Lavanttal Alps
Lavanttal Alps | |
---|---|
Seetal Alps with Mt. Zirbitzkogel | |
Highest point | |
Peak | Zirbitzkogel |
Elevation | 2,396 m (7,861 ft) |
Coordinates | 47°3′0″N 14°34′0″E / 47.05000°N 14.56667°E |
Geography | |
Countries | Austria and Slovenia |
States | Styria and Carinthia |
Range coordinates | 47°04′N 14°57′E / 47.07°N 14.95°ECoordinates: 47°04′N 14°57′E / 47.07°N 14.95°E |
Parent range |
Central Eastern Alps Carinthian-Styrian Alps (Noric Alps) |
The Lavanttal Alps (German: Lavanttaler Alpen, Slovene: Labotniške Alpe) are part of the Central Eastern Alps in Austria and Slovenia, between the river Mur in the north and the Drava in the south.
The mountains are named after the central valley of Lavanttal and the Lavant River which runs in their midst. Historically they were also viewed, along with the neighbouring Gurktal Alps range, as part of the larger "Noric Alps", but that grouping had no geological basis.[1]
Subdivision
The main ranges of the Lavanttal Alps are:
- Seetal Alps, stretching along the Mur River from Scheifling to Zeltweg in Styria, including the highest peak, Mt. Zirbitzkogel, 2,396 m (7,861 ft)
- Saualpe, the lower westernmost range in Carinthia, between Klippitztörl Pass in the north and the Drava in the south
- Packalpe and Stubalpe, stretching from Obdach Saddle in the west and Gaberl Pass in the north to the Packsattel in the south, including Mt. Ameringkogel, 2,187 m (7,175 ft)
- Koralpe, the southern continuation along the Styrian-Carinthian border
- The Kozjak Mountains (also Possruck Mountains), along the border of Austria with Slovenia, from Radl Pass in the west down to the Slovene Hills and the Drava River.
- Gleinalpe, stretching from the Mur near Zeltweg in the northeast and Gaberl Pass in the southwest down to the Graz Basin, crossed by the Gleinalm Tunnel.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lavanttal Alps. |
References
- ↑ Noric Alps in: Austria-Forum, the Austrian knowledge network online (at AEIOU); hence also the AVE No. 46b (and 46a for the Nock Mountains, the eastern Gurktal Alps) which goes back to the old group 46 of Moriggl's classification of 1924
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.