Across
- 3. / The seven tallest mountains in the United States are all contained within a single state
- 5. / dormant volcano, is located in the Wrangell mountain range in the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park in southeastern Alaska. It rises to 16,390 feet and is named after Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn, a former U.S. senator from Kentucky
- 7. / is the highest point in North America, rising 20,320 feet above sea level.
Down
- 1. / located in the same range of mountains as Mount St. Elias in southeastern Alaska. At 16,500 feet, is the tallest volcano in the United States, although the volcano portion is currently dormant.
- 2. / straddles the U.S.-Canadian border in southeastern Alaska. The 15,979-foot mountain is named after the explorer George Vancouver, who also gave the Canadian city of Vancouver its name
- 4. Elias / stands at the border between Canada and the United States on the southeastern Alaskan coast. At 18,008 feet it is the third highest peak in North American Foraker / is a 17,400-foot peak in the Denali National Reserve, a close neighbor to Mount McKinley. It is named after Joseph B. Foraker, a former U.S. senator from Ohio.
- 6. / another peak in the Wrangell range, is the third highest volcano in the United States. It, too, is currently dormant, reaches 16,237 feet.
