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<text class="heading1" id="1">Other Western Crags</text>
<text class="text" id="2">This section contains information about other crags in the West and South West of Tasmania for which we do not have full guides for.</text>
<text class="heading2" id="3">Coronation Peak</text>
<text class="text" id="4">Coronation Peak has a decent sized quartize cliff on its north face. The cliff splitting line was climbed in the 90s at about grade 16. You can climb it easily in a day from the shore of Lake Pedder, approached by kayak.</text>

<text class="heading2" id="5">Franklin River</text><text class="text" id="6">The lower section of the Franklin River passes through some very nice limestone, that provides great deep water soloing if you are passing by in a raft. High up in the Elliot Range, on the right as you go down the river is a large limestone cliff called Cromleigh Cliff. As far as I know it hasn't been climbed, due to the massive epic involved in getting there.</text><text class="heading2" id="7">Lion Rock</text><text class="text" id="8">The track from Cockle Creek comes out in South Cape Bay by a large intrusion of dolerite, Lion Rock. The CCT mounted an expedition led by Tom Terry to climb it in 1969 and reached the Rock by wading across the narrow channel at low tide. The "route" went straight up the seaward  face (50m) on rotten rock and descent was by a very risky abseil.</text>

<text class="heading2" id="9">Mt Field</text>
<text class="text" id="10">There have been several routes done on the big cliffs of Mt Field West. You can get reasonably close to them on the Florentine Valley logging roads.</text><climb extra="" grade="17" length="130m" name="Longer Climb" number="" stars="" id="11" fa="Marcel and Hamish Jackson (alt), Adele Vincent, 1996.">Starts in the middle of the tallest part of the cliff and takes the very wide chimney like feature to the top.
1. 43m. Climb easily up left tending ramp to the line then climb pleasant corner crack to a ledge at the top of the flake.
2. 45m. Crux. Continue up corner crack to sloping ledge then climb face above via the amazing sharp flakes and double layaways. Belay in chimney with sloping base high on right.
3. 40m. Easy. Climb chimney then scramble up easy ground to the bushy ledge (further cliffs behind). 
Decent can miraculously be made down the gully to the right.</climb><climb extra="" grade="18" length="47m" name="Short Climb" number="" stars="" id="12" fa="Hamish Jackson, Adele Vincent, 1996.">Clean corner to bottom left of large amphitheatre. Climb corner crack past very loose spike then step around arete to right and continue up ledgey face to the top. A descent gully is present to the left.</climb><climb extra="" grade="20" length="" name="Cosmic Comics" number="" stars="" id="13" fa="Hamish Jackson 1998.">No description - there is a picture in Rock #34.</climb><climb extra="" grade="21" length="" name="Scud" number="" stars="" id="14" fa="Marcel Jackson 1998.">A big R facing corner. No description - there is a picture in Rock #34.</climb>
<text class="heading2" id="15">Mt Murchison</text>
<text class="text" id="16">Mt Murchison is a big conglomerate peak on the West Coast near Tullah. Some routes have been done there by the Jacksons, but no details are available.</text>


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