Sobretta Gavia Group
Sobretta Gavia Group | |
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Location of the Sobretta-Gavia Group |
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Highest peak | Monte Sobretta ( 3296 m slm ) |
location | Sondrio / Brescia , Lombardy , Italy |
part of | Southern Eastern Alps |
Classification according to | AVE 48b |
Coordinates | 46 ° 24 ' N , 10 ° 24' E |
The Sobretta-Gavia Group is a mountain group that extends between the Upper Valtellina and the Upper Valcamonica in the Italian provinces of Sondrio and Brescia . Large parts of the mountains are protected in the Stilfserjoch National Park .
location
The Sobretta-Gavia Group is assigned to the Central Alps because it lies north of the geological fault of the Tonale line , but in a general regional geographic sense it is part of the Southern Alps because they are located south of the longitudinal valley furrow Valtellina (Adda) - Vinschgau (Etsch). According to the Alpine Club division of the Eastern Alps (AVE), the group is limited as follows:
- in the northeast of the Ortler Alps the line Bormio - Gaviapass - Ponte di Legno
- to the Adamello-Presanella group in the southeast with the Oglio (upper Valcamonica) between Ponte di Legno and Edolo as the border
- in the south and west of the Bergamasque Alps through the upper reaches of the Ogliolo - Passo dell'Aprica - Tresenda / Valtellina and the Valtellina up the Adda to Tirano
- in the northwest from the Livigno Alps the upper Valtellina to Bormio
Until the reorganization of the AVE in 1984, this group was counted according to the old Moriggl classification (ME) from 1924 to the Ortler group. According to Italian usage, it is one of the Rhaetian Alps .
Important peaks
summit | Height (meters) |
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Monte Sobretta | 3296 m |
Monte Gavia | 3223 m |
Punta di Pietra Rossa | 3212 m |
Monte Vallecetta | 3148 m |
Monte Serottini | 2967 m |
Huts and paths
- Albergo Bonetta , 2,610 m, 16 beds, private - ascent to Monte Gavia, Corno dei Tre Signori (3,359 m)
- Rifugio Berni al Gavia , 2,545 m, 41 beds, CAI - Corno dei Tre Signori, Punta San Matteo (3,684 m), Pizzo Tresero (3,606 m)
Individual evidence
- ^ Peter Holl: Alpine Club Guide Ortleralpen
- ↑ Alpine association division of the Eastern Alps