The North Tyrol Limestone Alps (Nordtiroler Kalkalpen in German) are a mountain range located in Austria and, marginally, in Germany.
North Tyrol Limestone Alps | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Peak | Parseierspitze |
Elevation | 3,036 m (9,961 ft) |
Coordinates | 47°10′28″N 10°28′42″E / 47.17444°N 10.47833°E |
Naming | |
Native name | Nordtiroler Kalkalpen (German) |
Geography | |
North Tyrol Limestone Alps (section nr.21) within Eaestern Alps | |
Countries | Austria and Germany |
States | Tyrol, Vorarlberg and Bavaria |
Parent range | Alps |
Borders on | Northern Salzburg Alps, Bavarian Alps, Tyrol Schistose Alps, Western Rhaetian Alps and Eastern Rhaetian Alps |
Geology | |
Orogeny | Alpine orogeny |
Rock type | Sedimentary rocks[1] |
Administratively the range belongs to the Austrian states of Tyrol and Vorarlberg and to the German state of Bavaria.
According to SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain range is an Alpine section, classified in the following way:[2]
The range is divided into six Alpine subsections:[2]
Some notable summits of the range are:
Name | metres | feet |
---|---|---|
Parseierspitze | 3,036 | 9,961 |
Zugspitze | 2,961 | 9,718 |
Feuerspitze | 2,852 | 9,357 |
Birkkarspitze | 2,749 | 9,019 |
Rote Wand | 2,704 | 8,869 |
Hochwanner | 2,744 | 9,003 |
Ellmauer Halt | 2,344 | 7,690 |