Mount Iizuna
Mount Iizuna | |
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![]() A view from Daizahoushi Pond on the way from Nagano City to Togakushi Village. Mount Reisenji on the right and Mount Menō on the left. | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 1,917 m (6,289 ft) |
Coordinates | 36°44′22″N 138°8′1″E / 36.73944°N 138.13361°ECoordinates: 36°44′22″N 138°8′1″E / 36.73944°N 138.13361°E |
Naming | |
Native name | 飯縄山 (Japanese) |
English translation | mountain of edible sand |
Geography | |
![]() ![]() Mount Iizuna Location in Japan | |
Location | Nagano, Japan |
Geology | |
Mountain type | Stratovolcano |
Mount Iizuna (飯縄山, Iizuna-yama), also known as Mount Izuna (飯綱山, Izuna-yama), is a mountain located ten kilometers north-northwest of the heart of Nagano, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. Together with Mount Reisenji (霊仙寺山, Resenji-yama) 1875.0 m, Mount Menō (瑪瑙山, Menō-yama) 1748 m, and others, it forms the Iizuna range. It has an elevation of 1,917 metres. It is one of the "Five Mountains of Northern Shinshu" (北信五岳) that includes: Mount Myōkō (妙高山), Mount Kurohime (黒姫山), Mount Togakushi (戸隠山) and Mount Madarao (斑尾山).
This mountain is a sacred site for mountain-based religious sects such as Shugendo, and said to be the home of a tengu named Saburō. According to legend, there was once a strange, edible sand somewhere on the mountain, which the tengu would distribute in times of poor harvest.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/57/Iizuna_Volcano_Relief_Map%2C_SRTM-1.jpg/150px-Iizuna_Volcano_Relief_Map%2C_SRTM-1.jpg)
The mountain is also a popular area for skiing and is where the bobsleigh and luge track for the 1998 Winter Olympics is located.
See Also[]
- List of mountains in Japan
- List of volcanoes in Japan
External links[]
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Iizuna. |
- Iizuna Yama - Geological Survey of Japan
- "Iizuna". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
Gallery[]
Mount Iizuna from Asahi Station platform
A view from Lake Reisenji. Mt. Reisenji (right), Mt. Iizuna (left).
- Venues of the 1998 Winter Olympics
- Mountains of Nagano Prefecture
- Stratovolcanoes of Japan
- Pleistocene volcanoes
- Nagano geography stubs
- 1998 Winter Olympics stubs
- Winter Olympic venue stubs