Mount Agathias

Mount Agathias (Greek: Αγκαθιάς), at 2,424 m, is one of the highest mountains on Crete.[2]

Mount Agathias
Greek: Αγκαθιάς
View of the Agathias from west
Highest point
Elevation2,424 m (7,953 ft)[1]
Prominence103 m (338 ft)[1]
Coordinates35°13′13″N 24°47′01″E
Geography
Mount Agathias
Location in Greece
LocationCrete, Greece
Climbing
First ascentancestral
Easiest routehike

Features

Damaged trig point on the summit

Located in the Rethymno regional unit, the Agathias stands close to the Psiloritis, the highest summit of Mount Ida massif and of the whole island. It belongs to the water divide between the southern part fo Crete, tributary of the Libyan Sea, and the northern one, facing the Aegean sea. A saddle at 2321 m West of mount Agathias connects it with the Psiloritis,[1] while eastwards the ridge continues with Mount Voloumenou.[3] A natural park, member of UNESCO's Global Geoparks Network, includes the Agathias and the Mt. Ida massif as a whole.

Access to the summit

The summit of Mount Agathias can be reached following a track on a rocky terrain branching from the E4 European long distance path.[4]

gollark: Hmm, I think I actually know someone with one of those still.
gollark: Does anyone know of phones with removable batteries (and good availability of said batteries), no notch, an LCD (not OLED) screen, a μSD card slot, decent battery life, and some custom ROM support, which is still produced or fairly available used? Do any even exist now?!
gollark: Since my current device doesn't have a replaceable battery, and is becoming increasingly less usable, I don't know *what* I'll replace it with which won't break in the same ways.
gollark: My *previous* phone became unusable due to not actually holding in μUSB cables, preventing me from charging it. Though I think that's partly because the port was mildly out of spec.
gollark: Also, my phone (~2 years old) has a USB-C port which cables randomly come loose from now.

References

  1. "Mount Ida, Greece". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  2. "Greek Islands:"Mount Agathias height"
  3. 1:35.000 scale map nr.11.14 – Ψηλορείτης (Agathias) (Map). Anavasi.
  4. "Mt. Ida (Timios Stavros, 2456m), Agathias (2424m), Vouloumenou (2267m), Kousakas (2211m)". Retrieved 14 September 2019.

Media related to Agathias (Psiloritis) at Wikimedia Commons

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