Chad's Gap
Chad's Gap is a 120-foot (37 m) backcountry gap located in the Wasatch Mountains, approximately 0.6 miles (0.97 km) northeast of Alta Ski Area, in northern Utah, United States. One version of the structure's discovery has it that Chad Zurinskas, a local Utah resident after whom the gap was purportedly named, discovered it as a gap between two piles of mine tailings in 1999 and arranged with filmmaker Kris Ostness to make the first successful jump. The first successful jump was done by Candide Thovex.[1][2]
Chad's Gap | |
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Candide Thovex clearing Chad's Gap, January 1999 | |
Location | Grizzly Gulch, Little Cottonwood Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah United States |
Range | Wasatch Range |
Coordinates | 40.596029°N 111.621132°W |
References
- Rozendaal, Steve (20 Jun 2012). "How Chad's Gap became skiing's most iconic jump spot". freeskier.com. Retrieved 3 Dec 2016.
- "14 year old skier jumps Chad's Gap – 120 feet". mpora.com. 4 Jan 2016. Retrieved 3 Dec 2016.
External links
- Media related to Chad's Gap at Wikimedia Commons
- Candide Thovex Sessions Chad's Gap on YouTube
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