Maja Jezercë

Maja Jezercë

Maja Jezercë as seen from Maja Trojan
Highest point
Elevation 2,694 m (8,839 ft)[1]
Prominence 2,036 m (6,680 ft)[2]
Listing Ultra
Coordinates 42°26′33″N 19°48′51″E / 42.44250°N 19.81417°E / 42.44250; 19.81417Coordinates: 42°26′33″N 19°48′51″E / 42.44250°N 19.81417°E / 42.44250; 19.81417[2]
Naming
Translation Lake Peak (Albanian)
Geography
Maja Jezercë
Albania
Location Shkodër County
Parent range Albanian Alps, Dinaric Alps
Geology
Mountain type Limestone
Climbing
First ascent 1929 by Sleeman, Elmslie and Ellwood
Easiest route North slope

Maja Jezercë (Albanian: Maja Jezercë), is the highest peak in the entire Dinaric Alps, the second highest in Albania and the seventh highest in the Balkans, standing at 2,694 m (8,839 ft) above sea level. However, Maja Jezercë is the 28th most prominent mountain peak in the European continent.[3]

Maja Jezercë is situated within the Albanian Alps, that is noted for its southernmost glaciers in Europe.[4] Apart from certain areas north of the peak, the limestone mountain massif is part of the National Parks of Theth and Valbonë Valley.[5] It can be climbed from the north; most climbers come from Gusinje in Montenegro as well as from Theth.[6]

The summit is 5 km (16,404 ft) from the border with Montenegro, between the Valleys of Valbonë to the east and the Shala to the west. In part, the whole floor between the valley of Valbonë, Shala, Ropojana and Maja Roshit 2,522 m (8,274 ft) is known as Jezercë, in addition to the peak, Jezercës borders other peaks such as the Maja e Popljuces (2,569 metres) and the Maja Ali 2,471 m (8,107 ft) in the west, Maja Rrogamit]] 2,478 m (8,130 ft) to the east, Maja Kolajet 2,498 m (8,196 ft), Maja Malësores 2,490 m (8,169 ft), Maja Bojs 2,461 m (8,074 ft) in the northwest, Maja Kokervhake 2,508 m (8,228 ft) and Maja Etheve 2,393 m (7,851 ft) in the north.

Name

The Maja Jezercë is the Albanian name, which is derived from the Slavic word, probably more specifically from Serbian jezero ("lake"), and Albanian word maja ("top" or "peak"), meaning "peak of Jezero". In Slavic, including Serbian[7][8][9][10] Jezerski Vrh means "lake peak". The toponym refers to the cirque lakes in the lower part of the Buni i Jezercës on the northern side of the mountain. During the Communist era in Albania it had been given the name of Maja e Rinisë (Mountain of Youth), which never stuck.[6]

Topology

The Cirque of Buni i Jezercës with lakes.

Jezerca is a large rocky peak of dolomitic limestone. There is almost no vegetation there. North, east and west of the mountain top is in great cirque from that in the glacial periods when glaciers were more extensive than today. Today the northern cirque is called Buni i Jezercës at a height of 1980 metres and 2,100 metres in height around 400 metres. Because it is located in the wettest region of Europe with around 6 metres (240 in) of rainfall equivalent believed to fall on the western slopes, snowfall is so large that only in dry years do even the less exposed sections melt away.[11]

See also

References

  1. "Maja e Jezercës". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  2. 1 2 "Europe Ultra-Prominences". Peaklist.org. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  3. "EUROPE ULTRA-PROMINENCES 99 Peaks with Prominence of 1,500 meters or greater". peaklist.org.
  4. "FEASIBILITY STUDY ON ESTABLISHING A TRANSBOUNDARY PROTECTED AREA PROKLETIJE / BJESHKËT E NEMUNA MOUNTAINS" (PDf). condesan.org. p. 4. The number of glacial ponds in this area is rare for the European mainland and can only be compared to the Alps.
  5. Florian Baba (Herausgeber): Linja e Gjelbër Shqiptare, Tirana 2008
  6. 1 2 "Summipost: Jezerca". Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  7. Elezi, Mehmet. "Kush i nemi "Bjeshkët e Nemuna"?". Gazeta55.
  8. Kolcakovski, Belj (1997). The periglacial zone of high mountains of Serbia and Macedonia and its basic characteristics. Observatoire de Montagne de Moussala.
  9. Vtora jugoslovenska onomasticka konferencij. Skopje: Makedonska akademija na naukite i umetnostite. 1980. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  10. Petrović, Mihailo (1941). Đerdapski ribolovi u prošlosti i u sadašnjosti. Zadužbine Mikh. R. Radivojeviča. p. 8. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  11. Milovan Milivojevića, Ljubomir Menkovića and Jelena Ćalić: Pleistocene glacial relief of the central part of Mt. Prokletije (Albanian Alps), in: Quaternary International, V. 190, 1, 1. November 2008, S. 112-122
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.