El Altar

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox mountain El Altar or Capac Urcu (possibly from Kichwa kapak principal, great, important / magnificence, urku mountain)<ref>Kichwa Yachakukkunapa Shimiyuk Kamu (Ministry of Education, Ecuador) (Kichwa-Spanish dictionary), 2009</ref><ref>Miñaca Rea Silvia Patricia, Vallejo Lara Vicente Orlando, Diseño de paquetes turísticos para el Nevado Los Altares por el sector Inguisay, Universidad de Chimborazo, 2010 (in Spanish)</ref> is an extinct volcano on the western side of Sangay National Park in Ecuador, Template:Cvt south of Quito, with a highest point of Template:Cvt. Spaniards named it so because it resembled two nuns and four friars listening to a bishop around a church altar. In older English sources it is also called The Altar.<ref>The New International Encyclopaedia Volume 1 ed Frank Moore Colby, Talcott Williams 1918 Page 618 "The northern group, mainly comprised in Ecuador, is the most imposing collection of active and extinct volcanoes on earth. ... The Altar, a truncated mountain, 17,736 feet in height, is said to have once been the highest in the region"</ref>

Geology

El Altar consists of a large stratovolcano of Pliocene-Pleistocene age with a caldera breached to the west. Inca legends report that the top of El Altar collapsed after seven years of activity in about 1460, but the caldera is considered to be much older than this by geologists. Nine major peaks over Template:Convert form a horseshoe-shaped ridge about Template:Convert across, surrounding a central basin that contains a crater lake at about Template:Convert, known as Laguna Collanes or Laguna Amarilla.

File:Lagunacollanes.JPG
Laguna Collanes or Laguna Amarilla

Access and recreation

El Altar is perhaps the most technically demanding climb in Ecuador. The route to the El Obispo summit is graded D+.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> December through February are the best months to attempt an ascent. Much more accessible is the hike to the lake within the caldera of the mountain. From Riobamba, one takes a bus for about an hour to Candelaria and then checks in at the ranger station to enter the Sangay park. About 4–7 hours of an extremely muddy trail (knee-high rubber boots are recommended) leaves one at the refuge belonging to Hacienda Releche, which can be rented. The refuge has many beds, and a kitchen. To hike to the lake is another 1.5h - 2 hours from the refuge across a valley and up a steep hill.

List of peaks

The nine peaks of El Altar, starting with the highest summit on the south side and proceeding counterclockwise:

Peak name Translation Elevation Direction from lake First ascent
Obispo Bishop Template:Convert South July 7, 1963, Ferdinando Gaspard, Marino Tremonti, Claudio Zardini
Monja Grande Great Nun Template:Convert Southeast August 17, 1968, Bill Ross and Margaret Young
Monja Chica Small Nun Template:Convert East-Southeast January 16, 1971, Peter Bednar and party
Tabernáculo Tabernacle Template:Convert East
  Fraile Oriental     Eastern Friar   Template:Convert East-Northeast September 28, 1979, Fernando Jaramillo, Danny Moreno, Luis Naranjo, Hernán Reinoso, Mauricio Reinoso and Marcos Serrano
Fraile Beato Devout Friar Template:Convert East-Northeast
Fraile Central Central Friar Template:Convert Northeast
Fraile Grande Great Friar Template:Convert North-Northeast December 1, 1972, Lorenzo Lorenzi, Armando Perron, Marino Tremonti
Canónigo Canon Template:Convert North March 7, 1965, Ferdinando Gaspard, Lorenzo Lorenzi, Marino Tremonti, Claudio Zardini

See also

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References

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Sources

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