This article contains a table listing by elevation, mountains of the Alps that are between 2000 and 2499 metres high and which also have a topographic prominence of at least 300 metres (984 ft). The list is a continuation of the List of prominent mountains of the Alps (2500–2999 m) and List of prominent mountains of the Alps above 3000 m, which contains an introduction with statistics and an explanation of the criteria.
Mountains of the Alps between 2000 and 2500 m
See also
Notes
- ↑ Unranked summits have a topographic prominence between 293 and 299 m l. They are included given the uncertainties in estimating these values.
- ↑ Numbers in italics are estimates when a precise height for the key col is lacking. For example, maps often provide heights for the place where a route passes over a ridge rather than for the lowest point in the ridge.
- ↑ For the Eastern Alps the range names are according to the Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps
- ↑ SOIUSA codes, representing a proposal for a new classification system of the Alps. The codes usually but not always correspond to established ranges. Sorting on this tab puts the mountains in a geographic order, roughly from the southwest to the east.
- ↑ State in Austria and Germany, department in France, province in Italy, and canton in Switzerland
References
- ↑ All mountain heights and prominences are from the following maps:
For France the 1:25,000 cartes topographiques of the Institut Géographique National
For Switzerland the 1:25,000 Swisstopo maps.
For Austria BEV's Österreichische Karte 1:50.000 supplemented with the 1:25,000 Alpine Club maps where available.
For the Aosta Valley in Italy, the 1:10,000 CTR edizione 2005
Elsewhere in Italy the 1:25,000 Istituto Geografico Militare maps via the Geoportale Nazionale website.
For Slovenia the highest scale maps available via the Geopedia.si site.
Key cols were verified using the SRTM data based contour lines in the terrain view of Google Maps. - ↑ Verified and fine-tuned via google terrain and satellite maps
- 1 2 According to laser measurements, Ochsenkopf is a mere 38 cm higher than Salzachgeier a few km away
Sources
- Jonathan de Ferranti & Eberhard Jurgalski's map-checked ALPS TO R589m and rough, computer-generated EUROPE TO R150m lists
- Christian Thöni's list of 8875 summits in Switzerland
- Mark Trengrove and Clem Clements' list of German alps above 2000 m,
- Mark Trengrove's lists of several regions of the French Alps.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.