Schober group
Schober group | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Peak | Petzeck |
Elevation | 3,283 m (10,771 ft) |
Coordinates | 46°56′54″N 12°48′15″E / 46.94833°N 12.80417°ECoordinates: 46°56′54″N 12°48′15″E / 46.94833°N 12.80417°E |
Naming | |
Native name | Schobergruppe |
Geography | |
Schober group (in red) within the Alps.
The borders of the range according to Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps | |
Country | Austria |
States | Tyrol and Carinthia |
Parent range | Hohe Tauern |
The Schober group (German: Schobergruppe) is a sub-range of the Hohe Tauern mountains in the Central Eastern Alps, on the border between the Austrian states of Tyrol (East Tyrol) and Carinthia. Most of the range is located inside Hohe Tauern national park. It is named after Mt. Hochschober, 3,242 metres (10,636 ft), though its highest peak is Mt. Petzeck at 3,283 metres (10,771 ft).
Geography[]
The range comprises central parts of the Hohe Tauern south of the neighbouring Glockner Group and the Alpine divide. In the south it stretches down to the East Tyrolean capital Lienz and the Drava Valley. In the east, the Grossglockner High Alpine Road leads up to Hochtor Pass via Großkirchheim.
Neighbouring ranges[]
The Schober group is bordered by the following other ranges in the Alps:
- Glockner Group (to the north)
- Goldberg Group (to the east)
- Kreuzeck group (to the SE)
- Gailtal Alps (to the S)
- Villgraten Mountains (to the SW)
- Granatspitze Group (to the NW)
Peaks[]
All the named three-thousanders in the Schober group:[1]
|
|
Alpine huts[]
Accident[]
On 8 September 2016 shortly after take off on the return leg of a supply flight to the Elberfelder Hut, a helicopter crashed, and the pilot, Hannes Arch, was killed. The hut manager, who had spontaneously decided to accompany Arch, was injured but was able to be rescued.[2]
References[]
- ^ ÖK50 www.austrianmap.at
- ^ Hannes Arch: Suche nach Absturzursache. In: ORF, 9 September 2016.
Maps[]
- Alpine Club map 41 Schobergruppe. Deutscher Alpenverein: Munich, 2005, ISBN 3-928777-12-2.
Literature[]
- Gerhard Karl, Michael Krobath: "Die Schobergruppe, ein stilles Kleinod der Hohen Tauern" in: Berg 2006 (Alpine Club Yearbook, Vol. 130) with Alpine Club map 41 of the Schober group, ISBN 3-937530-10-X, pp. 270–283.
- Walter Mair: Alpenvereinsführer Schobergruppe. Bergverlag Rudolf Rother: Munich, 1979, ISBN 3-7633-1222-6.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Schober group. |
- Central Alps
- Mountain ranges of the Alps
- Mountain ranges of Tyrol (state)
- Mountain ranges of Carinthia (state)
- Schober Group
- Geography of East Tyrol