Olperer

Coordinates: 47°03′12″N 11°39′32″E / 47.05333°N 11.65889°E / 47.05333; 11.65889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Olperer
The Olperer from the west
Highest point
Elevation3,476 m (AA) (11,404 ft)
Prominence1,230 m (4,040 ft)
Isolation11.4 km (7.1 mi) Edit this on Wikidata
ListingAlpine mountains above 3000 m
Coordinates47°03′12″N 11°39′32″E / 47.05333°N 11.65889°E / 47.05333; 11.65889
Geography
Olperer is located in Austria
Olperer
Olperer
Parent rangeZillertal Alps
Geology
Mountain typeRock summit
Type of rockGranite, gneiss
Climbing
First ascent1867 Paul Grohmann, Georg Samer and Jakob Huber over the southeast ridge (Südostgrat)
Easiest routeOlperer Hut, southeast ridge (with small Schneegupf firn field), or north ridge from Geraer Hut over sections of glacier

The Olperer is a 3,476-metre-high (11,404 ft) mountain in the Zillertal Alps in the Austrian federal state of Tyrol. It is the main summit on the Tux Crest (Tuxer Kamm) and is often crossed in the summer as climbers transit from the Olperer Hut to the Geraer Hut. It was first climbed on 10 September 1867 along the southeast ridge (Südostgrat) by Paul Grohmann, Georg Samer and Gainer Jackl.[1] On its north flank is the ski region known as Hintertux Glacier on the Gefrorene-Wand-Kees glacier (also called the Tuxer Ferner).

View from the Gefrorenen Wandspitzen.

Location and area[edit]

The Olperer, with its pyramidal summit block, presents a striking appearance. As a result of that and because of its geographical prominence over its nearby peaks, the summit is a popular viewing point. It lies about four kilometres as the crow flies northwest of the Schlegeisspeicher dam and seven kilometres south of Hintertux. Its neighbours are, to the north and separated by the Wildlahnerscharte (3,220 m), the Großer Kaserer at 3,266 metres, to the southeast along the crest the 3,381-metre-high (11,093 ft) Fußstein and, to the northeast, separated by the Großes Riepenkees glacier, lie the twin peaks of the Gefrorene-Wand-Spitzen, the southern summit of which lies at a height of 3,270 metres.

Sources and maps[edit]

  • H. Klier und W. Klier: Alpine Club Guide Zillertaler Alpen, Munich, 1996, ISBN 3-7633-1269-2
  • Alpine Club Map 1:25,000, Sheet 35/1, Zillertaler Alpen West

References[edit]

  1. ^ Zeitschrift des Deutschen und Oesterreichischen Alpenvereins, Vol. II, 1870/71, Munich, 1871, pp. 132 f.

External links[edit]