Devils Thumb

Mountain in the Stikine Icecap region


title: "Devils Thumb" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["boundary-ranges", "two-thousanders-of-the-united-states", "two-thousanders-of-british-columbia", "mountains-of-petersburg-borough,-alaska", "canada–united-states-border", "international-mountains-of-north-america"] description: "Mountain in the Stikine Icecap region" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devils_Thumb" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Mountain in the Stikine Icecap region ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox mountain"]

FieldValue
nameDevils Thumb
photoDevilsThumb.jpg
elevation_ft9077
rangeStikine Icecap, Boundary Ranges
locationSoutheastern Alaska, U.S. and northwestern British Columbia, Canada
mapAlaska#British Columbia#Canada
map_captionLocation in Alaska##Location in British Columbia##Location in Canada
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom8
mapframe-captionInteractive map of Devils Thumb
coordinates
topoUSGS Sumdum A-2
NTS
first_ascent1946 by Fred Beckey, Clifford Schmidtke, Bob Craig
easiest_routerock/snow/ice climb
::

| name = Devils Thumb | photo = DevilsThumb.jpg | photo_caption = | elevation_ft = 9077 | elevation_ref = | prominence = | prominence_ref= | range = Stikine Icecap, Boundary Ranges | location = Southeastern Alaska, U.S. and northwestern British Columbia, Canada | map = Alaska#British Columbia#Canada | map_caption = Location in Alaska##Location in British Columbia##Location in Canada | mapframe = yes | mapframe-zoom = 8 | mapframe-caption = Interactive map of Devils Thumb | coordinates = | coordinates_ref= | topo = USGS Sumdum A-2 NTS | type = | age = | first_ascent = 1946 by Fred Beckey, Clifford Schmidtke, Bob Craig | easiest_route = rock/snow/ice climb

Devils Thumb, or Taalkhunaxhkʼu Shaa in Tlingit, is a mountain in the Stikine Icecap region of the AlaskaBritish Columbia border, near Petersburg. It is named for its projected thumb-like appearance. Its name in the Tlingit language means "the mountain that never flooded" and is said to have been a refuge for people during Aangalakhu ("the Great Flood"). It is one of the peaks that marks the border between the United States and Canada, and is also listed on maps as Boundary Peak 71.

Devils Thumb is a very challenging climb even for advanced mountain climbers.

Location

Devils Thumb is part of a group of striking, difficult rock peaks on the western edge of the Stikine Icecap. The Stikine Icecap occupies the crest of the Boundary Ranges, a subrange of the Coast Mountains spanning the Canada–United States border, north of the mouth of the Stikine River. Other peaks in the area include the Witches Tits and Cat's Ears Spires (part of the western ridge of the Devils Thumb massif itself), and Mount Burkett and Burkett Needle, a pair of spires about 8 mi to the northeast.

Notable features

The most famous feature on the Devils Thumb among climbers is its Northwest Face, rising 6700 ft from the Witches Cauldron at its base to the summit, at an average angle of 67 degrees.{{cite book |last1= Wood |first1= Michael |last2= Coombs |first2= Colby |title= Alaska: A Climbing Guide |edition= 1st |year= 2001 |publisher= Mountaineers Books |location= Seattle |isbn= 978-0-89886-724-4 |oclc= 48500987|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_4oTCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA187|page=187

Climbing history

The first ascent of the Devils Thumb in 1946 was a landmark in North American mountaineering. Fred Beckey, along with Clifford Schmidtke and Bob Craig, climbed the East Ridge, a route that combined technical difficulty equal to anything ever climbed on the continent to that time with great remoteness and terrible weather conditions.

The Northwest Face has seen many attempts; at least three teams have died on this face. It stands as a huge wall with bad weather, bad rock, bad ice, and bad avalanches. "It is a dangerous and difficult face that rarely, if ever, comes into condition," says Dieter Klose, who in 1982 made it halfway up the route, higher than anybody else alive.

In 1977, author Jon Krakauer climbed the East Ridge of the Devils Thumb, a feat described in detail in his book Eiger Dreams: Ventures Among Men and Mountains. Krakauer also chronicles his solo ascent of Devils Thumb in chapters 14 and 15 of his book Into the Wild.

In 2010, Colin Haley and Mikey Schaefer completed a 3 day traverse across the Witches’ Tits, Cat’s Ears Spires, and Devil’s Thumb, calling it the Diablo Traverse (5.10 A2), building on an earlier attempt by Jon Walsh and Andre Ike in 2004. https://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/12201112200/Devils-Thumb-Diablo-Traverse & https://colinhaley.com/devils-thumb-the-diablo-traverse/

In 2023, Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell successfully scaled all 5 peaks in just under 12 hours, completing the first ever single day traverse of the Devil’s Thumb skyline. Their climb is documented in the 2024 National Geographic film The Devil's Climb.

Notes

  1. The peak's official name carries no apostrophe.
  2. A shoulder of the peak is the crash site of Dirk Benedict's character's plane in the 1996 film Alaska.

References

References

  1. "2003 American Alpine Journal". The Mountaineers Books.
  2. Krakauer, Jon. (1997). "Eiger dreams: Ventures among men and mountains". Anchor Books.
  3. Moye, Jayme. (2024-11-08). "“Just Miserable.” Tommy Caldwell Takes Us Inside His New Climbing Film with Alex Honnold.".
  4. {{cite gnis. 1421449. Devils Thumb
  5. "Devils Thumb".

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boundary-rangestwo-thousanders-of-the-united-statestwo-thousanders-of-british-columbiamountains-of-petersburg-borough,-alaskacanada–united-states-borderinternational-mountains-of-north-america