2018-07-11.

External links

Media related to La Cloche Mountains at Wikimedia Commons

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