Salzkammergut and Upper Austria Alps

The Salzkammergut and Upper Austria Alps (Oberösterreichisch-Salzkammerguter Alpen in German) is the proposed name for a subdivision of mountains in a new classification of the Alps, which are located in Austria.

Salzkammergut and Upper Austria Alps
Hoher Sarstein as seen from Bad Goisern
Highest point
PeakHoher Dachstein
Elevation2,995 m (9,826 ft)
Listing
Coordinates47°28′32″N 13°36′23″E
Naming
Native nameOberösterreichisch-Salzkammerguter Alpen
Geography
Salzkammergut and Upper Austria Alps (section nr.25) within Eaestern Alps
CountryAustria
States of AustriaUpper Austria, Salzburg and Styria
Parent rangeAlps
Borders onNorthern Salzburg Alps, Northern Styrian Alps, Northern Lower Austria Alps and Eastern Tauern Alps
Geology
OrogenyAlpine orogeny
Type of rockSedimentary rocks[1]

Etymology

Salzkammergut is the name of a historical territory and literally means Estate of the Salt Chamber; it derives from the Imperial Salt Chamber, the authority charged with running the precious salt mines in the Habsburg empire. [2]

Geography

Administratively the range belongs to the Austrian state of Upper Austria, Salzburg and, marginally, to Styria. The whole range is drained by the Danube river.

SOIUSA classification

According to SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain range is an Alpine section, classified in the following way:[3]

Subdivision

The range is divided into four Alpine subsections:[3]

Notable summits

The Grimming in winter
Gennerhorn, Gruberhorn and Regenspitz, in the Salzkammergut Mountains

Some notable summits of the range are:

Namemetresfeet
Hoher Dachstein2,9958,924
Großer Priel2,5158,251
Grimming2,3517,711
Gamsfeld2,0276,649
Hoher Sarstein1,9756,440
Hoher Nock1,9636,438
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References

  1. The Northern Limestone Alps, Gesaeuse National Park; article on www.nationalpark.co.at, accessed on April 2012
  2. Speakman, Fleur; Colin Speakman (1989). Walking in the Salzkammergut: Holiday Rambles in Austria's Lake District. Cicerone Press Limited. p. 11.
  3. Marazzi, Sergio (2005). Atlante Orografico delle Alpi. SOIUSA (in Italian). Priuli & Verlucca. ISBN 978-88-8068-273-8.
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