Monte Viso
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Monte Viso | |
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Monte Viso seen from the Col de Chamoussiere |
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Elevation | 3,841 metres (12,602 feet) |
Location | Italy |
Range | Cottian Alps |
Prominence | 2,062 m ranked 10th in the Alps |
Coordinates | |
First ascent | August 30, 1861 by M. Croz, William Mathews and Frederic Jacomb |
Easiest route | South Face scramble |
Monte Viso (also called Monviso) is a mountain in the Cottian Alps in Italy close to the French border. Monte Viso is well known for its pyramid-like shape and since it surmounts all its neighbouring peaks by at least about 500 m it can be seen from far away, standing as a 'distant sentinel' to the major peaks of the Alps in the title of Will McLewin's eponymous book.
On the northern slopes of Monte Viso are the headwaters of the Po, the so-called Pian del Re (2,020 m).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
In Monte Viso’s Horizon: Climbing All the Alpine 4000m Peaks, Will McLewin, Ernest Press, 1991, ISBN 0-948153-09-1
[edit] External links
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