This area is more easterly; most of these routes shown are northwest facing. Some of the untried routes are dirty in the upper sections. A plethora of more difficult climbs.

K. "Meat Lover Crack", 5.10b/c, (aka Bat Crack). Onsight FA Matt Sumner, 2nd Brandon Lawson. A beautiful hand and foot jam crack which angles over and widens at the top, which may be the crux. Sustained climbing all the way. All gear.
NOTE: while climbing this recently, this editor got involved with bats about halfway up, one of which flew out, brushing the top of the head. This created quite a bit of involvement with his MD and the Health Dept., with suggestions of getting the immune-globulin and seven rabies vaccinations. For many reasons, including the fact that thousands of climbers have had contact with bats and bat cracks, and for other medical reasons, treatment was declined. This is written as a warning that there seems to be quite a lot of bat hysteria right now, and if one does have direct contact with a bat, rabies treatment will be suggested.
L. No name, awaiting development. 5-11/12?. This appears to be a very aesthetic route, hard all the way. Dirty at top and will need some work. Extremely thin crack at bottom is 5.12+ (done on TR by Aidan Maguire) and gear would be tough, as each miniscule finger pocket is needed for fingers.
LM. "The Fiddler", 5-10c/d, Aidan Maguire. This is the climb using both cracks of L and M, with two bolts above the first ledge. Bolts are close; watch for Z-clipping. Otherwise, all gear. Both cracks have been moderately cleaned; further climbing will make this a fine route.
M. "The Green Alien", 5-11/12?. Done as TR only to this point. Named for a slot where a green Alien fits.

N. May leave from "M" or from the platform. Hasn't been tried, though certainly looks feasible. Still dirty.
O. "Gully Wonkers". 5.10+/-. Offwidth all the way. Too wide for gear.

P. Done on TR @ 10c+, will need cleaning. Can be done from the bottom, on face holds along a thin discontinuous crack, 1+ meter to the right of "Tulip", and immediately left of the chimney of "O". Climb up to the right end of the horizontal crack of "Tulip", then straight up a bit, joining "Tulip", then follow the slightly-angling flaring crack to the right of the upper crack of "Tulip"
P-2. There appears to be a diagonal route that would leave "P" from the right end of the horizontal crack,heading out up and right to a knob, then finish on the third upper crack .
Q. "Tulip", 11a, FA Aidan Maguire. From the end of the vertical handcrack on "R", "The Connector", take off out right following a horizontal hand crack, then continue up the left vertical crack. Avoid using the backside of the chimney. An aesthetic route with sustained climbing. All gear. Still dirty in parts; had moderate cleaning before FA. Not as difficult when following or TR'ing, due to strenuous gear placements on lead.
R. "The Connector", 5.10a. Climb the beautiful hand crack to its end, step left around the "Connector", lieback up steeply, work through a rounded section, and finish on the straight-up 5.7 crack at the top, with tricky exit move. All gear, and a fine varied route.
S. No name, awaiting development, also see photo below. 5.11 TR at this time. Start up a small left-facing "dihedral", cross out onto face, then a sloping ledge. Continue up and finish on "The Connector". Where one steps out of the dihedral, it may be possible to do a direct left-curving ascent of the dihedral to T.
T. "Wile E Crack", 5.11a/b, Aidan Maguire - feels it is one of best routes here. After climbing the diagonal, the route moves onto the bolted face to the right of the "U" arete. Small to small-med. gear in lower section; wider at top (#3 Camalot). If you TR this climb, and fall, you will swing right - have an uphill spotter (and/or rap from top and clip a directional). Difficult throughout, crux-y at the small roof. The bottom part of "S" goes up and left via one bolt, to join Wile E Crack, and is called the "Mr. Whiskers Variation".
U. TR arete, awaiting development, also see photo below. Very thin in upper third. May need to finish out to the right on the face. Needs cleaning at the top.
V. "Paralax Right", 5.9 to 10b, depending on how one uses the hollow block up high. Harder if one strictly jams the crack; easier if you grab the outside edge of the somewhat scary block to pull through the overhang. Gear all the way; larger pieces at top.
W. "Paralax Buttress", 10d+/-. Feet on buttress only, not in side cracks! (rules, what rules?). Crux in middle and very thin at top. All gear; larger piece at top.
X. "Paralax Left", 5.8. Jammin' the whole way. Widens near top. All gear; larger piece at top.
Y. "Edges and Ledges", 5.8. Move straight up into the crack from the ground, a bit tricky and balance-y, but one can step up onto an adjacent block to place first piece in the 1"-wide crack. It goes all gear; take small to medium pieces, some small nuts. A bit tricky to protect the last ramp which goes at about 5.5.