Chiemgau Alps
Appearance
Chiemgau Alps | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Peak | Sonntagshorn |
Elevation | 1,961 m (6,434 ft) |
Geography | |
Countries | Germany, Austria |
States | Bavaria, Salzburg and Tirol |
Parent range | Northern Limestone Alps |
Geology | |
Orogeny | Alpine orogeny |
Rock age(s) | Mesozoic and Cenozoic |
Rock type | sedimentary rocks |
The Chiemgau Alps (Template:Lang-de) are a mountain range in the Northern Limestone Alps and therefore belong to the Eastern Alps. Their major part is situated in Bavaria, Germany and only a small section crosses the Austrian border into the states of Salzburg and Tirol. They reach their highest elevation (1961 m) in the Sonntagshorn, a peak straddling the German-Austrian border.
Geography
The Chiemgau Alps stretch from the Inn River in the West to the Salzach River in the East and cover a distance of 60 km in strike direction; their maximum width in North-South direction amounts to about 25–30 km. They are surrounded by the following mountain ranges:
- Bavarian Prealps in the West
- Kaisergebirge in the Southwest
- Leoganger Steinberge in the South
- Loferer Steinberge in the Southeast
- Berchtesgaden Alps in the Southeast and East
Their northern edge often drops off quite drastically to the foothills.
Major peaks
- Sonntagshorn 1961 m
- Steinplatte 1869 m
- Geigelstein 1813 m
- Zwiesel 1781 m
- Dürrnbachhorn 1776 m
- Hochstaufen 1771 m
- Fellhorn 1764 m
- Hochgern 1744 m
Peaks for rock climbing:
- Hörndlwand 1684 m
- Kampenwand 1664 m