Berlingersköpfle
Berlingersköpfle | ||
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Hehlekopf , Berlingersköpfle, Ifersgunthöhe and Hoher Ifen from the southeast from the eastern Ochsenhofer Kopf |
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height | 2010 m above sea level A. | |
location | Vorarlberg , Austria | |
Mountains | Northwestern Walsertal Mountains , Allgäu Alps | |
Dominance | 0.5 km → Hählekopf | |
Notch height | 30 m ↓ notch to the Hählekopf | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 21 '11 " N , 10 ° 4' 26" E | |
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Type | Grasberg | |
rock | Schrattenkalk ( Helvetic chalk ) |
The Berlingersköpfle (also Pellingerköpfle ) is a 2010 m above sea level. A. high mountain peak in the Allgäu Alps in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg .
Location and surroundings
The summit, located in the subgroup of the Northwestern Walsertal Mountains , represents the point at which the mountain ridge from the Hohen Ifen ( 2230 m ) to the west bends south to the Hählekopf ( 2058 m ). The Berlingersköpfle lies between the two mountains. To the west, the mountain ridge on the Berlingersköpfle breaks vertically with the Fellefluh into the Subersach valley , to the north with the Iferfluh to the Fellegraben. The notch to the Hählekopf forms the reference for the notch height of at least 30 meters.
The district on which the Berlingersköpfle is located is Egg , which is about 16 kilometers to the northwest. The border with the municipality of Bezau runs near the summit .
height
The altitude of 1994 m above sea level indicated in the maps . A. refers to a point north-west of the summit. The actual summit has a height of 2010 meters.
Origin of name
The summit was first mentioned in 1808 in the Bavarian Rustical Cadastre as Berlingers Köpfle , another mention comes from 1886 in an Austrian map as Pelinger Köpfle . Most likely, it was named after the family name "Berlinger", which is common in the Bregenzerwald .
Ascent
The Berlingersköpfle is not developed with paths. The normal route leads from the Schwarzwassertal on hiking trails past the Schwarzwasserhütte ( 1620 m ) to the Ifersguntalpe ( 1750 m ) and from there pathless to the northwest to the summit. A ridge transition from the hollow head can also be made.
The mountain is climbed much more often in winter as part of a ski tour.
photos
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ernst Zettler, Heinz Groth: Alpine Club Guide - Allgäu Alps. 12th, completely revised edition. Bergverlag Rudolf Rother, Munich 1985, ISBN 3-7633-1111-4 (p. 512).
- ↑ a b Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000) . Retrieved April 25, 2012.
- ↑ a b Thaddäus Steiner : Allgäu mountain names . 2nd Edition. Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg 2008, ISBN 978-3-8987-0389-5 (p. 73).
- ↑ a b c Dieter Seibert: Alpine Club Guide alpine - Allgäu Alps and Ammergau Alps . 17th edition. Bergverlag Rother, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-7633-1126-2 (p. 170).
- ↑ Exact value not known, stated value is a minimum value (can be up to 19 meters higher). It was determined from the distance between the contour lines (20 meters in altitude ) on a topographic map ( scale 1: 25,000).
- ↑ Kristian Rath: Allgäu ski tour guide with Kleinwalsertal and Tannheimer Tal . 6th edition. Panico Alpinverlag, Köngen 2009, ISBN 978-3-9367-4010-3 (p. 35).