Mount Barr
Mount Barr is a mountain in the Skagit Range of the Cascade Mountains of southern British Columbia, Canada, located on the northeast side of Wahleach Lake and just southwest of Hope. It is a ridge highpoint with an elevation of 1,907 m (6,257 ft).
| Mount Barr | |
|---|---|
![]() Mount Barr Location in western British Columbia  | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 1,907 m (6,257 ft) | 
| Prominence | 137 m (449 ft) | 
| Coordinates | 49°15′49″N 121°33′35″W[1] | 
| Geography | |
| Location | British Columbia, Canada | 
| District | Yale Division Yale Land District | 
| Parent range | Skagit Range, Cascade Mountains | 
| Topo map | NTS 92H5 Harrison Lake | 
| Geology | |
| Type of rock | Intrusive | 
| Volcanic arc/belt | Canadian Cascade Arc Pemberton Volcanic Belt  | 
Mount Barr is one of several magmatic features just north of the Chilliwack batholith. It is part of a large circular igneous intrusion that was placed along the Fraser Fault 16 to 21 million years ago.[2][3] The intrusion is part of the Pemberton Volcanic Belt, an eroded volcanic belt that formed as a result of subduction of the Farallon Plate starting 29 million years ago.[2][4][5]
References
    
- "Mount Barr". BC Geographical Names. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
 - "Miocene peralkaline volcanism in west-central British Columbia - Its temporal and plate-tectonics setting" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
 - Chapter 5: The Cascade Episode
 - Cenozoic to Recent plate configurations in the Pacific Basin: Ridge subduction and slab window magmatism in western North America
 - Catalogue of Canadian volcanoes: Franklin Glacier Archived 2010-12-11 at the Wayback Machine
 
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