Date.Authority.Height.Latitude.Longitude.
1786La Pérouse12,672 feet60° 15' 00"140° 10' 00"
1791Malaspina17,851 feet60° 17' 35"140° 52' 17"
1794Vancouver—————60° 22' 30"140° 39' 00"
1847Russian Hydrographic Chart, 137817,850 feet60° 21' 00"141° 00' 00"
1847Tebenkof (Notes)16,938 feet60° 22' 36"140° 54' 00"
1849Tebenkof (Chart VII)16,938 feet60° 21' 30"140° 54' 00"
Bach. Can. Inseln16,758 feet60° 17' 30"140° 51' 00"
1872English Admiralty Chart 217214,970 feet60° 21' 00"141° 00' 00"
1874U. S. Coast Survey19,500±400 feet60° 20' 45"141° 00' 12"
1891Nat. Geog. Soc. Ex.18,100±100 feet60° 17' 51"140° 55' 30"

The position given by Malaspina is from a report on astronomical observations made during his voyage,2 which places the mountain in longitude 134° 33' 10" west of Cadiz. Taking the longitude of Cadiz as 6° 19' 07" west of Greenwich, the figures given in the table are obtained.

2 Memorias sobre las obversaciones astronomicas hechas por les navegantes Españoles en distintos lugares del globe; Por Don Josef Espinosa y Tello. Madrid, en la Imprente real, Ano de 1809: 2 vols., large 8°; vol. 1, pp. 57–60. My attention was directed to this work by Dr. Dall, who owns the only copy I have seen.

The data from which the various determinations made previous to 1874 were obtained have not been published. The observations made by Messrs. Dall and Baker, of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, are published in full in the annual report of that Survey for 1875, already referred to. The observations made by myself last summer as a part of the work of an expedition sent to Mount St. Elias by the National Geographic Society and the U. S. Geological Survey, from which the height and position of the mountain have been computed, are as follows:

A base line 16,876 feet long was measured on the beach at Icy bay. The line, with the exception of section C to D, as shown below, was measured three times in sections of about 3,000 feet each. The distances given below in columns 1 and 2 were obtained with a 100-foot steel tape, and those given in column 3 with a 300-foot iron wire. These are rough measurements, made without the use of a plumb-bob and without taking account of temperature. The ground was quite smooth, with a rise of about five feet in the center; but section C to D was crossed by a stream channel about 300 feet broad and twenty feet deep. Throughout much of the distance the ground was covered with grass, which was only partially cleared away. The stations at the ends of the line were ten feet above high tide. The bearing of the line from the western base was S. 89° E., magnetic.

Measurements of Base Line.

1.2.3.Mean.
Ft. in.Ft. in.Ft. in. Ft. in.
Western base to station A 3,179 103,178 73,178 9 3,179 1
Station A to station B2,355 22,354 12,354 2 2,354 6
Station B to station C3,589 03,587 93,586 0 3,587 7
Station C to station DRejected.2,609 22,609 5 2,609 3
Station D to eastern base5,145 55,144 10Not meas-
ured.
5,145 1
Length of base line 16,875 6

The measurements of angles were made with a gradienter reading by vernier to minutes. The error of the vertical arc was –3', and remained constant during the observations.

Measurements of Angles at Western Base.