Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1520855> ?p ?o }
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- Q1520855 subject Q6375736.
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- Q1520855 subject Q8582096.
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- Q1520855 abstract "Template:ForMount Blackburn is the highest peak in the Wrangell Mountains of Alaska in the United States. It is the fifth highest peak in the United States and the twelfth highest peak in North America. The mountain is an old, eroded shield volcano, the second highest volcano in the United States behind Mount Bona and the fifth highest in North America. It was named in 1885 by Lt. Henry T. Allen of the U.S. Army after Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn, a U.S. senator from Kentucky. It is located in the heart of Wrangell – St. Elias National Park, the largest national park in the country.The mountain's massif is covered almost entirely by icefields and glaciers, and is the principal source of ice for the Kennicott Glacier, which flows southeast over 20 miles (32 km) to just above the town of McCarthy. The mountain also contributes a large volume of ice to the north-flowing Nabesna Glacier and the Kuskulana Glacier system.Mount Blackburn is a large, dramatic peak, with great local relief and independence from higher peaks. Its west face drops over 11,000 ft (3,350 m) to the Kuskulana Glacier in less than 4 horizontal miles (6 km). Its other faces drop 8,000–10,000 ft (2,440–3,050 m), all in less than 8 miles. The toe of the Kuskulana Glacier, less than 12 miles from the summit, lies at an elevation of 2,400 ft (730 m), giving a rise of 14,000 ft (4,270 m). While these figures speak to the peak's relief, one measure of its independence is that it is the 50th most topographically prominent peak in the world.The western of Blackburn’s two summits is the mountain’s highpoint, a fact that was not understood until the 1960s when the then new USGS maps were published. The first ascent of the west peak, and hence Mount Blackburn, was done on May 30, 1958 by Bruce Gilbert, Dick Wahlstrom, Hans Gmoser, Adolf Bitterlich, and Leon Blumer via the North (also called the Northwest) Ridge. This team made the first ascent of Blackburn, but did not even know it at the time due to the incorrect identification of the highpoint. In fact Blumer’s article in the 1959 American Alpine Journal is titled “Mount Blackburn – Second Ascent.”".
- Q1520855 elevation "4995.672".
- Q1520855 firstAscentYear "1958".
- Q1520855 locatedInArea Q748597.
- Q1520855 locatedInArea Q797.
- Q1520855 mountainRange Q616559.
- Q1520855 nationalTopographicSystemMapNumber "USGSMcCarthy C-7".
- Q1520855 prominence "3547.872".
- Q1520855 thumbnail MtBlackburn-KennicottGlacier.jpg?width=300.
- Q1520855 type Q212057.
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- Q1520855 elevation "16390.0".
- Q1520855 firstAscent "1958".
- Q1520855 location Q748597.
- Q1520855 location Q797.
- Q1520855 name "Mount Blackburn".
- Q1520855 prominence "11640.0".
- Q1520855 range Q616559.
- Q1520855 topo "USGS McCarthy C-7".
- Q1520855 type Q212057.
- Q1520855 point "61.73166666666667 -143.43305555555557".
- Q1520855 type Mountain.
- Q1520855 type Place.
- Q1520855 type Location.
- Q1520855 type Mountain.
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- Q1520855 type Place.
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- Q1520855 comment "Template:ForMount Blackburn is the highest peak in the Wrangell Mountains of Alaska in the United States. It is the fifth highest peak in the United States and the twelfth highest peak in North America. The mountain is an old, eroded shield volcano, the second highest volcano in the United States behind Mount Bona and the fifth highest in North America. It was named in 1885 by Lt. Henry T. Allen of the U.S. Army after Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn, a U.S. senator from Kentucky.".
- Q1520855 label "Mount Blackburn".
- Q1520855 lat "61.73166666666667".
- Q1520855 long "-143.43305555555557".
- Q1520855 depiction MtBlackburn-KennicottGlacier.jpg.
- Q1520855 name "Mount Blackburn".