Glockner Group

Glockner Group

Glockner Group from the north
Highest point
Peak GroƟglockner
Elevation 3,798 m (12,461 ft)
Geography
Country Austria
States East Tyrol, Salzburg and Carinthia
Range coordinates 47Ā°05ā€²N 12Ā°41ā€²Eļ»æ / ļ»æ47.08Ā°N 12.69Ā°Eļ»æ / 47.08; 12.69Coordinates: 47Ā°05ā€²N 12Ā°41ā€²Eļ»æ / ļ»æ47.08Ā°N 12.69Ā°Eļ»æ / 47.08; 12.69
Parent range High Tauern
The Pasterze with the GroƟglockner (centre) and the Johannisberg (centre right rear)
The GroƟglockner is the highest mountain in the Glockner Group

The Glockner Group[1] (German: Glocknergruppe) is a sub-group of the Austrian Central Alps in the Eastern Alps, and is located in the centre section of the High Tauern on the main chain of the Alps.

The Glockner Group lies in Austria in the federal states of Salzburg, Tyrol and Carinthia. The three states meet at a tripoint on the summit of the Eiskƶgele (3,436 m above sea level (AA)).

The highest summit of the Glockner Group and also the highest peak in Austria is the GroƟglockner (3,798 m (AA)), which gives the mountain group its name. Considerable portions of the Glockner Group belong to the core zone of the High Tauern National Park. Also found in the Glockner Group is the Pasterze, the largest glacier in Austria.

Boundaries

The boundaries of the Glockner Group are defined as follows: the River Salzach from Uttendorf to Taxenbach; the Rauriser Tal to Wƶrth; Seidlwinkltal; Hochtor (GroƟglockner High Alpine Road); Tauernbach; Mƶll to its confluence with the Moosbach; Moosbach; Peischlachtƶrl; Peischlachbach; Kals am GroƟglockner; Kalser Bach; Dorfertal; Dorfersee; Kalser Tauern; WeiƟsee; WeiƟenbach; GrĆ¼nsee; Enzingerboden; Stubachtal; Uttendorf.

Together with the Ankogel Group, the Goldberg Group, the Schober Group, the Kreuzeck Group, the Granatspitz Group, the Venediger Group, the Villgraten Mountains and the Rieserferner Group the Glockner Group forms the mountain range of the High Tauern.

Neighbouring ranges

The Glockner Group borders on the following ranges in the Alps:

Peaks

The named three-thousanders in the Glockner Group:[2]

  • Hocheiser, 3,206 m (AA)
  • Kitzsteinhorn, 3,203 m (AA)
  • Hoher Kasten, 3,189 m (AA)
  • Schattseitkƶpfl, 3,182 m (AA)
  • Oberer Fochezkopf, 3,159 m (AA)
  • Kleiner Tenn, 3,158 m (AA)
  • Gamsspitze, 3,157 m (AA)
  • Breitkopf, 3,154 m (AA)
  • Totenkopf, 3,151 m (AA)
  • Bauernbrachkopf, 3,125 m (AA)
  • Schwarzkƶpfl, 3,124 m (AA)
  • Zwingkopf, 3,117 m (AA)
  • Freiwandkasten, 3,114 m (AA)
  • Schwertkopf, 3,099 m (AA)
  • Racherin, 3,092 m (AA)
  • Lange Wand, 3,087 m (AA)
  • Grieskogel, 3,066 m (AA)
  • Blaue Kƶpfe, 3,061 m (AA)
  • Freiwandspitz, 3,034 m (AA)
  • Wasserradkopf, 3,032 m (AA)
  • Kreuzwandspitze, 3,031 m (AA)
  • Spielmann, 3,027 m (AA)
  • Zollspitze, 3,024 m (AA)
  • Brennkogel, 3,018 m (AA)
  • Rifflkarkopf, 3,016 m (AA)
  • Kellerswand, 3,010 m (AA)
  • Kristallspitzl, 3,005 m (AA)

Tourism

The region is well developed for tourism: The GroƟglockner High Alpine Road (and its branch to Franz Josefs Hƶhe), the road from Uttendorf to the Enzingerboden, the bus transfers to the reservoirs near Kaprun and the toll road from Kals am GroƟglockner to the Lucknerhaus enable cars and public transport to travel well into the mountains. A large number of Alpine huts offer accommodation for walkers and climbers:

Power generation

The power industry in Austrian and the Austrian Federal Railways use the water from the Glockner Group to generate electricity at the following locations Kaprun, Franz Josefs Hƶhe (Margaritze Reservoir) and Enzingerboden (WeiƟsee, Tauernmoossee).

Maps

References

  1. ā†‘ Reynolds, Kev (2005). Walking in the Alps, 2nd ed., Cicerone, Singapore, p.409, ISBN 1-85284-261-X.
  2. ā†‘ Ć–K50 www.austrianmap.at

Sources

External links

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