Eldorado Peaks, NV: Stalker vs. Stocker

Harlan W S & Paula R
December 2, 2019

I first saw peak "1173m" from Mt Stocker (which is on the W side of the valley between the two peaks).  Both 1173m and Stocker have the same final closed contour of 1170m. Mt Stocker was given an elevation of 3871' (1180m) on the older 1958 USGS 15 minute map, but there is no record of a formal survey, and the peak never had a benchmark. The current map was issued in 1984, with a different geoid to define "sea level," the newer USGS map removes the 3871' elevation for Stocker, and instead denotes the eastern peak as 1173m. There is no indication of a survey station on either peak. Note the true summit block is about 1m higher than the point assigned "1173m" by the USGS.

I took telephoto pictures, from the summit block of "1173," over the top of Stocker.  I identified features in my photo and Google Earth, as well as the ExpertGps topo and aerial modes. I conclude that Stocker is the same elevation as 1173m, to within 1m,
accounting for 1.5m of earth curvature.

I went alone this day, as I had just injured my ankle badly, and needed to set my own pace. I put the photos on FaceBook, with a suggestion that one could protect the climb of the summit block with a piece of webbing thrown over the top, anchored to a rock on the far side. Ms. XX read my post, and went to the peak the very next day, and used that method.
She wanted to call it "Stockman Peak," but I asked her to call the 1173m peak "Mt Stalker" on Peakbagger as something of a joke, because she would stalk my trips.

There is a register placed in 2001 by Tom Roundtree, declaring the 1173m peak as the highpoint of Eldorado Mts. Since the Ireteba peaks are also considered part of the Eldorado Mts by some, and there is a 1176m peak 2 miles to the NW, clearly this label is incorrect. The area was declared as the Eldorado Wilderness in 2002. I was unable to pull Tom's register out of the bottle, so I added a thinner notebook. Again, note the top of the block is 1m higher than the point indicated as 1173 by USGS.

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I took the route from
the pavement on
Rte 60/165 to Nelson.
The first 1-2 miles is a
confusion of washes. It
looks like there is an easier
path from 4x4 road to the
east.
IMG_0828
First view of Stocker
Ridge from west.
IMG_0831
IMG_0833
Arch to SSW of Stocker
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We go up the R gulley.
It's steeper than it
looks.
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Now on the E side of
Stocker ridge, we see
the true summit, a lone boulder.
(USGS, using photogrammetry,
put the 1173m mark on
a spot to N).

IMG_0841
This is the true summit
block, view S. I needed
to add 2" of cheater rock
to reach the ledge at
top of "7.5'" bar. A taller person
might reach the ledge easily,
but would need some upper
body strength to mantle. Look
here and here to see how
  Ms. XX used webbing.
IMG_0845
View S, with snowy
Charleston at L, Black
Mt ridge in mid-distance,
and Lonesome Peak
(Wilderness highpoint)
as the tannish Mt on R
in foreground.
IMG_0849
View to Railroad Peak
in Black Hills near
Henderson.
IMG_0850
View S to Spirit Mt
IMG_0852
View over Stocker
IMG_0853
Black Mt in back
of Lonesome Peak.
IMG_0856 IMG_0857
Bob Cable wrote rock-
climbing books for California,
and has climbed many of
the harder summit blocks
in Southern NV.
IMG_0859
Fire Mt. near river, with
Mt. Tipton and the
Cerbat Ridge in back.
IMG_0861
View S through some canyons
at the S end of the valley
between Stocker and Stalker.
IMG_0862
All the S canyons had
unseen, talus-covered
cliff bands
IMG_0863
So for today, I opted
not to explore routes
down the canyons.
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View back at Stalker
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Heading W from Stocker
Ridge.
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Nelson and the Nelson Rd.
Nelson-15min-1958
The 1958 15 min. map.