Cime de Capoves
Cime de Capoves | |
---|---|
Cima Capoves | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 2,260 m (7,410 ft)[1] |
Prominence | 53 m (174 ft)[1]>[2] |
Coordinates | 44°09′13.22″N 7°40′09.45″E / 44.1536722°N 7.6692917°E |
Geography | |
Location | Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France |
Parent range | Ligurian Alps |
Climbing | |
First ascent | ancestral |
Easiest route | step meadows and some scrambling |
The Cime de Capoves (French) or Cima Capoves (Italian[3]) is a mountain of the Ligurian Alps located in the French region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, close to the French-Italian border.
History
The Cime the Capoves up to World War II belonged to Italy but, following the Paris Peace Treaties, signed on February 1947, is now in France[4] because the France–Italy border runs between Colle dei Signori and Colle di Capeves east of the mountain.
Geography
The mountain belongs to the Ligurian Alps and is located on the main chain of the Alps. Going South a saddle at 2.007 m,[5] sometimes named Colle di Capoves,[6] divides it from the Cima di Pertegà, wihlie going North the Cime de Capoves is divided from the Cima Gaina by the Colle dei Signori. On the eastern side of the mountain runs a former-military dirt road connecting Monesi (a village of the municipality of Triora) with the colle di Tenda. The summit is marked by a stone cairn and administratively belongs to an exclave of the Frenc municipality of La Brigue.[5]
SOIUSA classification
According to the SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain can be classified in the following way:[7]
- main part = Western Alps
- major sector = South Western Alps
- section = Ligurian Alps
- subsection = (It:Alpi del Marguareis/Fr:Alpes Liguriennes Occidentales)
- supergroup = (It:Catena Marguareis-Mongioie/Fr:Chaîne Marguareis-Mongioie)
- group = (It:Gruppo del Marguareis/Fr:Groupe du Marguareis)
- subgroup = (It:Nodo del Marguareis/Fr:Nœud du Marguareis)
- code = I/A-1.II-B.2.a
Hiking
The mountain is accessible by walking tracks starting from the foothpath connecting Colle dei Signori and Colle di Capoves.[8]
Mountain huts
- Rifugio Don Barbera
Maps
- Cartografia ufficiale italiana in scala 1:25.000 e 1:100.000 (Map). Istituto Geografico Militare.
- Géoportail (French official maps) (Map). Institut géographique national.
- Carta in scala 1:50.000 n. 8 Alpi Marittime e Liguri (Map). Torino: Istituto Geografico Centrale.
References
Media related to Cima Capoves at Wikimedia Commons
- ^ a b carta in scala 1:25.000 n.16 "Parco del Marguareis" (Map). Fraternali.
- ^ Key col: Colle di Capoves (2207 m)
- ^ Alpi Marittime. Club Alpino Italiano - Sezione di Torino. 1908. p. 272. Retrieved 2017-11-26.
- ^ Sapi, Jandi (1948). Il trattato di pace con l'Italia. Council of Foreign Ministers. p. 167. Retrieved 2017-11-26.
- ^ a b Institut national de l'information géographique et forestière, official 1:25.000 map on www.geoportail.gouv.fr
- ^ user CompagniadellAnello (29 May 2017). "Anello della Cresta del Ferà da Carnino Superiore". Retrieved 6 November 2017.
{{cite web}}
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has generic name (help) - ^ Marazzi, Sergio (2005). Atlante Orografico delle Alpi. SOIUSA (in Italian). Priuli & Verlucca. ISBN 978-88-8068-273-8.
- ^ Ente di gestione del Parco naturale del Marguareis. "Escursione a piedi al Monte Bertrand (Val Tanaro)". Retrieved 2017-11-26.