This article contains a sortable table listing mountains of Italy. All mountain heights and prominences on the list are from the largest-scale maps available.[1] In the list, only the exact location of the culminating point of the mountain is considered.
List
Alps
Apennines
Sicily
Sardinia
Mountain | Height (m) |
Drop (m) | Coordinates | Range | Province | First ascent |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
La Marmora | 1834 | 1834 | 40°1′N 9°18′E / 40.017°N 9.300°E | Sardinia | ||
Monte Linas | 1216 | 1190 | 39°27′N 8°37′E / 39.450°N 8.617°E | Sardinia | ||
Monte Limbara | 1365 | 1070 | 40°51′N 9°11′E / 40.850°N 9.183°E | Sardinia | ||
Monte Is Caravius | 1116 | 970 | 39°9′N 8°50′E / 39.150°N 8.833°E | Sardinia |
Other Mountains
Mountain | Height (m) |
Drop (m) | Coordinates | Province | Island | Range | First ascent |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mount Capanne | 1018 | 1007 | 42°46′N 10°10′E / 42.767°N 10.167°E | Livorno | Elba | Elba | |
Monte Fossa delle Felci | 963 | 963 | 38°33′N 14°51′E / 38.550°N 14.850°E | Messina | Salina | Aeolian | |
Mount Stromboli | 924 | 924 | 38°48′N 15°13′E / 38.800°N 15.217°E | Messina | Stromboli | Aeolian | |
Monte dei Porri | 860 | 565 | 38°34′N 14°49′E / 38.567°N 14.817°E | Messina | Salina | Aeolian | |
Mount Epomeo | 789 | 787 | 40°44′N 13°54′E / 40.733°N 13.900°E | Naples | Ischia | Campanian | |
Monte Solaro | 589 | 589 | 40°33′N 14°13′E / 40.550°N 14.217°E | Campanian | Capri | ||
Vulcano | 501 | 501 | 38°24′N 14°58′E / 38.400°N 14.967°E | Messina | Vulcano | Aeolian |
See also
Notes
- 1 2 Numbers in italics are estimates because a precise height for the key col is lacking.
- ↑ 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.
- ↑ The key col Hochjoch is 2770 m in the literature and per local indications, but appears at least 20 m higher on the maps.
- ↑ East summit. West summit is 3,541m. On some maps neighboring Ouille d'Arbéron is higher.
- ↑ The lowest col between equally high Gletscherhorn and Piz Gallagiun is the 383 m deep Passo de la Prasgnola. They share the 2694 m key col Pass da la Duana.
- ↑ Punta di Scais is a twin peak with Pizzo Redorta, 700 m to the south and separated by the 133 m deep "Passo Scais". They are sometimes given the same height (3038 m). Elsewhere Punta di Scais is 1 or 2 meters higher.
- 1 2 Equally high Sas Rigais and Furcheta are only 600 m apart but joined by the 329 m deep Salieresscharte.
- 1 2 Equally high Cima del Sasse & Moiazza Sud are separated by the 363 m deep Forcella delle Sasse
- ↑ A point 2978 on the Italian topographic map, between Tête des Vieux (2873 m) and Têtes de Jeunes (2785 m), has been copied by the Swiss and French topographic maps, but is not supported by the SRTM data nor by the topology of the mountain. It probably was a typo, perhaps for 2778.
- ↑ Commonly given a height of 2,652 m. This is the height of the top of the north face. The true summit is 100 m SSE.
References
- 1 2 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 Italy the 1:25,000 Istituto Geografico Militare maps via the Geoportale Nazionale website.
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.
- ↑ The three main sources for first ascent data are:
For France and in general; W.A.B. Coolidge, The Alps in nature and history, Methuen & Co, London, 1908.
For Switzerland; Gottlieb Studer, Über Eis und Schnee: Die höchsten Gipfel der Schweiz und die Geschichte ihrer Besteigung, Volumes 1-3, Schmid & Francke, Bern, 1896-1899.
For the Eastern Alps: Die Erschließung der Ostalpen, Volumes 1-3, German and Austrian Alpine Club, Berlin, 1894.
Given are the years for the first recorded ascents. In many cases local people or surveyors made earlier ascents. In particular, chamois and ibex hunters are expected to have reached many summits. Years in italics indicate that it is known that an earlier ascent was made, for example by the presence of artifacts on top or the summit's prior use as a triangulation point. - ↑ Petter E. Bjørstad, Cima Tosa is lower than Cima Brenta
Sources
- Jonathan de Ferranti & Eberhard Jurgalski's map-checked ALPS TO R589m and rough, computer-generated EUROPE TO R150m lists
- Mark Trengrove's lists of several regions of the French Alps, and of the Grand paradiso and Rutor ranges of the Italian Alps
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